BookGilt - Search results - Author: stefan-zweig

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  • Publisher: Viking Press
  • Date published: 1928
New York: Viking Press, 1928. First Thus. 12mo (17.75cm.); publisher's cloth in light tan decorative dust jacket printed in brown and orange; [6],187pp.; frontispiece and decorations throughout. Jacket extremities gently rubbed, small chip at spine crown, spine a bit toned, else Near Fine in Very Good or better jacket. "A New York Theatre Guild Production" - upper jacket panel. A modern adaptation of Jonson's 17th-c. comedy; this version was later adapted for George Antheil's 1953 opera.
lornebairrarebooks-150.00-60edefc9ab55d6846442d1cee6653a57
$150.00
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Lorne Bair Rare Books (USA)
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  • Publisher: The Clinker Press
  • Date published: 2010
Pasadena: The Clinker Press. Fine. 2010. Limited Edition. Hardcover. Taupe cloth with illustrated paper cover label; paper spine label. Printed at The Clinker Press by Andre Chaves; set in 10 point Palatino designed by Hermann Zapf and printed on Revere paper in an edition of 140 copies. ; Small 4to 9" - 11" tall; 28 pages .
gfwilkinsonbooks-200.00-ec742d8ef9fddd15035ab58464853755
$200.00
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G. F. Wilkinson Books, member IOBA (USA)
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  • Publisher: Viking Press
  • Date published: 1931
New York: Viking Press, 1931. First American Edition. First printing. 12mo. Yellow cloth, titled in maroon on spine with color pictorial vignette to front cover; dark green topstain; 121pp. Light soiling to cloth, else a straight, tight, Near Fine copy. In the original pictorial dustwrapper, unclipped (priced $1.50 on front flap), lightly soiled but generally bright and unfaded, Very Good+. Zweig's controversial novella, originally published in the Viennese newspaper Neue Freie Presse in 1922. The story, filled with Freudian references, deals with the romantic obsession of an abortionist with one of his patients, leading finally to her death and his suicide – almost needless to say, this was hardly the drink of choice for Americans in the Great Depression; the print run must have been small and sales smaller still, as today the book is unexpectedly scarce in commerce, and rarely found in nice condition.
lornebairrarebooks-250.00-bcdf198830296ad3964a7cdf730b668a
$250.00
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Lorne Bair Rare Books (USA)
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  • Publisher: Marmara Gazetesi Matbaasi
  • Date published: 1970
Istanbul: Marmara Gazetesi Matbaasi, 1970. 1st Edition . Soft cover. Fine. 8vo - over 7¾ - 9¾" tall. Paperback. Cr. 8vo. (20 x 14 cm). In Armenian. 320 p. Pages partly uncut. Chatrav khaghats'voghy. [= Schachnovelle]. Translated to Armenian by R. Chattechian. The Royal Game (also known as Chess Story; in the original German Schachnovelle, "Chess Novella") is a novella by the Austrian author Stefan Zweig written in 1941, the year before the author's death by suicide. First Armenian Edition of 'Schachnovelle' by Stefan Zweig. Armenian title means 'how to play'. Published by Istanbul Armenians. Not in OCLC.
khalkedonrarebooksesa-275.00-2a2d093798f5820091a1e204c9932408
$275.00
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Khalkedon Rare Books, IOBA, ESA (TUR)
Via
  • Date published: 2007
2007. GOLDYNE, Joseph. The Invisible Collection. By Stefan Zweig. Illustrated with an original etching by Joseph Goldyne. 8vo, 230 x 140 mm., bound in original black morocco-backed sepia-coloured paper over boards. New York: Ursus Books, 2007. A handsome new edition of this classic fable about collecting. Zweig's story, set in Germany in the aftermath of the First World War, is timeless. It eloquently evokes the magic of collecting, the excitement of dealing and the pleasures and complexities of ownership. Joseph Goldyne, the distinguished California artist who is himself a renowned collector, has thoughtfully produced an illustration which successfully solves the problem of how to illustrate a book, which on first reading would seem to defy the concept of illustration. Peter Koch has designed and printed as elegant a version of Zweig's story as one could hope for. One of an edition of only 50 copies elegantly printed by Peter Koch in San Francisco, and containing a signed etching by Joseph Goldyne. The colophon is signed by both Peter Koch and Joseph Goldyne. As new. Bringhurst, Robert. JOSEPH GOLDYNE: Catalogue Raisonné of Books, Portfolios, and Calligraphic Sheets, 008.
