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Catalog 177

All books are first printings of first editions or first American editions unless otherwise noted.

2.
(Animal Memoir)
click for a larger image of item #36656, The Cat Who Came For Christmas Boston, Little Brown, (1987). The tale of how a cat won over Amory (and went on to meet Cary Grant, Walter Cronkite, George C. Scott, etc.). Blurbs by Bea Arthur and Doris Day, among others. Warmly inscribed by the author to a couple, "Jimmy & Gloria, with admiration and love" in the month prior to publication. With an autograph note signed laid in, in which he invites the recipients to a "small (I promise)" publication party, and reminds them he's still a dog person, "especially about your dogs" -- written on Beverly Hills Hotel stationery. The recipients were likely Jimmy Stewart and his wife Gloria McLean, who were famous for their affection for their dogs: Stewart once recited a poem he wrote about his golden retriever Beau on the Johnny Carson show, which famously brought his host and many of the audience members to tears. Near fine in a near fine dust jacket. [#036656] $350
3.
(Animal Memoir)
click for a larger image of item #36657, The Sound of a Wild Snail Eating Chapel Hill, Algonquin Books, 2010. The 2011 John Burroughs Medal winner. A surprisingly fascinating memoir of a woman's debilitating illness being eased by the companionship of a snail. Basis for the award-winning 2019 short film, narrated by Daryl Hannah and starring Ariela Kuh and Neohelix Albolaris (the snail). Signed by the author, "ETB," with a sketch of a snail on the move. Fine in a very near fine, lightly edge-rubbed dust jacket. First printings are scarce; signed copies much more so. [#036657] $250
4.
(Animal Memoir)
click for a larger image of item #36658, An Eagle Named Freedom (NY), Morrow, (2010). The friendship between an eagle who can't fly and a man with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. A tale of injury, illness, and redemption. Blurbs by Stacey O'Brien and Susan Richards, among others. Inscribed by the author. Fine in a fine dust jacket. [#036658] $125
5.
(Animal Memoir)
click for a larger image of item #36659, Saving Simon: How a Rescue Donkey Taught Me the Meaning of Compassion NY, Ballantine Books, (2014). Author Jon Katz brings a sick donkey to his farm in upstate NY, where he begins to learn (empathy, compassion, friendship) from him. Signed by Katz. Fine in a fine dust jacket. [#036659] $125
6.
(Animal Memoir)
click for a larger image of item #36660, How To Be a Good Creature Boston, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, (2018). "A memoir in thirteen animals," by the acclaimed naturalist, with lessons from a dog, a pig, a weasel, an octopus, a spider, an emu, etc., several of whom have been the subjects of entire books by her in the past. Illustrated with drawing at each chapter heading, and with photographs of the author with most of the book's subjects at various times and places over the years. Also with an annotated bibliography of ten books "For Further Reading" that inspired the author "to embark on a career of studying the lives of animals and writing about the natural world -- including works by Jane Goodall, Dian Fossey, Barry Lopez, Farley Mowat, and others. Signed by the author on a tipped-in leaf. Fine in a dust jacket with a small mark on the rear panel blacking out the price, otherwise fine. [#036660] $200
7.
(Animal Memoir)
click for a larger image of item #36661, Saddled: How a Spirited Horse Reined Me In and Set Me Free Boston, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2010. A Morgan named Georgia becomes Richards' lifeline out of a bad marriage and a decade of drinking. Blurbs by Stacey O'Brien, Abigail Thomas, Rita Mae Brown, and others. Signed by the author. Fine in a near fine, slightly edge-rubbed dust jacket. [#036661] $125
8.
(Anthology)
click for a larger image of item #36626, Third World Women (San Francisco), Third World Communications, 1972. Edited by Janice Mirikitani, this anthology brought together work by "Third World people of Asia, Africa, and the Original Americas," including "A Scarlet Woman" by Ntozake Shange and "Custer Lives in Humboldt County" by Janet Campbell Hale, both appearances being prior to the authors' first books. Stamp of The Institute for the Study of Labor & Economic Crisis on the title page and inked-out address of the "Women's Library" inside the front cover. Spotting to covers; still very good in wrappers. 30 copies in OCLC. A landmark volume, and scarce now. [#036626] $250
On Sale: $163
10.
