LES GRAFFITI DE LA RUE D'AUXONNE
First edition of this rare work forging an early link between graffiti and politics.
First edition of this rare work forging an early link between graffiti and politics.
Second edition of this early illustrated guide to the mechanical operation of the motorcycle, for "People who want the 'SHOW HOW' Features."
Later printing of Bukowski's 1983 short story, with Crumb's well-matched illustrations detailing every loathsome square inch of the author's "sick son-of-a-bitch[es]".
One of many early reprints of this key situationist text, among which quite a few were unauthorized — but this edition published by the official British wing of the Situationist Intertnational, with their introductory text.
First edition of this early pamphlet documenting the dramatic changes to the community with the rise of Silicon Valley.
First edition of Brown's ambitious hard-boiled hippie-exploitation pulp, starring Joe Christmas (Black novelist and Vietnam veteran with a name borrowed from Faulkner's LIGHT IN AUGUST), a P.I. hired to find a missing white runaway lost in the drug dens of San Francisco.
'60s collection of poetry with work by Ralph Dickey, Ken Mikolowski, Jay Vogelbaum, Kent Rush, Mark Nakell, Sheldon Tannenbaum Jonathan Schwartz, David Hereshoff, Esther M. Broner, Walter Hall, Phillip Klukoff, and Richard M. Sweeney.
First US publication of Rolfe's romance between his alter ego, Nicholas Crabbe, and the cross-dressing Venetian gondolier Zildo/Gilda.
Compilation of Michigan small presses and periodicals, including "all presses currently known to" the editors.
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.
Complete five-issue run of this smutty but short-lived 1950s pin-up meets Suicide Girls magazine.
Third impression of the true first edition of Allen Ginsberg's epochal poem "Howl," the Serendipity issue, specially signed or inscribed by Ginsberg, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Marthe Rexroth, Michael McClure, David Meltzer, Gary Snyder, Philip Lamantia, and Philip Whalen.
Scarce original program from one of Smith's earliest gigs, predating her first album by almost two years.
Signed first edition of Zappa's autobiography, published just a year before his prostate-cancer diagnosis — a review copy.
Signed first edition, second issue of this quintessentially Los Angeles book, and one of the great photobooks of all time – with the original wrap-around band intact.
Signed second edition of Ruscha's commissioned photographs of Los Angeles lots, taken from helicopter by aerial photographer Art Alanis.
Signed first edition of Ruscha's photo-novel, illustrating a 1967 short story by Mason Williams, "How To Derive The Maximum Enjoyment From Crackers."
Signed first edition of Ruscha's fourteen spare, black and white photographs of California palms, each captioned with its home address.
Signed second edition of Ruscha's first book using color photographs, a series on water artificially contained and explosively freed.
Signed second edition of Ruscha's third artist's book, one of 3,000 copies produced following the original printing of 700 in 1965.
Elusive and allusive narrative photographic artist's book, one of the defining works of the 1970s in the genre.
First US edition of this uncommon collection of visual and concrete typewriter poems by Bob Cobbing, Edwin Morgan, dom Sylvester Houedard, Peter Mayer, Alison Bielski, and others.
First edition of this pulp cri de coeur from a drug-addled teen lost in a "fuzzy twilight" of heroin, jazz records, and post-war atomic dread.
First edition of Bukowski's second full-length collection, issued by Epos, a major early supporter.
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.