Product Type
Condition
Binding
Collectible Attributes
Seller Location
Seller Rating
Published by (no publisher), Cambridge, 1966
Seller: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, U.S.A.
First Edition
Softcover. Condition: Near Fine. Magazine. Octavo. 60pp. Rubbed illustrated wrappers near fine. Errata slip and order form laid in. Contributions by Daniel Hoffman, Robert Bly, Galway Kinnell, Edward Dorn, Gael Turnbull, David Chaloner, Norman Paxton, Jeremy Hilton, Jan Sutch, Peter Roche, Emilie Glen, Djelloul Mabrouk, Robert Lincoln, Louie Gluck, George Quasha, Harold Dicker, Daniel Zimmerman, Eric Sellin, John Heureux, Douglas Blazek, Robert David Cohen, William Collins, Charles Wyatt, Mike Haywood, Henry Graham, and Robert Palmer.
Published by (no publisher), Cambridge, 1966
Seller: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, U.S.A.
First Edition
Softcover. Condition: Near Fine. Magazine. Octavo. 60pp. Rubbed illustrated wrappers near fine. Errata slip and order form laid in. Literary magazine Signed by Daniel Hoffman, the 22nd U.S. Poet Laureate, by his untitled poem in which he has written at the top (presumably the final title): "First Flight." Other contributors include Hoffman, Robert Bly, Galway Kinnell, Edward Dorn, Gael Turnbull, David Chaloner, Norman Paxton, Jeremy Hilton, Jan Sutch, Peter Roche, Emilie Glen, Djelloul Mabrouk, Robert Lincoln, Louie Gluck, George Quasha, Harold Dicker, Daniel Zimmerman, Eric Sellin, John Heureux, Douglas Blazek, Robert David Cohen, William Collins, Charles Wyatt, Mike Haywood, Henry Graham, and Robert Palmer.
Published by Chicago: The Chicago Press, 1972
Seller: Philip Smith, Bookseller, Berkeley, CA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. 1st edition. VG+. Folio, 52 leaves (printed one-side), printed wrappers. Fifth issue of this important early seventies mimeo poetry magazine edited by Alice Notley. Includes work from a range of prominent contributors. Unmarked copy, light toning and soil to wrappers. Not Signed.
Published by Stuart Mills February 1966, Nottingham, 1966
Seller: William Allen Word & Image, London, United Kingdom
First Edition
Condition: Fine. Poetry 66 programme, published by Stuart Mills, Nottingham, 1966. 255 x 104mm (folded). Folding card screen-printed in dark grey on grey card. Contains the list of participating poets and the programmes for the two days of the festival across Albert Hall (London) and Midland Group Gallery (Nottingham) 18th and 19th of February 1966. Both days were organised by the Trent Bookshop, Nottingham (home of Tarasque Press). Features poem by Ian Hamilton Finlay which was also published in Extra Verse,1965. The poem effectively explains that Finlay can not make the event (in fact due to agrophobia). The poem is also seen in Ian Hamilton Finlay Selections, ed. Alec Finlay p.132 (last poem featured in Early Writings section). Rare. Condition: fine.
Published by Alan Swallow for the Inter American University, San German, Puerto Rico, 1960
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. Printed wraps. Covers show some light general age; a bit of wear at spine ends; front cover has a small spot of soiling near the fore-edge and a received date (Aug 17 1960) is rubber-stamped along the top edge. Interior is clean and unmarked. Original order form tipped in at rear. Cover art by Man Ray. Two plates with full-page illustrations of art by Man Ray and Jaime Carrero. 189 pages. Placed in an archival mylar sleeve. The first issue of Between Worlds, an international review of poetry, prose and art, with contributions from many Beats. Contributors include Henry Miller, William Burroughs, Edward Abbey, Gregory Corso, Gary Snyder, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, David Ignatow, Philip Whalen, Man Ray, Harold Norse, Alfred Perles, Herbert Read, Marcel Duchamp, Malcolm Cowley, and many others. Only two subsequent issues were published: Vol. 1, No. 2 and Vol. 2, No. 1. Between Worlds was edited by Dr. Gilbert Neiman (1912-1977). Henry Miller lived with the Neimans in Los Angeles in 1942 and later, Neiman would write his doctoral dissertation on Miller, earning his Ph.D. at the University of New Mexico ('59). While at UNM, he befriended Edward Abbey, one of his classmates. In 1960, he became the Director of the Creative Writing Program at the Inter American University in Puerto Rico and from 1963 on, was Professor of English at Clarion State College, Clarion, Pennsylvania.
Published by Clayton Eshleman, New York
Seller: Tony Power, Books, North Vancouver, BC, Canada
Book First Edition
Original Wraps. Condition: Near Fine. First Edition. Near fine -- illus. wraps. 14 issues in 11 volumes published between 1968 and 1972. #3/4, 5, 6, 7, 8/9, 10, 11, 12, 15/16, 17, 19. A substantial broken run (14 of the 20 total issues) of this important '60s poetry magazine, edited by Clayton Eshleman. Issues feature numerous New American poets; #12 is devoted to Jack Spicer.
Published by Brooklyn, NY, 1960 through 1964. [1960]. [1960]., 1960
Seller: Blue Mountain Books & Manuscripts, Ltd., Cadyville, NY, U.S.A.
Condition: Very good. - Five issues comprised of four octavo sized volumes and one small quarto sized volume. Each issues is bound in stapled wrappers. The covers of each are slightly soiled and rubbed with minor creasing to the edges. 28 pages & [1] leaf; 28 pages; 32 pages; 44 pages; and 44 pages, respectively. The first issue, bound in black & white pictorial wraps and printed on white and tan paper is illustrated with a section of 4 plates illustrating "four drawings" by "amy mendelson". That issue is printed by "Orion Press & Publishing Co." with the firm's device illustrating the last leaf. The text block of this first issue is intact although detached from the covers and the left edges of the pages are stained by rust from the staples. Issues two through five are in very good condition with only minor creases internally. As issued and usually found, 4 lines of the Theodore Enslin poem in Trobar 5 have been blacked out with a marker. A complete run of 5 issues of this literary periodical edited by Robert Kelly with Joan Kelly and George Economu."Trobar" is the Provencal counterpart of the French "trouver" (to find). It is the root of "troubadour", the poet who expresses himself through song.This periodical which gave birth to the "deep image movement" includes contributions by Robert Duncan, David Antin, Robert Creeley, Robert Kelly, Louis Zukofsky, Gary Snyder, Anselm Hollo, Ed Dorn, Jackson Mac Low, Paul Blackburn, Diane Wakoski, Clayton Eshelman, LeRoi Jones, Philip Lamantia, among others.Robert Kelly's "Notes on the Poetry of Deep Image" is first published on page 14 of the second issue of this periodical. The theme is taken up again by Jerome Rothenberg in the third issue with an essay entitled "Why Deep Image?".