ursusbooks-300.00-8e2250cfc0be2e4d1d6c5e105a7fef0d
$300.00
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Ursus Books (USA)
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  • Publisher: Universal-International Pictures
  • Date published: 1948
Los Angeles: Universal-International Pictures, 1948. Vintage reference photograph of director Max Ophüls talking with actress Joan Fontaine on the set of the 1948 film. Printed mimeo snipe affixed to the verso. Based on the 1922 novella by Stefan Zweig, about a pianist in 1900s Vienna who receives an important letter from a woman from his past, and must figure out how to escape a duel he is due to fight the next morning. The first film produced by Rampart Productions, an independent company formed by Fontaine and her husband William Dozier. 10 x 8 inches. Near Fine. National Film Registry.
royalbooks-350.00-ea06113e2c8ab9297668fe339b128b29
$350.00
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Royal Books, Inc. (USA)
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  • Publisher: N.p.
  • Date published: 1960
N.p.: N.p., 1960. Bound carbon typescript of Stefan Zweig's 1927 novella, made for the purpose of use by German actress Lil Dagover for her reading of same for the 1963 German LP, "Lil Dagover spricht Stefan Zweig." Dagover's name is in blue manuscript ink on the front board, then again with her German address on the front endpaper, then only her name once again on the title page. With Dagover's manuscript corrections to the text on virtually every recto, and, when a rewrite of a passage was required, on the verso to the of a given typescript passage on the recto. Typescript is accompanied by the resulting recording by Dagover, the original German issue by Deustsche Grammophon, released in 1963. One of the most famous works by Zweig, an Austrian Jew who was a passionate collector of autograph manuscripts, maintained close friendships with the likes of Sigmund Freud and Richard Strauss, and whose prose took on the dual concerns of daily life and the impact of politics on everyday people. This novella is an outwardly simple drama of a single day in a woman's life, an English widow who becomes uncontrollably attracted to a gambling diplomat during an evening in Monte Carlo. She is quickly reeled into his very troubled life, and realizes her error too late. The novella was adapted to film in 1931, 1944, 1952, and 1968, and most recently in 2002, with the most notable among these adaptations is Max Ophuls' first American film, "Letter from an Unknown Woman" (1948), starring Joan Fontaine and Louis Jourdan. Pages Near Fine, binding three quarter leather and decorated paper covered boards, with no titling, Very Good plus.
royalbooks-1250.00-c8999f4fb7e7feac7f4642f7fea12bed
$1,250.00
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Royal Books, Inc. (USA)
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  • Publisher: The Viking Press
  • Date published: 1939
New York: The Viking Press, 1939. First Edition. Hardcover. Good. First American edition, translated from the German by Phyllis and Trevor Blewitt. 8vo. 498 pp. Blue cloth, with gilt lettering to the front board and spine, corners rubbed, spine dulled with faint spots around the bottom, spine foot bumped and rubbed, head worn, with a 2cm tear in the cloth. Without the dust jacket. Bookplate of Liliore Green Palmer to front paste-down. Signed by Zweig in purple to the first blank. Clean throughout and the binding tight and square. Good candidate for a rebind, or quite alright as it sits without the dj.
karolkrysikbookscpbfa-1450.60-826d952803aaedb82bb3926abfae1899
$1,450.60
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Karol Krysik Books, ABAC/ILAB, IOBA, PBFA (CAN)
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  • Publisher: The Viking Press
  • Date published: 1939
New York: The Viking Press, 1939. First Edition. Very Good. First American edition, first printing. Signed by Stefan Zweig on the front free endpaper. Bound in publisher's royal blue cloth with gilt lettering; lacking dust jacket. Very Good with shelf wear at extremities; slight lean to binding, spine faded and mottled, lettering is quite rubbed. Offsetting to end sheets with remnants of small bookseller ticket to rear; contents lightly tanned. Scarce historical novel that was later adapted into film by Maurice Elvey in 1946. Wes Anderson loosely based The Grand Budapest Hotel off this work.
burnsiderarebooksa-2500.00-91e696acb0c78414d2904a1fb25bd942
$2,500.00
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Burnside Rare Books, ABAA (USA)
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