THE WONDERFUL WIZARD OF OZ
First edition of the book that gave Americans their own fairy tale, with all the textual points of the first state and a mixed state B/C of the plates.
First edition of the book that gave Americans their own fairy tale, with all the textual points of the first state and a mixed state B/C of the plates.
First edition, a lovely copy rarely found so bright — and rare in the original jacket.
First edition of this joyfully printed Oz book, with gatherings of the paper in various colorful hues — lavender, pink, green, blue, and more — a beautiful, bright copy.
First edition of the 22nd Oz book and the eighth by Thompson, featuring a High Horse with telescoping legs, three missing mortal maidens, and the return of Jinjur, "the girl who conquered a city."
Lovely first printing of the 35th Oz book in the first state dust jacket — the second title written by illustrator John R. Neill, in which self-driving private cars come to merrily dominate the once-idyllic landscape.
First printing of this Oz story that finds Ozma, the Wizard, and other rulers whisked away by a suspicious man and a magical horse.
First printing of the 33rd Oz title in the original dust jacket, dedicated by Thompson to J.R. Neill (who illustrated every Oz book except the first, including this one).
First printing of this delightful collection of children's stories, including the first Richard Scarry-illustrated edition of the Oz story "With Dorothy in Oz."
First edition, first printing of the follow up to THE WONDERFUL WIZARD OF OZ.
First edition, second printing of the second Oz book, and the first illustrated by J.R. Neill – who would define the iconography for the series as a team with Baum.
First edition of this rare Land of Oz spin-off, featuring a character from THE MARVELOUS LAND OF OZ (1904) that Baum made the hero of his newest stage musical.
First edition, first state of this continuation of Baum's Oz series, a beautiful copy in the rare dust jacket.
First edition of this early children's book by Baum, published only months after THE WONDERFUL WIZARD OF OZ and thus almost immediately forgotten, with supplied facsimile frontispiece.
First edition, first issue of the first Oz book both written and illustrated by Neill, who illustrated every Oz book from 1904 to 1942.
Signed limited edition, one of 500 numbered copies signed by Hague – this an additionally inscribed copy with an original Hague drawing of the Scarecrow alongside his signature.