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  • Seller image for James Bond in World and Popular Culture: The Films are Not Enough (first edition) for sale by Medium Rare Books

    Weiner, Robert G. & B. Lynn Whitfield & Jack Becker (editors)

    Published by Cambridge Scholars Press, Newcastle, 2010

    Seller: Medium Rare Books, Mountainside, NJ, U.S.A.

    Association Member: IOBA

    Seller rating 5 out of 5 stars 5-star rating, Learn more about seller ratings

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    First Edition

    £ 618.87

    £ 7.52 shipping
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    Quantity: 1 available

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    Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Cambridge Scholars Press. Newcastle. 2010. 503 pages. First Edition; first printing. Book is exceptionally tight. Black cloth boards are bright and clean. Endpapers are clean and bright. Binding and hinges are strong. Pages lay tight and undisturbed; seemingly unread. The only flaw keeping book from as-new is a tiny ink dot on top page edges; and previous owner's initials written in orange marker on bottom page edges. Original DJ is bright and fine. A tiny closed edge nick (tiny) on upper rear DJ edge. A scholarly take on all things James Bond in nearly 40 chapters over 500 pages. A cult-classic one-off thanks to its unique examination of the most famous literary character ever created; in a tiny print run making the First Edition highly collectible thanks to its rarity. Near Fine/Fine.

  • Seller image for Face to Face: Twelve American Wood Engravers (Twelve Contemporary Artists Interpret Themselves in a Limited Edition of Original Wood Engravings) for sale by Ken Sanders Rare Books, ABAA

    Prints. Condition: Near Fine. Folio [39 cm] Two suites of loose prints (the suites are issued in two states). 13 prints printed on white paper, 12 of which are signed; 13 prints printed on cream-colored paper, 12 of which are signed. The images on the cream-colored paper are the same as the images on the white paper, the only difference being the paper. The 13th print in each suite is by Lynd Ward, which are not signed, as he passed away in June of 1985, just before the project was completed. *Does not contain the introduction by Leonard Baskin or the descriptive letterpress text.*. With signed self-portraits by the following artists: -Fred Becker (1913-2004). Born in Oakland, California, and active in St. Louis, Missouri and New England. -Jack Coughlin (b. 1932). Born in Greenwich, Connecticut. He studied at the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence and the Art Students League of New York. He is most known for his portrait wood engravings, etchings, and lithographs of literary figures and musicians. (Information obtained from Brier Hill Gallery, Boston, MA). -John DePol (1913-2004). A New York printmaker and wood engraver. His press was Endgrain Press. -Fritz Eichenberg (1901-1990). A German/American artist. Considered a master of wood engraving. Eichenberg's first big commissions came with Crime and Punishment and Gulliver's Travels for the Limited Editions Club. His images often depict suffering and poverty. His positions included director of Graphic Arts Center in Brooklyn and a teacher of Graphics at New York's Pratt Institute. (Westmont Ridley-Tree Museum of Art) -Raymond Gloeckler (1928-2022). Born in Portage, Wisconsin. While still a student, he taught art, via a government program, in rural schools. Later, he was employed as a professor at UW-Madison between 1961-1993. "Gloeckler is known for his highly detailed caricatures, and bold, expressive, satire and commentary. His prints and paintings comment on humanity's follies and foibles in a unique light-hearted style defying art world trends." - Gallery of Wisconsin Art -James Grashow (b. 1942). An American sculptor and woodcut artist. "James Grashow was born in Brooklyn in 1942 and has been creating works that address themes of man, nature and mortality since the 1960's" "The scale of his work ranges from large environmental installations, through which the viewer traverses, to the delicate and contained world of his houseplants, where homes and buildings replace flowers and buds in intricately constructed bouquets." - The artist's website -Judith Jaidinger (b. 1941). One of the two female artists represented here. Born in Chicago, Illinois. "Judith Jaidinger's obsession with cutting began in her 1960s student days at the School of the Art Institute, and is linked to her equally long, frankly sensuous relationship with boxwood. She was introduced to both in an engraving class taught by British-born print-master Adrian Troy. "At the same time, printing industry technology had moved on, supplanting woodblock engravings with line drawings and photography. 'A dying art,' Jaidinger says. It was also a seriously slumping industry. But in the 1960s in Chicago, hub of an enormous catalog business, there were still a few commercial wood-engraving establishments turning out the precise, detailed images more typical of the previous century. One of them, Sander Wood Engraving, on Dearborn Street, was where Professor Troy, a committed modernist, sent his students to buy the best material: rare, English-grown, boxwood blocks. "'He warned us,' Jaidinger recalls, 'If you go to Sander and buy your wood from them, don't look at what those engravers are doing. I don't want you to be influenced by them.' "That made it irresistible." - Reader- Chicago's alternative nonprofit newsroom -Stefan Martin (1936-1994). Born in Elgin, Illinois, and a graduate of the Art Institute of Chicago. He was also active in Roosevelt, New Jersey. His work is held in private museums and collections throughout the world, including th.