
The Accidental Bookseller
Specializing in Interesting and Uncommon Books in Unusually Nice Condition
Membership(s): IOBA, FABA
Hunt, John
The Ascent Of Everest
$1,200.00
Hunt, John
London: 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.
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George, Henry
The Condition Of Labor: An Open Letter To Pope Leo XIII, with Encyclical Letter of Pope Leo XIII on the Condition of Labor.
$500.00United States Book Company, New York, 1891. First edition, seemingly issued simultaneously in cloth and wrappers, this is the scarce cloth edition. Signed by the author without personalization adding “regards”. Recipient’s small note below signature indicating receipt date. In this book, Henry addresses the issue of labor conditions in the late 19th century, particularly in the United States. He argues that the capitalist system is inherently flawed and that it leads to the exploitation of workers. Henry presents a detailed analysis of the economic and social factors that contribute to the poor conditions of labor and offers solutions to improve the situation. The book is written in the form of an open letter to Pope Leo XIII, who had recently published an encyclical on the issue of labor. Henry’s letter is a passionate plea to the Pope to use his influence to bring about change and to advocate for the rights of workers Some gingerness to the hinge in middle of the book, spine tips scuffed, corners rubbed. Very good. less
moreOffered for Sale by: The Redbridge Book Co. -
Fogel, Robert & Engerman, Stanley
Time on the Cross: The Economics of American Negro Slavery
$450.00Little, Brown and Company: Boston, 1974. First edition. Signed and dated by Fogel with a warm inscription to Henry Rosovsky, economist and academic administrator who served as dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences of Harvard University. Rosovsky is among a large group of scholars cited in the book’s Acknowledgments who contributed to the development of the book. The date of the inscription precedes by several weeks the New York Times’ review of the book. Fogel went on to win the 1993 Nobel Prize for Economics for “having renewed research in economic history by applying economic theory and quantitative methods in order to explain economic and institutional change,” according to the Nobel citation. In the biography Fogel wrote for the Nobel, he acknowledges Rosovsky for providing research assistants, a computer programmer, and the computer time needed to conduct his research while at Harvard in the late 1970s. This groundbreaking book reexamined the economic foundations of American slavery, marking “the start of a new period of slavery scholarship and some searching revisions of a national tradition” (C. Vann Woodward, New York Review of Books). The book generated somewhat of a firestorm of media coverage when it was first published due to its controversial hypothesis: that slavery was a highly efficient, profitable enterprise, that the South was generally flourishing economically on the eve of the Civil War, that the slaves were treated reasonably well, and that they had a standard of living compared favorably with many northern white industrial workers. “It is a rare monograph in economic history that gets reviewed in magazines and newspapers such as Newsweek, Time, The Atlantic Monthly, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post among others; or whose authors appear on television talk shows. Robert Fogel and Stanley Engerman’s Time on the Cross was one such book — perhaps the only one.” A near fine copy in a very good dust wrapper owing to a tear on the rear panel. less
moreOffered for Sale by: Founding Lines -
Masters, William H.; Virginia E. Johnson
Human Sexual Response
$2,000.00Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1966. First Edition of the co-authors’ first book. Inscribed “with compliments” and signed by both Masters and Johnson. An uncommonly nice copy, externally fine, binding slightly cocked, edges of text block lightly foxed (not affecting internal text), slight tinge of offsetting from front flap, in a fine dust wrapper save for some light edge wear. “After many years of secretly documenting how the human body responds during sex—and coming up with remarkably effective treatments for their patients—Masters and Johnson became suddenly famous with the publication of their first landmark book. In a real sense, Masters and Johnson symbolized the triumph of modernity and medicine over religious taboos and cultural ignorance. Their “facts of life” felt far more definitive than ancient religious screeds or even Freud’s theories. Sex had left the church and entered the clinic. Instead of consulting with black-clad ministers or rabbis, Americans would rely on doctors in crisp white. At great risk to their livelihoods and reputations Masters and Johnson provided men and, particularly, women with the freedom and fundamental knowledge to make vital choices in their relationships, while highlighting medicine’s position at the forefront of social debates about human sexuality.” (The Real ‘Masters of Sex’: LIFE With Masters and Johnson; Time Magazine; July 9th, 2014) less
moreOffered for Sale by: The Redbridge Book Co.