UCLA Library Department of Special Collections
Exhibition checklist
Some Favorite Things: The Rare Books Librarian surveys additions to Special Collections, 1983-1997

Checklist of an exhibition of books collected for Special Collections
by James Davis


Introduction
by Dan Luckenbill

Items are arranged chronologically under the following
Special Collections collecting categories:



Area Studies

Near East
(Near East Photography collections)

Sebah & Joailler (Firm)
Intérieur de la mosquée de Ste. Sophie
Constantinople: Sebah & Joailler, ca.187-?

Sebah was the most active early photographer in Constantinople. This splendid image surely does justice to a splendid interior. I found this at an antiquarian book fair; another institution had expressed some interest in it but, when a firm offer was made, the photograph became ours. The cost of the purchase was shared by the then Near Eastern Bibliographer, Dunning Wilson.


Californiana

California Cookbook Collection

The Department has had an interest in local cookbooks from the time of its founding; this interest was intensified by the purchase of the Glozer collection in 1958. Since then, we have actively sought out cookbooks produced within California. As social documents (or as reflections of society's concerns) they are hard to beat. Here is a fairly random selection of recent additions.

Encarnación Pinedo
El cocinero español
San Francisco: Imprenta de E. C. Hughes, 1898

Encarnación Pinedo
The Spanish cook: A selection of recipes, edited and translated by Dan Strehl
Pasadena: The Weatherbird Press, 1992

This was the first Spanish-language cookbook published in California. Selections were recently translated by Dan Strehl & printed by Vance Gerry at The Weatherbird Press.

Judy Hogness
Cesar salads
Stanford: Gourmet Friends of the Farmworkers, 1977

"A salad cookbook using no head lettuce, no grapes."

Nancy Lee & Linda Oldham
Tacos, tempura, and teem gok: A child's heritage cookbook featuring single serving recipes
Long Beach: Hands on Publications, 1979

Julie Lilly
Any which way but meat: Vegetarian recipes with flair
Sherman Oaks: Lilly and Belote, 1989


History of Printing

Ahmanson - Murphy Aldine Collection &
Ahmanson - Murphy Collection of Early Italian Printing, 1465-1600

Laurent Maiolo
Epiphyllides in dialecta
Venice: Aldo Manuzio, 1497

It was noted long ago that there are two versions of the titlepage of this book. For some years, we have had a copy with the title in three lines; recently we were offered an incomplete copy with the title in a single line. Further study of this second copy showed that the headings of the preface & first chapter have been mistakenly reversed (as in the Bibliothèque Nationale's Variante A); in addition, the type of that first chapter heading has been reset. The second copy, with the misplaced chapter heading is on the left of the copy with the correct preface heading.

Gualterus Burlaeus
Super octo libros physicorum
Venice: Simone de Leure for Andrea Torresano, 1501

We have here two versions of the same publication. Although the text is unchanged (including three leaves that are misnumbered) and the colophon in both copies is dated "25 augusti 1501," the titlepage has been reset & shoulder notes have been added throughout the text of one copy. In addition, the final column of the enhanced text ends with a woodcut of a tower, the Torresano device; it is blank in the other copy.

John Duns Scotus
Opus Oxoniense 1v. in 2
Venice: Bernardo de' Viani for Andrea Torresano, 1503

Toward the end of 1987, the first part of this text was offered at a London auction. Because this work was not recorded by A.-A. Renouard, the bibliographer of books printed by Aldo Manuzio & members of his extended family, we were anxious to add it to the Ahmanson-Murphy collection. It did not seem likely that another copy would soon be offered, and this first half seemed better than none. The volume, in contemporary tawed pigskin, became ours. Four years later, we were told of an incomplete copy of this work being offered at a German auction. The scant details indicated that this copy might be the complement of the volume that we had; it seemed likely that - since the text was not complete - it would not be an expensive purchase. It was not, and we were able to acquire the second volume, bound in nineteenth-century brown calf. Although the second volume has the index misbound at the front, it includes every gathering that was not in the first.

Giovanni Boccaccio
Il decamerone
Venice: Andrea Torresano, 1522

This was the first Aldine edition I purchased for UCLA; it was in 1983. This copy is from the collection of Andrew Fletcher of Saltoun (1655-1716), a collector with extensive holdings of continental literature. Nearly all of the volumes from his library are bound in limp vellum; this is one of a handful bound in red morocco. Although the Ahmanson-Murphy collection is primarily concerned with the texts of the books it includes, rather than the bindings, this edition is so rare that there was no hesitation about acquiring this copy.

Giovanni Battista Vimercato
Dialogo de gli horologi solari
Venice: Gabriele Giolito de Ferrari, 1565, 1566, 1584, 1585

A few years ago, we were given the opportunity to purchase a collection of more than 600 Giolito imprints at an extremely favorable unit cost. We had been collecting this printer, as funds permitted, from the time that Frances Kirschenbaum Zeitlin, for some years the Library's Medieval & Renaissance Bibliographer, had identified him as being useful to several of UCLA's academic programs. This purchase puts us in the forefront of Giolito holdings in North America & gives us unparallelled strength in tracing the printing history of certain texts, such as this one, dealing with sundials.

