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Published by Vintage Motorsport Publication, 1994
Seller: Zubal-Books, Since 1961, Cleveland, OH, U.S.A.
Condition: Very Good. *Price HAS BEEN REDUCED by 10% until Monday, May 20 (sale item)* 194 pp., Paperback, very good. - If you are reading this, this item is actually (physically) in our stock and ready for shipment once ordered. We are not bookjackers. Buyer is responsible for any additional duties, taxes, or fees required by recipient's country.
Published by Vintage Motorsport Publication
Seller: Koster's Collectible Books, Farmingville, NY, U.S.A.
Condition: Very Good+, No Dust Jacket. 1994. 4TO, 194 pgs., Color Photos, Paperback Softcover:Glossy color illustrated paper stock covers and text pages are crisp and clean. Utilizing the best images available, here are famous races, vintage cars, important drivers. This photographic retrospective shows them all.no jaunty angles.no dayglo graphics just stunning, in focus color photos for 1994. Advertising pages. Nice tight binding.
Published by Vintage Motorsport, Lakeland, FL, 1990
Seller: Ray Boas, Bookseller - Established 1980, Walpole, NH, U.S.A.
PB. Condition: fine, wraps (softcover). B&W and color illustrations (illustrator). 98pp.
Published by Vintage Motorsport, 1993
Seller: Mom's Resale and Books, River Hills, WI, U.S.A.
Book
Paperback. Condition: As New. 1993 Soft Cover Edition. Very light shelf wear to cover.
Published by Vintage Motorsport, Lakeland, FL, 1989
Seller: Ray Boas, Bookseller - Established 1980, Walpole, NH, U.S.A.
PB. Condition: very good+, wraps (softcover). B&W and color illustrations (illustrator). 98pp.
Published by The Masses Publishing Co, New York, 1916
Seller: Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA, Winchester, VA, U.S.A.
First Edition
First Edition. Large quarto (35cm); pictorial wrappers, stapled; 34pp; illus. Two very faint vertical bends, a few tiny tears to wrapper extremities, else an uncharacteristically fresh, very Near Fine copy. Contents include contributions by Max Eastman, Louis Untermeyer, John Reed, Austin Lewis, Sara Bard Field, and others. Illustrations throughout by Art Young, Arthur B. Davies, K.R. Chamberlain, Elias Goldberg, and others, with cover art and a large centerfold spread by Boardman Robinson.
Published by The Masses Publishing Company, New York, 1915
Seller: Singularity Rare & Fine, Baldwinsville, NY, U.S.A.
Book First Edition
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. Frank Walts, John Sloan, Art Young, Glenn O. Coleman, Stuart Davis, Cornelia Barns, Randall Davey, George Bellows, Maurice Becker, A. Londoner, Elias Goldberg, Eugene Higgins (illustrator). 1st Edition. New York: The Masses Publishing Company, 1915. The June, 1915 issue (Volume VI, Number 9, whole number 49). Large Folio, illustrated stapled wraps, 27 pp. Very Good by any periodical standard; as the very inexpensively-produced budget-of-the-heart icon The Masses was, this example is certainly better than very good, by its own standard. Light crease the vertical length of cover; small nicks at front cover perimeter; larger chip at rear cover, lower left; modest toning to the remarkably healthy contents. See scans. Certainly one of the most seminal socio-political American publications of the last 200 years, The Masses was a collection of ideological art, opinion and reporting - usually contributed with little or no compensation - which strongly represented socialist / marxist values, but in a larger sense was representative of labor, women's rights, and radical left issues in general as those were at that time. Famous names of the era often contributed work, but the names of the regulars are themselves all now in history books. The now-timeless publication was shut down by the U.S. Government in 1918 on the basis of postal regulations, after two intense and ideologically-charged trials. Eastman and his sister, Crystal, then started The Liberator to carry on; after The Liberator closed its doors in 1926, The New Masses, under the primary leadership of Mike Gold, carried the radical flag. The Masses, as the first, is also the rarest. Text contributors to this issue of June, 1915 included Eastman, Carl Sandburg, Howard Brubaker, Harris Merton Lyon, Louis Untermeyer, Edmond McKenna, Elsie Clews Parsons, Frank Tanenbaum, Robert Carlton Brown, W.J. Robinson, Charles Grey, and Florence Kiper Frank. Art was contributed by Frank Walts, John Sloan, Art Young, Glenn O. Coleman, Stuart Davis, Cornelia Barns, Randall Davey, George Bellows, Maurice Becker, A. Londoner, Elias Goldberg, and Eugene Higgins, with Walts executing the front cover, and Davis the rear cover. Check out all of those names. An extraordinarily rare piece of American publishing and political history. l-lng2.
Published by The Masses Publishing Company, New York, 1917
Seller: Burnside Rare Books, ABAA, Portland, OR, U.S.A.
Four issue run of the famous American revolutionary socialist magazine: April, May, June, and July issues of 1917. Vol. IX Nos. 6-9. Stapled wraps. Good+ condition overall, some issues better, light wear and a little chipping, toned with age. May and June issues faintly vertically creased. April and June issue wraps more heavily chipped and fragile, starting to detach. Faint pencil to front cover of May issue. Label "From the Collection of Carl Van Vechten," author and patron of the Harlem Renaissance movement, on rear wrap of April issue, overstamped "Duplicate." Beautifully and powerfully illustrated issues from the final year of the magazine, before it was censored and repressed by the US government under the Espionage Act. As with all periodicals from this time and earlier, the ads are fascinating reading in their own right. The July issue features essay "War and Individual Liberty" by Bertrand Russell. August (not included) would be seized by the postmaster and declared "unmailable"-- mainly due to the remarkable effectiveness of the political artwork-- beginning the end of the magazine.