(Children's Literature)
click for a larger image of item #36570, The Phantom Tollbooth NY, Epstein & Carroll, (1961). Juster's wildly successful first book, a now-classic fantasy adventure tale illustrated by Juster's housemate at the time, Jules Feiffer. This copy is inscribed by Juster to the founder of a literacy nonprofit -- "Lovely to be one of your books" -- and is also signed by Feiffer. Slight spine lean; small spot to upper spine; possible pencil markings at the lower edge of the text block. Still a near fine copy in a good, supplied, price-clipped dust jacket with internal and external tape repairs. [#036570] $3,500
13.
click for a larger image of item #36545, A Conversation with National Book Award Winner Don DeLillo (n.p.), National Book Foundation, (1997). An 8-page pamphlet printing an interview with DeLillo by Diane Osen, upon the publication of the BOMC edition of Underworld. Covers two questions on DeLillo's becoming a writer, and another dozen specific to Underworld itself. After his National Book Award for White Noise, and the string of great novels that followed, DeLillo was considered one of the great American novelists of the second half of the 20th century, with Underworld widely considered to be his masterpiece. Fine in stapled wrappers. [#036545] $125
14.
click for a larger image of item #36546, Love-Lies-Bleeding NY, Scribner, (2005). His third published play. Inscribed by the author. This is the first printing of what was to be a simultaneous softcover issue, but we've found no indication (other than an assigned ISBN) of there ever having been a hardcover printing. Fine in wrappers. Scarce signed. [#036546] $250
15.
(Democracy)
click for a larger image of item #36547, Ill Winds: Saving Democracy from Russian Rage, Chinese Ambition, and American Complacency NY, Penguin Press, 2019. Warnings about democracy from before the Capitol attack, before the (second) invasion of Ukraine, and during the (first round of) tariffs on China (one effect of which was China ending its domestic ownership rules for auto companies, benefiting Tesla). Inscribed by Diamond, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and a professor at Stanford University. Fine in a fine dust jacket. [#036547] $250
16.
(Democracy)
click for a larger image of item #36572, Surviving Autocracy NY, Riverhead Books, 2020. Gessen, a non-binary Russian-American journalist sentenced, in abstentia, to 8 years in a Russian prison for speaking out about atrocities in the war in Ukraine, here cogently skewers both the form and the function of the first Trump presidency. Signed by the author in 2022. Gessen had published the viral essay, "Autocracy: Rules for Survival," in The New York Review of Books two days after the 2016 election. Fine in a fine dust jacket, with a blurb by Timothy Snyder. Uncommon signed. [#036572] $250
17.
(Democracy)
click for a larger image of item #36548, How To Save a Constitutional Democracy Chicago, University of Chicago Press, (2018). How democracies decay (via attacks on checks and balances, the free press, opposition parties, and individual rights, along with a growing centralization of power, etc.), and strategies for democracy's defense (Congress, the judiciary, science, society, etc.). Rational arguments from the time of the first Trump administration. Signed by both authors. Fine in a fine dust jacket. [#036548] $200
18.
(Democracy)
click for a larger image of item #36630, Renegade (NY), Open Field, (2023). A political memoir by one of only two Republicans to serve on the House Select Committee investigating the January 6 insurrection. Signed by Kinzinger. Fine in a fine dust jacket. [#036630] $150
19.
(Democracy)
click for a larger image of item #36631, Guantanamo Voices: True Accounts from the World's Most Infamous Prison NY, Abrams, (2020). Graphic novel artists illustrate the stories of ten people affected by their time at GITMO, a place that serves as a model for the tendency of democracies to jettison the very principles they are claiming to defend. Edited and inscribed by Mirk, and with an introduction by Omar El Akkad, author of One Day Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This. Fine in a fine dust jacket. [#036631] $200
On Sale: $130
20.
(Democracy)
click for a larger image of item #36632, Threat to Democracy: the Appeal of Authoritarianism in an Age of Uncertainty Washington, DC, American Psychological Association, (2019). Moghaddam, an Iranian-born professor of psychology at Georgetown, explores the recent global decline in democracy. Although published during Trump's first term, the index entry alone alludes to the continuing story ("assault on American press; Charlottesville neo-Nazi rally; dismissal of scientific findings; etc.). Inscribed by the author. Fine in a fine dust jacket. [#036632] $150
22.
(Democracy)
click for a larger image of item #36573, The Great Suppression: Voting Rights, Corporate Cash, and the Conservative Assault on Democracy NY, Crown, (2016). The subversion of democracy via gerrymandering, judicial activism, "Citizens United" and the rise of Super PACs, restrictive voting laws passed at the state level, etc., as seen from the politically pivotal year of 2016. Signed by the author. Fine in a fine dust jacket. [#036573] $150
23.
