Description:
First editions. Each title limited to 750 copies ; the present examples on Vélin de Rives (n° 727, 597, 727, 376, 377 and 657). Six titles, 76,101,79,136,76142 pp., comprising a complete set of the publisher's series of novellas by and about women. 8vo. Very good. Uniform original pastel wrappers ; the set is housed in a custom peach boards enclosure with gilt embossed spine. [1480] I. Paul Morand - L'innocente à Paris ou la jolie fille de Perth (1927) ; II. Jean Giraudoux - La grande bourgeoise ou toute femme à la vocation (1928) ; III. Joseph Kessel - La Femme de maison ou Mariette au désert (1928) ; IV. Henri de Régnier - Lui ou les femmes et l'amour (1928) ; V. Colette - Sido ou les points cardinaux (1929) ; VI. I. Nemirovsky - Les Mouches d'automne ou la femme d'autrefois (1931). The titles individually are scarce -- complete sets in such good condition are rare.
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Femmes I-VI (all published)
by Paul Morand - Jean Giraudoux- Joseph Kessel - Henri de Régnier - Colette - I. Nemirovsky
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Brooklyn, New York, United States
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Black Power / Burn Baby Burn. Watts, Harlem, Chicago, Cleveland, Newark, Detroit. Where Next?
by [Wooden nickel]
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Brooklyn, New York, United States
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Wooden token printed in red ink on one side ("Burn Baby Burn") and black on the other ("Black Power.") Approx. 1.5 in. diameter, and 0.125 in. thick (38 mm diameter ; 3.2 mm thickness.) Very good. Loose as issued. [1413]A remarkable novelty item presenting the image of a black hand crushing a frail-looking Uncle Sam figure on one side, with an image of a burning urban skyline on the other. First popularized in the 1930s, "wooden nickels" were often used by local banks or merchants in connection with a promotion for products or services. In this case, the item serves as a form of currency designed to transmit a potent but compact expression of Black anger. While undated, this wooden nickel was likely produced during the late 1960s, when the cities named on the coin's face experienced uprisings that threatened the white establishment with retribution for racist harrassment of Black citizens. The work also resonnates with the popular folk adage cautioning people against accepting false promises, i.e.… Read More
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