The Big I Am
New York: Summit, 1988. Numerous color illustrations. Slim square 4to, blue cloth, d.w. New York: Summit, (1988). First American Edition. Fine. More
New York: Summit, 1988. Numerous color illustrations. Slim square 4to, blue cloth, d.w. New York: Summit, (1988). First American Edition. Fine. More
New York: Paddington Press, 1978. Full page illustrations in black & white and color. Thin short folio, cloth, d.w. unpaginated. New York & London, (1978). First Edition. Fine. Blatantly aggressive anti-war illustrations. More
New York: Holt, 1980. Illustrated in color. slim square 8vo, black boards, dust wrapper. First American edition. A fine copy in a very good(+) dust wrapper. New York: Holt, 1980. More
Salt Lake City: Straight Arrow, 1974. Introduction by Hunter Thompson. Oblong 4to, black cloth, worn d.w. (San Francisco: Straight Arrow Books, 1974). A very good(-) copy in a poor dust wrapper. The black binding is lightly stained. The dust wrapper is price-clipped, worn at the edges & has a small tape reinforcement on the verso. More
New York: Paddington Press, 1979. Numerous black and white illustrations, 118 pages. Large square 4to, tan cloth (lower corners lightly bumped) dust wrapper a bit chipped and creased at edges). New York and London: Paddington Press, (1979). A very good(+) copy in a very good(-) dust wrapper. More
Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, 1978. Color illustrations by Ralph Steadman. Small, slim , square 4to, blue cloth, d.w. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, (1978). First American Edition. Fine. More
Dear Folks, It's good to see you on the World's Book Map. To Mr. Cohen and the member of his family I owe a great thank you for all the lessons "how to hold back straight". To all the members of the stuff -- a great thank you for help and assistance in all periods of a busy days and weekends. And to the good young Argosy, a great thank you for being there back in the 1970's & 1980!
Thanks for the note. I'm actually in NY for a few days and was hoping to get there but have to head back tomorrow. I've been stopping by the Argosy for over 60 years starting when my mother would take me there after shopping at Bloomingdale's and lunch at a long gone restaurant on the east side of Lexington between 58th and 59th that was torn down to make way for Alexander's department store; that is gone too, of course.