
The Accidental Bookseller
Specializing in Interesting and Uncommon Books in Unusually Nice Condition
Membership(s): IOBA, FABA
We have a small, select stock with focus areas in signed books; modern first editions & poetry; economics; American history; and scholarly books. We are located in Boca Raton, South Florida. If you're local or visiting, feel free to make an appointment to view our inventory in person.
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Hawkes, John (Author); Solien, T. L. (Artist).
Innocence in Extremis
$500.00New York: The Grenfell Press, 1985. From the colophon: “118 copies have been printed & published at The Grenfell Press, New York City, in spring/summer 1985. Copies numbered 1-85 are printed on Saunders paper and bound in quarter morocco with the covers and frontispiece by T. L. Solien. Roman numeral copies I-XV are bound in full morocco hand-colored by the artist and contain a frontispiece. Lettered copies A-R are for the author and artist. Bindings are by Claudia Cohen; Michael Bixler has set the text in Dante. Each copy has been signed by John Hawkes and T. L. Solien.” Copy XIII of the Roman numeral edition. T. L. Solien’s work has been the subject of numerous exhibitions across the country and is included in public and private collections around the world. Selected collections include: Metropolitan Museum of Art, Whitney Museum of American Art; Smithsonian American Art Museum; Art Institute of Chicago; Milwaukee Art Museum; Madison Museum of Contemporary Art; Minneapolis Institute of Art; Tate Gallery, London; National Gallery of Australia; Singapore Art Museum, among others. (source: Tory Folliard Gallery). Near fine, slight uneven tanning to boards, small and shallow abrasion to rear cover. In publisher’s plexiglass slipcase, one seam split as appears to be common to be this title, small chip and a couple of cracks, neither affecting the case’s integrity. less
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Peterkin, Julia
Black April
$800.00Bobbs Merrill: Indianapolis, 1927. First edition, first issue with ‘ducks quacked’ on page 17 (Ahearn Collected Books). “An extraordinary novel of Negro life on an isolated plantation” signed by the author on front free endpaper. Black April was “accepted by the critics as being one of the best books ever written about the southern negro” (The Sunday Oregonian). A very good copy, gilt on spine and front cover dulled as usual in very good, first issue dust wrapper without Crawford blurb, price intact, extremities of spine a little chipped, one small edge tear to rear. Peterkin went on to win the Pulitzer Prize in 1929, the first southern novelist to receive that honor. A household name for the better part of three decades, “Peterkin’s accomplishment lay in her upending the traditional plantation novel by replacing its gross stereotypes with rural black southerners of complexity, stamina, integrity, and courage, while valorizing the African spiritual inheritance as a transcendent force of cultural regeneration. Because no Uncle Toms, Aunt Jemimas or Colonels clad in white linen inhabited Peterkin’s fiction (indeed, white characters made rare appearances), and because she dared depict tender love and sex between black people, prickly white southerners viewed her suspiciously, perceiving her work as inflammatory and pornographic. In a letter to her mentor H.L. Mencken, Peterkin admitted the sting of her own family’s disdain. Her grown son, she relayed, urged her to write about ‘beautiful white men and women, not n-words.’ In a poignant confession of her alienation she tersely wrote, ‘No beautiful white people live in my head.'” (Life out of Darkness: The Recovery of Julia Peterkin, Forgotten Pulitzer Prize Winner by Elizabeth Robeson, M.Phil, Columbia University). less
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Alexievich, Svetlana
Second-Hand Time. The Last of the Soviets
$800.00London: Fitzcarraldo Editions, 2016. First UK edition. A paperbound original. Signed to the title page by the author, the winner of the 2015 Nobel Prize in Literature, and dated in the latinate style as is her wont. Not to be confused with the 2024 Fitzcarraldo edition, limited to 1000 copies signed on a bookplate. Few small finger smudges, else fine in wrappers. less
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Ishiguro, Kazuo
The Remains of the Day
$3,500.00Faber & Faber: London, 1989. First Edition. Lovely copy of this Booker Prize winning novel, the third from future Nobel Prize for Literature winner, basis for movie of same name starring Anthony Hopkins and Emma Thompson. Boldly signed by the author to title page. Accompanied by a bookmark promoting upcoming Booker Prize announcement, also signed by Ishiguro. Author’s signature has changed over time, and this example as well as the bookmark appear to be contemporaneous with the novel’s publication. Very scarce and desirable thus. A fine copy in fine dust wrapper. less
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McBratney, Sam & Jeram, Anita
Guess How Much I Love You
$1,500.00New York: Candlewick Press, 1996. Early reprint. Inscribed to “Bean”, signed and dated by author McBratney, signed by illustrator Jeram and with an original drawing by her titled “Jumping Bean”. A publishing phenomenon from the start, as of its 25th anniversary in 2019, the book had sold more than 43 million copies worldwide in 57 languages. A near fine copy in like dust wrapper. Signed copies are scarce indeed and especially desirable with the original drawing. less
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Burroughs, William S.
