COMPANY: A Musical Comedy
Working script for the original Harold Prince-directed Broadway mounting of Sondheim's innovative classic of musical theater.
Working script for the original Harold Prince-directed Broadway mounting of Sondheim's innovative classic of musical theater.
First edition, review copy of the great American musical based on ("suggested by") the memoirs of Gypsy Rose Lee, with music by Styne and lyrics by a still-obscure Stephen Sondheim.
First edition of Sondheim and Weidman's musical based on Perry's 1853 expedition to Japan, a Kabuki-influenced production with a demanding and ambitious Japanese-influenced score.
First edition of King's sprawling and terrifying coming-of-age epic, set in Derry, Maine, where friendship is forever if the clown in the drains doesn't get you.
First edition of the fifth of King's novels to be published under his own name, one of his most successful works and the basis for a film adaptation by David Cronenberg.
First edition, first printing of the Arthur Laurents-penned book of the Tony-award winning musical, a US American ROMEO AND JULIET.
First Applause printing of the script for the Tony-winning Victorian slasher musical, based on the classic 19th-century Penny Dreadful story.
Original catalogue for an exhibition to mark the bicentenary of John Keats, held by the Wordsworth Trust.
Third edition of these selected comic pieces by the Canadian humorist, notably including "An Irreducible Detective Story," whose target is an unnamed but easily identified Great Detective.
Signed first edition of King's foray into one of the darkest reaches of human suffering, inscribed by King to the owners of venerable independent bookstore Bookshop Santa Cruz.
Signed slipcased first edition of Dau's debut novel, the story of a post-9/11 war refugee in Pittsburgh, issued as part of the Powell's Books INDIESPENSABLE series.
First edition of this poetry mag with contributions from Simon Schuchat, Tom Raworth, Peter Schjeldahl, Larry Fagin and many others, and cover design by Stephen Shrader.
Inscribed first trade edition and publisher's proof of Stephen Berg's meditations on the work of Russian poet Anna Akhnatova, with Stanley Plumley's notes to rear.
Inscribed first printing of this tale of an itinerant bear who makes friends with a group of circus performers as they travel through the forest.
Second printing of this cozy polar bedtime story, with original drawing of a polar bear cub— a NEW YORK TIMES Book Review's Best Illustrated Children's Book, signed by both the author and the artist.
First printing of this anthology of new Sherlock Holmes stories by Stephen King, Stuart Kaminsky, Lillian de la Torre, and others, published on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the detective's first appearance in print.
First printing of this beautiful Errol Le Cain-illustrated edition of the classic fairy tale.
Inscribed first printing of the book Colson Whitehead described as "[a] bleak, illuminating chronicle of racism in the name of 'science.'"
First printing of this illustrated literary biography of Keats, traced through the history of his surviving manuscripts.
First printing, signed by both authors (and with a signed postcase), of this beautiful and detailed monograph on the work of Philadelphia architectural firm KieranTimberlake, which focuses on building for sustainability.
First printing of this attractive volume that explores 17 homes designed by "one of America's premier 'great house' architects" (jacket), whose classical style emulates European stately homes – with a catalogue raisonné.
Catalogue issued to accompany Stout's exhibition at the UMKC Belger Arts Center, scarce inscribed by the artist.
Signed first printing of the second volume of Donaldson's Mordant's Need duology.
With poems by Randall Jarrell (All of None, The Tower, The Black Swan), as well as Irving Howe on Sherwood Anderson, Stephen Spender on the function of criticism, and two early poems by Edward Field.
Record with poems by Josephine Miles, William Stafford, May Swenson, and David Wagoner, each reading a selection of their own work.