(Democracy)
click for a larger image of item #36574, Listening to Grasshoppers: Field Notes on Democracy (New Delhi), Hamish Hamilton/Penguin, (2009). Essays by the Booker Prize winning author of The God of Small Things, an examination of rising wealth disparity, corporate power, religious majoritarianism, cultural nationalism, neo-fascism, and an unaccountable judiciary, in India. Inscribed by the author in New Delhi in the year of publication. In recent decades Roy has been known at least as much for her writings and activities as a political and social activist as for her literary writing. She was awarded the Sydney Peace Prize in 2004, and her two most recent volumes prior to this one were both nonfiction. This is the first Indian edition. Fine in a fine dust jacket with a small (Indian) bookstore label at the lower edge of the rear panel. [#036574] $250
24.
(Democracy)
click for a larger image of item #36633, Democracy May Not Exist, But We'll Miss It When We're Gone NY, Metropolitan Books, (2019). Signed by the author, who is a Canadian-American documentary filmmaker ("What is Democracy?) and activist. Taylor tackles issues such as the decline of democracy and democracy's connection (or disconnection) to corporate wealth, financial inequality, freedom, inclusion, conflict, coercion, and environmental degradation. If democracy means rule by the people, what does it mean to rule and who counts as the people? Fine in a fine dust jacket, with blurbs by Rebecca Solnit and Naomi Klein, among others. [#036633] $200
26.
(Fascism)
click for a larger image of item #36634, Even My Own Brother Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill, (1942). The apparent dedication copy of this early novel of how an average American man devolved into fascism. From the New York Times review: "It is very likely that the next few years will bring us much fiction about the disease of fascism that is corroding so large a part of the green earth. A wave in the coming tide, albeit a small one, is this volume by John Burgan on the making of an American Fascist." This title's dedication reads: "This Book Is For Wanda." Below, it is inscribed by the author, "who is the only one who knows all that is in it and all that is not. With my love, Jack/ Sept. 7, 1942/ Washington D.C." John "Jack" Burgan was a "newspaperman" and magazine editor. Born in 1913, he married Wanda Smith in 1939 and died in a plane crash in 1951 at the age of 38. Offsetting to the endpages; a near fine copy in a good dust jacket with shallow edge chipping but fragile along the folds. The rear panel is fully dedicated to Burgan's own pitch for Americans to buy war bonds. A scarce wartime publication; 14 copies listed in OCLC, no other copies available online. [#036634] $375
27.
(Horror)
click for a larger image of item #36576, Goona-Goona Gore: The Third World Cannibal Films (n.p.), (n.p.), ca. 1989-1993. A treatise by Bissette on a cycle of 1970's-era Italian horror films featuring cannibalism in the Amazon, Malaysia, and New Guinea. 80+ pages of computer printout, tapebound in cardstock covers. The front cover has a hand-written suggested date ("1993?"), but page 74 is dated 1989. Bissette is well-known for his work on Saga of the Swamp Thing in the 1980s; publishing the horror anthology Taboo into the early 90s; and co-editing Comic Book Rebels with Stanley Wiater in 1993. Since 2005 he has edited and published the film journal Green Mountain Cinema, with this manuscript being indicative of his longtime interest and expertise in the field. Stamp of another writer inside the front cover; the covers are soiled and lightly scented (cologne?); very good; the pages of text are near fine. [#036576] $1,500
29.
click for a larger image of item #36635, The Water-Method Man NY, Random House, (1972). The uncorrected proof copy of Irving's second book. An uncommon proof, preceding his breakthrough novel, The World According to Garp, by six years and dating from a period when proofs were not commonly collected, so few likely survived. Spots and a small black mark on the half-title page; spots and some creasing to covers; very good in wrappers. This is the earliest John Irving proof we've seen; we've never seen a proof of his first book, Setting Free the Bears. His latest novel, Queen Esther, a sequel to perhaps his best-loved novel, The Cider House Rules, has just been published. [#036635] $750
37.
(Native American)
click for a larger image of item #36637, Joe Thornton Tahlequah, Cherokee Bilingual Education Program, 1972-1973. A brief (approximately 16 pages, including illustrations) biography of the world champion archer and inductee of the American Indian Athletic Hall of Fame. Signed by Thornton. Uncommon: we found no copies listed in OCLC. A simple, comb-bound production. Near fine. [#036637] $300
40.
