Bookseller Catalogs


Maurice Sendak & Other Books for Adults

By Pryor-Johnson Rare Books

Maurice Sendak & Other Books for Adults With this catalogue we celebrate Sendak’s work and the perfect good sense he made so much of the time. The first half spans nearly the entirety of his career, from A Hole Is To Dig (with Ruth Krauss, 1952) through to his first and only pop-up book Mommy? in 2006. Along the way we have an exceptionally rare page-proof of Where the Wild Things Are, a large dossier of publication and advertising materials for Outside Over There (which Sendak considered his finest work) and his two major retrospectives, edited by Selma Lanes (1980) and by Tony Kushner (2003).
The second half of the catalogue is a simple celebration: illustrated books are for adults! We don’t have to read words all the time! The themes of these “picture-books for adults” run the gamut: cocktails, the bible, hatred for a celebrated lexicographer, hard drugs. Much good illustration came from the Beats: Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Gregory Corso, Ralph Steadman (if we extend the label so far). R. Crumb is a rich vein; we begin with his absolutely magnificent Sad Book and follow his career through his sketcbooks from the 1960’s, the aforementioned illustration of Genesis (so dirty!) and the development of his daughter Sophie’s individual style. Beyond that we find the first appearance of the Star Wars story, illustrated Frankensteins and the macabre Charles Addams (of Family fame) and Edward Gorey up through Charles Burns’s X’ed Out, which we’d call a “graphic novel” if we hadn’t learned our lesson.



How to request a print version: For a printed catalogue, kindly write to info@pryorjohnsonrarebooks.com.


Curios, Oddities and Recondita

By Pryor-Johnson Rare Books

Curios, Oddities and Recondita This catalogue marks Pryor-Johnson’s first ABAA book-fair, and we thought we’d take the opportunity to gather some of our gnarliest, knottiest, most curious and recondite material as a sort of thank-offering to the great gods of bibliomania. As with so many matters of the book, what constitutes gnarl or knot is for the arguing, but we hope to intrigue on one front or another.
These are the books that make being a bookseller a bit like being a sleuth. Enjoy them, ask us about them, and please help us figure out why one might dedicate a book to a dead man!



How to request a print version: For a printed catalogue, kindly write to info@pryorjohnsonrarebooks.com.


Fine Miscellaney

By Pryor-Johnson Rare Books

Fine Miscellaney The first half of the catalogue, at least numerically, is modern: signed firsts, Beat literature and poetry, photography, art, illustration and fine press. The second half is antiquarian: literature, philosophy, religion, science, natural history and exploration. We are under no illusion that there is “something for everybody” but hope that among the treasures, whether a pre-publication copy of Hirschfeld’s Harlem, a first of Darwin’s Descent annotated by a great ecclesiastical apologist or a presentation copy of Harvey Frank’s Lines of My Hand to the late legendary bookseller Harvey Zucker, some delight might be found.
The republic of letters is all the greater for the variety of its topography. Its citizens spread themselves admirably, and where they cluster great temples are built. Here at our first Armory fair we offer some fetishes for the high altars and some oases, more remote, less vaunted, but for those who seek and dwell in them no less enjoyed.



How to request a print version: Kindly write to info@pryorjohnsonrarebooks.com for a printed catalogue.


Kōshirō Onchi

By Boston Book Company

Kōshirō Onchi The accomplishments of Onchi Kōshirō 恩地孝四郎 (1891–1955) throughout the first half of the 20th century extend far beyond his eminence as a printmaker. He was an innovator who domesticated the ideas and ideals of abstraction and "creative printmaking" in Japan when still in art school. He was also an oil painter, largely in his early years, where he experimented with themes and concepts he would also apply to his prints.

From his early years, working with Takehisa Yumeiji 竹久夢二, among others, he began a long career as a book designer and book illustrator. From the very beginning of his life in the arts he was the center and focus of the Creative Print movement, surrounding himself with fellow artists who took inspiration from his dedication to the cause of self-expression. From his student efforts in the nineteen-teens creating the amazing TSUKUHAE journal until his premature and much-mourned death in the 50s, he was a dominant influence in his world.

He was also a poet and photographer of no mean skill. He combined all those interests in the wonderful artist's books he created, such masterworks as UMI NO DOWA, KISETSU-HYŌ, HIKKO KANNO, among many others. He was editor of the most important book arts periodical of the pre-War period, SHOSŌ magazine. He designed over a thousand books, collaborated in his later years with such important figures as Kitasono Katue - in short, he was the major figure involved with works on paper in his time and provided support and inspiration to scores of other artists.

It has been decades since the wonderful work on Onchi done by Elizabeth Swinton, THE GRAPHIC ART OF ONCHI KOSHIRO; INNOVATION AND TRADITION, the only substantial work on him ever written in English. Though he is the subject of a small cottage industry of scholarship in Japan, he is largely a much-admired mystery abroad in the 21st century.

So, we thought it might be fun to put together a smattering of interesting material by him that covers the breadth of his interests: sketches, illustrations, artist's books, his book of photography, one of the products in book form of the wartime Thursday Group, 4 amazing and rare oil paintings, several books designed by him, and a run of SHOSŌ magazine. The list goes on. But have a look and see for yourself.

There are treasures herein.

Catalogue 89 - Summer Potpourri

By J & J Lubrano Music Antiquarians LLC

Catalogue 89 - Summer Potpourri Contains 194 items and includes important autograph letters of Bellini to Count Apponyi in Paris discussing the composer’s constant work on his opera I Puritani; Berlioz to a conductor at the Paris Opéra regarding his Les Troyens; Gounod to the famous opera singer Adelina Patti praising her performance as Juliette in his Romeo and Juliette; Verdi to his librettist Francesco Piave regarding his opera Jérusalem; and Wagner discussing his early opera Rienzi as well as his proposed biography of Beethoven.

Opera performers are represented by letters and photographs of Caruso, Chaliapin, Jean de Reske, Gilbert Duprez, Adelina Patti, Marcella Sembrich, Rosine Stoltz, and two collections of original and vintage photographs of singers from the Golden Age of opera.

Musical first editions include works by Chopin, Mendelssohn, Haydn, Mozart, Schubert, and Robert Schumann.

The catalogue also contains a wide variety of original fine engravings and etchings of composers and musicians from the 17th through the 20th centuries. There is, in addition, a smattering of books about music and musicians.

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