THE HEMINGWAY WOMEN: Those Who Loved Him -- The Wives and Others.
New York: W. W. Norton & Co., (1983). First edition. SIGNED and dated 1983 by the author. Minute foxing on page edges, otherwise near fine in dust jacket. Item #49745 More
New York: W. W. Norton & Co., (1983). First edition. SIGNED and dated 1983 by the author. Minute foxing on page edges, otherwise near fine in dust jacket. Item #49745 More
New York: Pierre Matisse Gallery, no-date [1934]. First edition. Catalog for the exhibition of Quintanilla's dry points held at the Pierre Matisse Gallery, November 20 to December 4. Single sheet folded twice to make six pages; measuring approximately 6 1/8 x 9 3/8" when folded. Hemingway's essay covers two pages..... Item #54902 More
HemingwayE.pdf. Item #22817 More
London: Collins, 1968. First UK edition. Covers his reporting from 1920 to 1956. Edited by William White and with commentaries by Philip Young. Uncorrected proof, red paperwraps, printed label on front with hand-written publication information (price and "Now [underlined]/ probably end Jan/68]). Very good or better with thin area of..... Item #41039 More
New York: Scribner's Sons, 1929. First edition. One of Hemingway's most influential works. Second issue with publisher's seal on copyright page and disclaimer present. Very good with light touch up to rubbed areas of spine label but otherwise only mild wear. Lacking the dust jacket. Item #72746 More
Ada, OH: Ohio Northern Univ. 1990. First edition. Volume IX, No. 2, Spring 1990. Includes two previously unpublished short stories by Hemingway [Philip Haines was a Writer...] An untitled holograph text edited by Donald Junkins from the manuscript, and "A Lack of Passion." The original manuscripts are also reproduced in..... Item #55183 More
New York: Scribner's Sons, (1972). First edition. Twenty-four stories, including eight previously unpublished ones. Near fine in very good or better dust jacket with touch of rubbing, few inconspicuous tears, and narrow chip to base of rear flap fold. Item #72047 More
New York: Scribner's Sons, 1926. First edition. First issue with 3 p's in "stoppped" page 181, line 26. Front and spine labels slightly darkened and showing few nicks and rubs, spine a little shaken, cloth at spine a touch dulled and lightly worn at ends, and offset to half-title and..... Item #72431 More
New York: Scribner's Sons, 1933. First edition. His third collection of stories, fourteen in total with nine being published for the first time. About very good with spine ends bumped, spine ends and corners lightly rubbed, gold spine label somewhat dulled and a little askew but label on front still..... Item #51885 More
New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1933. First edition. His third collection of stories, fourteen in total with nine being published for the first time. The book itself is fine with the gold labels bright and the barest wear, in black dust jacket with minor chipping on corners and bottom of..... Item #55184 More
New York: Scribner's Sons, 1933. First edition. His third collection of stories, fourteen in total with nine being published for the first time. Good only with boards exposed at corners and upper front cover, old damp stains affecting red top edge stain which has bled slightly onto upper margins, labels..... Item #72735 More
Wellesly Hills: Sans Souci Press, (1978). First edition. Number 107 of 200 numbered copies (also 26 lettered and 73 hors-commerce. Introduction by William Young who "discovered" the manuscript at auction in 1977. First publication of Hemingway's apparent 1921 collaboration with Musselman who used Morris McNeil as his pen name. This..... Item #54705 More
Sacramento: Meeker Publications, 1999. First edition. Number 53 of 474 numbered copies from a total edition of 500. The first separate printing of Hemingway's article which first appeared in the March 1930 issue of Fortune Magazine. Foreword by Conrad, who notes that the article was written as Hemingway commenced research..... Item #54704 More
circa 1947. First edition. "Peck...Bennett...Hemingway...only all three together could create this electric love story...with a vengeance!" Original color print ad for the Zoltan Korda-directed movie based on Hemingway's 1936 short story "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber." Approximately 10.25 x 14". Fine. Item #71616 More