(Native American)
click for a larger image of item #36587, Walking the Rez Road (Stillwater), Voyageur Press, (1993). A collection of poems and short fiction by a Chippewa writer. Inscribed by the author. Fine in a fine dust jacket. [#036587] $85
42.
(Native American)
click for a larger image of item #36589, Nightland (NY), Dutton, (1996). A supernatural crime thriller, his fourth book, and the winner of an American Book Award from the Before Columbus Foundation, which is a multiculturally-focused nonprofit. Other winners have included Tony Morrison, Leslie Marmon Silko, and Joy Harjo. Owens' other novels won a bevy of prizes, including the Roman Noir for The Sharpest Sight, France's equivalent of the Edgar Award. He began his writing career as a Steinbeck scholar. This novel is described as "blending the gut-wrenching realism of Robert Stone with the Native American magical vision of Tony Hillerman." Signed by the author. Fine in a fine dust jacket. Scarce signed: Owens died in 2002 at the age of 54. [#036589] $150
43.
(Native American)
click for a larger image of item #36590, Gardens in the Dunes (NY), Simon & Schuster, (1999). Her third novel, following Ceremony and Almanac of the Dead. Silko was one of the "first generation" of writers of the Native American Renaissance. Her novel Ceremony has become an enduring classic, part of the canon and a staple on high school and college multicultural reading lists. Signed by the author. Fine in a fine dust jacket. [#036590] $125
44.
(Nature)
click for a larger image of item #36519, Saving All the Parts: Reconciling Economics and the Endangered Species Act Washington, DC, Island Press, (1993). A measured look at the "jobs vs. the environment" discussions of the time. Signed by the author. Also warmly inscribed in a different pen, but likely in the same hand, as Barker's is the only signature. Near fine in a fine dust jacket. [#036519] $350
45.
(Nature)
click for a larger image of item #36638, William Bartram: Interpreter of the American Landscape Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Press, 1933. An early biography of Bartram, the naturalist, explorer, and writer, with particular attention paid to the influence of Bartram on literature (in America, this means Emerson, Thoreau, Thomas Holley Chivers, and Lafcadio Hearn). Fagin taught English at Johns Hopkins, and this copy is inscribed by the author: "To Professor Gilbert Chinard/ with grateful acknowledgments," in the year of publication. Chinard is also acknowledged in the book's Preface, "for first directing my attention to Bartram." A near fine copy in a very good dust jacket with a small stain at the front spine fold. Uncommon inscribed, and also in dust jacket. [#036638] $375
46.
(Nature)
click for a larger image of item #36591, America's Great Outdoors Chicago, J.G. Ferguson, (1976). An anthology of 200 years (1776-1976) of American outdoor writing and photography, featuring Bartram, Thoreau, Muir, Burroughs, Hornaday, Faulkner, Rawlings, Leopold, and nearly 100 others. Heavily illustrated with paintings and drawings in addition to photographs. This is the limited edition printed for the Outdoor Writer's Association of America. The colophon indicates this is copy No. 84 of 1000 copies bound in steerhide and with "OWAA" branded on the front cover. This copy is inscribed by the co-editor, Bashline, to Charles Kurault, of CBS's "On the Road" fame, in 1990, after Kurault spoke at the annual OWAA conference. Additionally, there's a letter laid in to Kurault from the Executive Director of OWAA, expressing praise and thanks. Note that the colophon was apparently filled in at the time of presentation, as it has been given the same date (6/29/90) as the letter. The letter also provides the information that, despite the colophon statement, only 105 copies of this edition were created, not 1000. The book also contains a fold-out sheet with the printed signatures of the 21 OWAA Officers and Board of Directors. A landmark collection, extremely scarce, and with a good association. Slight foxing to top of text block and slight shelfwear to the steerhide; still a fine copy, without dust jacket, as issued. [#036591] $1,500
47.
(Nature)
click for a larger image of item #36520, Behold Our Green Mansions Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, (1945). Boerker studied forestry at Dartmouth and Yale and received a Masters of Science in Forestry from the University of Michigan, going on to work for the U.S. Forest Service in California, Wyoming, and Colorado. This book argues for replacing the concept of "conservation" with "forest restoration for multiple use, with human welfare as the ultimate object." Signed by the author, "Yours, R.H.D. Boerker." Owner name and date (August 1945) written above. Illustrated with photographs. Foxing to endpapers and bump to spine base; a very good copy in a good dust jacket with wear at the spine ends and along the rear flap fold. A scarce, early publication on this subject, produced during wartime. Uncommon in the original edition or in jacket, let alone signed. [#036520] $500
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