Language: English
Published by Garden City Publishing
Seller: West Coast Bookseller, Moorpark, CA, U.S.A.
hardcover. Condition: Very Good.
Published by Garden City Publishing, 1924
Seller: Basement Seller 101, Cincinnati, OH, U.S.A.
hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Missing.
Published by Garden City Publishing, 1924
Seller: Readers Cove Used Books & Gallery, DEMING, NM, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Good. Tan boards, navy titling to spine. Solid binding, deckle front edge. Light shelf wear. Name and date written inside front cover. Text unmarked. DJ scuffed with small chips and tears to edges, now in mylar cover. Photos by H. A. Chase and the author. ; 8.20 X 5.50 X 1.25 inches; 408 pages.
Condition: New.
Published by London, Hutchinson & Co., No date (c.1950)., 1950
Seller: Inanna Rare Books Ltd., Skibbereen, CORK, Ireland
13 cm x 19 cm. 286 pages including illustrations. Original hardcover. Excellent condition withminor signs of external wear. Browning of paper, spotting of page-edges and endpapers. Otherwise clean inside with solid binding. Includes for example the following essays: From Oxford Student to Jungle Leade / Lawrence Escapes from the Kurds / Lawrence Joins the Arabs / Planning the Capture of a Turkish Stronghold / A Desert March to the Land of Auda Abu Tayi / Through King Solomon's Mountains to Akaba / A Night Ride Through a Desert Sandstorm / Across the Red Sea on a Tramp Steamer etc. "A wonderful quixotic tale of the dramatic adventures of T. E. Lawrence in the Arabian Peninsula in the nineteen teens and early twenties." (Amazon) Sprache: english.
Published by about 1930, 1930
Seller: Berkelouw Rare Books, Berrima, NSW, Australia
London: Hutchinson, n.d. (ab. 1930). Roy. 8vo. Orig. cloth. Dustjacket. (318pp.). With frontisp., and 64 other illusts. Some light foxing otherwise fine.
Published by 18 October ; on his letterhead Hammersley Hill Pawling New York, 1977
Manuscript / Paper Collectible
Thomas broadcast many of his programmes from the Hammersley Hill estate, overlooking the Catskills. 1p, foolscap 8vo. On cream paper with letterhead in green. In good condition, folded twice for postage. Thomas's bold signature, also in green, rises at an angle. Reads: 'Dear Mr. McCormick, / I've entirely forgotten. / If you know of an extra copy I would like to add it to my collection. / With best wishes. / Sincerely, / Lowell Thomas'.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. 1st Edition. First UK Edition (first printing), issued a year after the original American edition. 8vo. xiii, 317pp. Red cloth lettered and ruled in gold at the spine and with a blind-stamped double border to the upper board. With sixty-five captioned black and white photographs by Harry A. Chase. The backstrip cloth lightly faded, and the ends a little bruised. Just a trace of very light spotting to the fore- and bottom-edge, and to very occasional leaf margins. A very good copy. No dust wrapper. One of the earliest in-situ accounts of the Arab War and T.E.L.'s contribution to it (and now an uncommon item). Thomas (along with cameraman Harry Chase) met Lawrence in Jerusalem and the three spent several weeks together in the desert where they photographed and interviewed various Arab leaders, and shot dramatic footage of Lawrence that Thomas later used during his public lectures in the US and Britain to educate people on the war in Palestine. O'Brien E012.
Seller: Houle Rare Books/Autographs/ABAA/PADA, Palm Springs, CA, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. ("Lowell") in green fountain pen ink on his engraved Lowell Thomas, Hammersley Hill, Pawling, New York letterhead, June 20, 1963. 7 1/8" x 10 1/2"; 1 page; very good (minor signs of handling). To columnist Leonard Lyons Interesting letter commenting on the film "Lawrence of Arabia." In part: ".In recent years the Lawrence story has been fantastically distorted -- by people who had no first hand knowledge of the Arabian campaign. Together with a copy of a 2 page letter dated January 28, 1963, that Thomas had sent to T.E. Lawrence's brother Arnold W. Lawrence commenting in great detail on the film and why he thought most of it was fiction. Thomas (1892-1981), born April 6, 1892, Woodington, Ohio; died August 29, 1981, Pawling, New York; noted American author/radio and television commentator; made T.E. Lawrence famous with his book "With Lawrence of Arabia"; voice of Hearst Movietone News (1935-52); author of over 50 books; participated in 2 television series. Leonard Lyons (1906-1976), born September 10, 1906, New York, New York; died October 7, 1976, New York, New York; American journalist; Broadway syndicated column "The Lyons Den" was noted for good taste in reporting gossip; appeared as himself: "Daisy Kenyon" 1947 in the Stork Club; "Jigsaw" 1949 newspaper columnist; "Mr. Broadway" playing himself in episode "Keep an Eye on Emily" September 26, 1964.
Published by New York: Asia Publishing Company, 1919, 1919
Seller: Peter Harrington. ABA/ ILAB., London, United Kingdom
First Edition
The first appearances in print of the four articles by Lowell Thomas that launched T. E. Lawrence into the spotlight. They include some of the earliest photographs of Feisal, the Bedouins, and Lawrence himself, who met with Thomas regularly in 1919 to assist with the writing process. Lowell Thomas (1892-1981) was first introduced to Lawrence in 1918, when he travelled to Jerusalem to film the war in the Middle East. He was soon invited to Feisal's camp, where he shot film and images of Lawrence in Arab clothing. These would form the basis of his multimedia show With Allenby in Palestine and Lawrence in Arabia in 1919. This show was the beginning of Lawrence's rise to fame, running in New York, London, Australia, New Zealand, India, and Canada. Thomas continued to promote and publicize Lawrence, partly by writing many articles about his exploits. The earliest of these articles appeared in four issues of the 1919 volume of Asia: The American Magazine on the Orient. This present volume is a complete set of issues from that year. The four articles in question are Mr. Lowell Thomas (July, pp. 623-28), Thomas Lawrence, Prince of Mecca (September, pp. 818-29), With Lawrence and Feisal in Arabia (October, pp. 998-1016), and The Matinée Idol of Arabia (December, pp. 1205-13). Thomas writes about his time filming and shooting Lawrence, including many anecdotes and stories that would go on to make this officer "one of the most romantic figures of the war" (p. 820). The articles are richly illustrated with half-tone photographic illustrations of Feisal, the Bedouins, battlefields, and many shots of Lawrence himself. This includes the famous image of Lawrence, Hogarth, and Dawnay in Cairo in 1918 (p. 1209). O'Brien G0012. 12 issues bound in one, large octavo (304 x 215 mm). Illustrations in text. Contemporary brown cloth library binding, spine lettered in gilt and brown, ruled in gilt, binder's ticket to front pastedown of "Wagerwood & Co". Numerous accession and withdrawal stamps in purple or blind of "The Public Library, Ann Arbor, Mich." to each issue. Extremities lightly rubbed and bumped, rear cover slightly scratched, Lawrence articles bright: a very good collection.