Type d'article
Etat
Reliure
Particularités
Pays
Evaluation du vendeur
Edité par Stone & Barringer Co, Charlotte, N.C., 1910
Vendeur : Frey Fine Books, Rougemont, NC, Etats-Unis
Edition originale
Cloth. Etat : Good. 1st edition. 1st edition. A Good copy. 12mo., 218 pp., illustrated with a photo-frontispieceand plates. Bound in checked cloth (gingham) with pine branches and cones design. Spine backstop missing. Covers soiled. Occasional finger soiling to text. Previous owner's name on the front end paper. Hinges strong. Text dialog written in dialect.
Edité par Stone & Barringer Co., 1910
Vendeur : Riverby Books, Fredericksburg, VA, Etats-Unis
Hardcover. Etat : Fair. Hardcover. Gingham cloth-covered boards with decorative stamping of pinecones, and green lettering on the front cover. Small paste down affixed to spine with black lettering. Cloth is frayed at the corners and smudged. Stamping remains bright and handsome. Rear gutter is cracked, muslin remains intact and binding is strong. Pencil markings on front free endpaper. Black-and-white photographic frontispiece of children titled, "Nine Little Tar Heels". Title page is dated 1910. Copyright page dated 1909. 218 pages. Ten photographic plates in total. Interiors are clean and unmarked. Overall, a fair copy. Henry Edward Cowan ("Red Buck") Bryant, journalist and political commentator. He was an active journalist for seventy-two of his ninety-four years.
Edité par The Author, Matthews, North Carolina, 1944
Vendeur : Pages Past--Used & Rare Books, Greensboro, NC, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Good. First Edition First Printing. 16mo. 39, [1] pages. Soft cover bound in tan stapled wrappers. The binding shows moderate rubbing and wear but is sound. Binding is a bit toned. Illustrated with three photos which are a bit foxed. Text is toned. A scarce North Carolina imprint. The front cover and title page is dated July, 1944. Henry Edward Cowan Bryant (1873-1967) was a journalist and political commentator born in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. Bryant covered Charles B. Aycock's campaign for governor and covered most Democratic Conventions and wrote of prohibition and the KKK. In 1931 he joined the Washington staff of the Boston Herald, and after his wife's death in 1943 he moved back to North Carolina and eventually hung his hat with the Charlotte Observer. This little booklet was published a year after his wife's death. He had married "Miss Eva" of Lincolnton, N.C. in 1900, and his writes a little of her early life in Lincolnton as well as extensively on their life together while he was a journalist.