Port of Saints
$1,200.00Covent Garden Press/Am Here Books: London/Ollon (Switzerland). Dated 1973 though not issued until 1975 due to paper supply shortage. The true first and only edition with this text. A revised edition was issued by Blue Wind Press in 1980. Only 200 copies printed, 100 numbered and signed, the remainder unsigned. This is one of the 100 unsigned copies which has been subsequently signed by Burroughs on the title page. A not terribly well made book, this is a nice near fine copy, boards slightly dust soiled, in a near fine example of the fragile dust wrapper, a bit rubbed to the extremities. One of the scarcer publications in the Burroughs canon. less
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Baskin, Leonard. Hatch, Benton L (comp.)
A Checklist of the Publications of Thomas Bird Mosher of Portland Maine: MDCCCXCI-MDCCCCXXIII
$275.00Northampton, MA: The Gehenna Press, 1966. Limited edition, one of 500 Copies, printed on Fabriano Paper in Monotype Van Dijck. Illustrated with 19 Mounted Letter Press Facsimiles of Title pages in Red and Black on Paper closely Simulating those used by Mosher. This is the printer’s copy, inscribed by Baskin and presented to Stanley Clifford “with the affection of” Leonard Baskin, dated 1967. Clifford started as a hand leather bookbinder at Bennett Book Studio in Manhattan. He came to be respected as one of the finest craftsmen practicing this trade, a reputation that allowed work to follow him to Deer Isle, ME where he and fellow islander Leonard Baskin became close friends, attracted by a mutual interest in the book arts. Ironically, an unbound copy in 20 signatures. Some staining to rear page and signature spines. less
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Frost, Robert
Selected Poems
$1,200.00New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1923. First Edition. A very good copy with cloth-backed green patterned boards, erasable pencil writing to rear free endpaper, tight other than a little gingerness to the hinge in the middle of the book, corners rubbed (one scuffed) and curling inward in a very good unclipped dust wrapper, lightly chipped, spine toned, small tear to side of front flap. First printings in dust wrapper are scarce with only three appearing in auction since 2000. less
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Brewer, David J.
