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Found 300 books(s). Showing results 1 thru 10.
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Typed letter signed. WITH: As We Remember Joe. WITH: Publisher's mailing list and supporting materials

"THE BOOK COULD NOT HAVE BEEN BETTER AND YOU HAVE CERTAINLY DONE A WONDERFUL JOB—AND I KNOW DAD WAS PLEASED"

KENNEDY, John F. Typed letter signed. WITH: As We Remember Joe. WITH: Publisher's mailing list and supporting materials. The Palace Hotal, San Francisco; and Cambridge, Massachusetts, Undated [1945] / 1945.

Exceptional typed letter by John F. Kennedy to the secretary of the publisher of the moving tribute to Joe Kennedy Jr., As We Remember Joe, noting that JFK was pleased with the book and requesting that it be sent to several people in England, boldly signed. Together with a presentation copy of the book, inscribed by JFK on the front free endpaper in the month of publication: "For Mr. Sherrill, with the greatest appreciation for all of his thoughtfulness, from Jack Kennedy, May 1945." Together with the publisher's typed mailing list and an archive of correspondence and other related materials. $27,500.

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Memoirs of Napoleon Bonaparte

“AH! BOURRIENNE, YOU ALSO WILL BE IMMORTAL!”

(NAPOLEON) DE BOURRIENNE, Louis Antoine Fauvelet. Memoirs of Napoleon Bonaparte. London, 1836. Four volumes bound in eight.

Expanded edition of de Bourrienne’s classic biography of Napoleon, with 27 plates, a facsimile of Napoleon’s abdication, and a folding map depicting the Battle of the Nile, expanded to from four volumes to eight and abundantly extra-illustrated with about 300 engraved plates, including portraits, scenes, views and maps, with a document signed by Napoleon bound into the front of the first volume. Beautifully bound by Sangosrki & Sutcliffe in full morocco with Napoleonic emblems in gilt. $25,000.

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Rights of Man. WITH: Common Sense

“THE CLEAREST OF ALL EXPOSITIONS OF THE BASIC PRINCIPLES OF DEMOCRACY” (PMM)

PAINE, Thomas. Rights of Man. WITH: Common Sense. London, 1791, 1792.

Rare second editions of Parts I and II of Rights of Man, published only days after the first editions by J.S. Jordan, who published Part I after the original edition was suppressed and was arrested for publishing Part II. One of Paine’s most important, influential, and bestselling works, Rights of Man resulted in the prosecution in England of Paine, his publishers, and booksellers, forcing Paine to flee to France. Bound with a 1791 edition of Common Sense. $23,500.

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Second World War

CHURCHILL'S BRILLIANT HISTORY OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR, INSCRIBED BY HIM IN THE FIRST VOLUME,

CHURCHILL, Winston. Second World War. London, 1948-54. Six volumes.

First English editions of Churchill's WWII masterpiece, part history and part memoir, written after he lost reelection as Prime Minister, inscribed by him on the title page of the first volume in the year of publication, "Inscribed by Winston S. Churchill 1948." $22,000.

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History of the Royal Residences

“AN EXTRAORDINARY RICHNESS OF COLOR”

PYNE, William Henry. History of the Royal Residences. London, 1819. Three volumes.

First edition of this beautifully illustrated work on the design and history of eight royal residences, with 100 hand-colored aquatint plates after the works of Charles Wild, James Stephanoff and others—a lovely copy in full straight-grain morocco-gilt. $17,500.

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Typed letter signed

"BUT JERUSALEM IS NOT ONLY THE CAPITAL OF THE STATE OF ISRAEL, IT IS THE MOST IMPORTANT SYMBOL OF JEWISH HISTORY—A HISTORY FULL OF SUFFERING AND FAILURES, BUT, IN ITS ESSENCE, THE HISTORY OF THE VICTORY OF THE SPIRIT AND THE FAITH OVER THE PHYSICAL FORCE TRYING TO DESTROY IT"

DAYAN, Moshe. Typed letter signed. Tel-Aviv, August 3, 1967.

Typed letter signed by Moshe Dayan, written less than two months after forces led by Dayan during the Six-Day War captured East Jerusalem, thanking his correspondent for a gift, describing the centrality of Jerusalem to Jewish history, and discussing his interest in archaeology. $17,500.

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Why England Slept

JOHN F. KENNEDY'S FIRST BOOK, WARMLY INSCRIBED BY HIM TO HIS GOOD FRIEND AND LONG-TERM NEIGHBOR

KENNEDY, John F. Why England Slept. New York, 1940.

First edition, sixth printing, of John F. Kennedy's first book, issued four months after the first printing, of JFK's striking analysis of Britain's lack of preparation for WWII, inscribed by him on the front free endpaper to his good friend and long-term neighbor Nancy Tenney Lloyd, "To Ten from Ken!" and further inscribed on the rear pastedown, "Ten: It's my hope that this book will interest you—as it is pregnant with significance as are you." $16,000.

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Poor Richard Improved: Being an Almanack and Ephemeris

“THE MOST WIDELY REPRINTED OF FRANKLIN’S WRITINGS”:EXCEEDINGLY RARE 1758 EDITION OF FRANKLIN’S POOR RICHARD’S ALMANACK, THE LAST ONE PRINTED BY HIMAND THE FIRST TO INCLUDE THE “WAY TO WEALTH” PREFACE—ONE OF THE MOST CELEBRATED AND WIDELY READWORKS OF COLONIAL AMERICA

FRANKLIN, Benjamin. Poor Richard Improved: Being an Almanack and Ephemeris. Philadelphia: 1757. Rare first edition of Franklin’s famous almanac for the year 1758, the last in the Poor Richard series to be printed by him, and the first to incorporate the famous aphorisms of prior issues into a preface entitled “The Way to Wealth”—“the most widely reprinted of Franklin’s writings.” Illustrated with a woodcut showing the anatomy of a man’s body surrounded by symbols of the Zodiac, along with 14 other woodcuts. $16,000.

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Original United Press International teletype roll—President Kennedy

“URGENT… PRESIDENT KENNEDY HAS BEEN SHOT”:HISTORIC BREAKING NEWS OF THE KENNEDY ASSASSINATION ON ORIGINAL UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL TELETYPE ROLL (27 FEET, 4 INCHES), 11/22/63

(KENNEDY ASSASSINATION). Original United Press International teletype roll—President Kennedy. Dallas, November 22, 1963. Original and continuous United Press International teletype roll reporting the breaking news of the Kennedy assassination, beginning only minutes after the shootings of the President and Governor Connally, noting witness reports of three shots, Mrs. Kennedy’s reaction, Secret Service and police response, pandemonium within Parkland Hospital where the President was ultimately declared dead, and ending with a draft of the President’s obituary. Extremely rare teletype roll of uninterrupted bulletins—UPR 74 to 115—marked 11/22. $15,000.

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