The 20th Century from Another Viewpoint
$300.00New York: Fleming H. Revell Company, 1899. Though inscribed on the front paste down to the author’s cousin, comparison to Brewer’s letters from the same period indicates that the inscription is not in the Supreme Court Justice’s hand. More likely, it was signed by Brewer’s secretary, and we have seen other copies similarly inscribed. Justice Brewer served on the U.S. Supreme Court from 1889 to 1910. As an intellectual leader of the court presided over by Chief Justice Melville W. Fuller – a court that has been seen as reactionary, determined to infuse the law with social Darwinism and laissez-faire ideology – Brewer has traditionally been viewed negatively by most scholars. “History has not been kind to David Brewer”, commented legal scholar Owen M. Fiss, going on to later say that ”[h]e has faded into obscurity, in part because some of his colleagues—Field, Harlan, and Holmes—were figures of great prominence.” More recently, however, Brewer’s reputation as a reactionary has been reconsidered. While accepting that “Brewer can fairly be labeled a conservative”, the legal scholar J. Gordon Hylton wrote in 1994 that “to say that he was a self-conscious defender of the interests of corporate America or an enthusiastic disciple of laissez-faire is both unfair and inaccurate” Further, Brewer’s biographer Michael J. Brodhead maintains that Brewer accepted most of his generation’s reform goals. He championed many forms of social legislation, the regulation of business, the rights of women and minorities, the support of charities, educational reform, and world peace. During his term, Brewer was the author of such notable court opinions as In re Debs, Muller v. Oregon, and Kansas v. Colorado. He supported property rights, admired honest entrepreneurial activity, and opposed the concentration of power in any form. Brewer favored the individual in all instances, whether that individual was the initiator of a great economic enterprise or a farmer struggling to extend agriculture into the western plains. Brodhead concluded his biography of Brewer by writing that he “deserves to be remembered as an important figure of a much misunderstood period in the judicial history of the United States”. Thin volume in very good condition with two small abrasions to front cover and minimal rubbing to board edges. less
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Frankfurter, Felix
Address by Associate Justice Felix Frankfurter at the Inauguration of Dr. Harry N. Wright, Sixth President of the City College
$400.00City College of the College of the City of New York. n.d. (1942). Frankfurter’s address on September 30, 1942 at the inauguration of the president of City College of New York (Frankfurter graduated from CCNY in 1902). 16 unnumbered pages in wrappers. Warmly inscribed to Dr. Thomas “TJ” Jones: “Dear T. J.;This owes more to you than it reveals — and it goes with the cordial good wishes; regards of Felix Frankfurter” Jones was a British civil servant and educationalist, once described as “one of the six most important men in Europe”. First appointed as assistant secretary (later Deputy Secretary) to the Cabinet in December 1916 by David Lloyd George, Jones served as Deputy Secretary to the Cabinet for nearly twenty years and under four different Prime Ministers. He was much involved in the negotiations which led to the celebrated Anglo-Irish treaty of 1921 and the industrial troubles of the 1920s which culminated in the General Strike of May 1926. Jones also accompanied Lloyd George on his famous visit to Hitler in 1936 and was one of the founders of the Gregynog Press in 1923. A scarce publication even unsigned: OCLC lists only four copies. Wrappers unevenly toned, consistent wear to yapped edges. Overall very good. less
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Scalia, Antonin and Garner, Bryan A.
Making Your Case
$1,250.00St Paul, MN: Thomson/West, 2008. First edition. Signed by Scalia as “Nino” and inscribed “with respect and affection” for Henry Abraham. Nino is the nickname Scalia acquired early in life, partly in remembrance of his grandfather, for whom he was named, and is how he was known to close friends. The recipient is almost undoubtedly Henry J. Abraham, University of Virginia Law Professor, scholar on the judiciary and constitutional law, and friend to Scalia (as well as Justices Brennan, Powell, and Ginsberg). In his honor, Professor Abraham’s former students and colleagues established the Abraham Distinguished Lecture Series at UVA Law School in 1997. Scalia was the 2010 Abraham Lecturer. A fine copy in similarly fine, unclipped dust wrapper. Association copies with Scalia’s signature are uncommon indeed. less
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Hunt, John
The Ascent Of Everest
$1,200.00London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1953. First edition. Signed by the author, the expedition leader of the first successful British team to reach Mount Everest’s peak. In a designer mountain-themed binding from Jane Francis of the Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts (U.K.) in dual blue Oasis morocco and alum tawed pigskin with foil tooling. Exhibited at the 1969 Thomas Harrison Craft Bookbinding Memorial Competition. Accompanied by exhibition pamphlet and Miss Francis’ invitation to the event. Prelims lightly foxed, spine a little faded, some tanning to the pigskin. Very good or better in custom slipcase with uneven fading. less
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