Marco Girolamo Vida
Cremonensium orationes III. Adversus Papienses in controversia principatus
Cremona: Giovanni Musio & Bernardino Locheta, 1550

Printing books on blue paper is a conceit that Aldo Manuzio had & began implementing in 1514. Although the purpose behind the endeavor isn't entirely clear, it is obvious that these books were special copies, possibly intended for presentation. It's interesting that the device on the Caro titlepage is a copper engraving on the blue paper copy & a woodcut on the white. Our 1514 Virgil that Aldo printed has typographic variants unknown in any copy printed on ordinary paper. Funding from the Ahmanson Foundation enabled us to acquire (among many others) a group of 12 Italian XVI century books printed on various shades of blue paper.

Annibal Caro
Apologia de gli Academici de Banchi di Roma, contra m.Lodovico Castelvetro de Modena
Parma: Seth Viotto, 1558

The Jeudwine Sale

In 1984, while vacationing in England, I learned that the books of J R H Jeudwine were scheduled for auction during my stay. Jeudwine, a dealer in Old Master prints & drawings, had selected his books to demonstrate significant aspects of art & style in printed books. Frantic telephone calls to Los Angeles resulted in funds being wired to me in London to assure that our purchase would be paid in a timely fashion. As it turned out, we acquired 13 books, most of the ones we went after, and at very reasonable prices (especially, it seems, by today's standards). For the next year-and-a-half I was able to pay for subsequent purchases with checks drawn on the account that was established to reimburse our representative for the Jeudwine books.

Bible. Latin. Vulgate. 1471
Biblia sacra, v.1 [only]
Rome: Konrad Sweynheym & Arnold Pannartz, 1471

Although this copy includes only the first half of the text, through Psalms, there are only three other copies in North America of this, the first Bible printed in Italy (& produced by the first printers in Italy). The white vine-branch illumination was made by the workshop David Zeidberg has identified as being responsible for the decoration of many of the books - perhaps as many as half - produced by this press.

Francesco Colonna
La hypnerotomachia di Poliphilo
Venice: Paolo Manuzio, 1545

This is a page-for-page reprint of the 1499 Aldine edition, often cited as the most beautiful book printed before 1501. The illustrations reflect the two threads of the narrative, the events in Poliphilo's dream and the buildings and celebrations pictured in that dream. Both editions have 170 illustrations; all but six of those in this version have been printed from the original blocks.

Etymologicum magnum
Venice: Zacharias Kallierges for Nikolaos Blastos, 1499

This is not an uncommon book: more than two dozen copies have been located in North American collections. But, quoting Proctor's remark concerning Kallierges's printing, "on the artistic aspect of these books all writers are agreed, that for the splendour of their ornamentation and the beauty of their presswork, they stand in the very forefront of all books yet printed." It's regrettable that the cursive Aldine greek types swept aside all rivals.

Marcus Vigerius
Dechachordum christianum
Fano: Gersom b. Mose Soncino, 1507

Although Gersom was not the first printer of Hebrew in Italy, he was unquestionably the most important one in the first part of the 16th century. He was also the first Jewish printer to print non-Hebrew texts; Franceso Griffo, the designer of several of Aldo Manuzio's typefaces, created an italic font for him. The son of a printer, he led a footloose life, establishing printing presses in several cities & then moving on; his last was in Constantinople in the 1540s. The book shown here is, most likely, his most important one; it led to commissions to print statutes for a number of Italian municipalities.

Fictitious Imprints

Louis-Sébastien Mercier
L'an deux mille quatre cent quarante: Reve s'il en fut jamais....
Londres, 1771 [Amsterdam?: Van Harrelvelt?]

Londres, 1772 [Amsterdam: Van Harrelvelt]

Londres, 1772 [Germany?]

Londres, 1774 [Lausanne?]

Our Pierre Marteau collection of fictitious imprints has been acknowledged as one of the largest assemblages of this strange genre. Through extraordinary funding from the Associate University Librarian for Collections & Technical Services, Brian Schottlaender, we obtained a collection of several separate editions of a single work. The novel, called the "only genuinely creative contribution to Utopian literature in the eighteenth century," seems rarely to have been published at the place stated on the titlepage.

And a final one, funded from our own allocation:

Londres, 1773 [Dresden?: Walther?]

Modern Fine Printing & Graphic Arts

Over the years, the Department had acquired a number of books & periodicals illustrated by the pochoir (stencil) process. When I learned that the material from Charles Boyer's French Research Foundation had been sent to the Stack Annex (the precursor of SRLF) without having been reviewed by Special Collections, I began to reclaim for us the books with pochoir that I could identify. These included an otherwise unrecorded Paris: Coleur de temps, by François-Paul Alibert (Paris: Éditions des trois cyprès, 1929). To provide background information on the pochoir process, we purchased a copy of Saudé's Traité, the seminal work.

François-Paul Alibert
Paris: Coleur de temps
Paris: Éditions des trois cyprès, 1929

Jean Saudé
Trait‚ d'enluminure d'art au pochoir
Paris: aux Éditions de l'ibis, 1925

Robert Burton
The anatomie of melancholy....   Illustrated by E. McKnight Kauffer
London: The Nonesuch Press, 1925

About the time that Saudé was developing his complicated technique, the Curwen Press in England was utilizing a simpler process. (They would summon staff from the bindery and set them up with pots of paint & brushes.) We now have copies of all the books that were illustrated with the stencil process at Curwen, including one of the 40 copies of this text.

Vance Gerry
Pochoir: Practical stencilling for the modern craftsman as applied to illustrations and designs for books &c
Pasadena: Weatherbird Press, 1991

Vance Gerry's text, one of 50 copies, is perhaps the most accessible guide to the process. Although an additional 50 copies were produced through color xerography, the entire edition went out of print immediately. Gerry is without question the leading practitioner of the process working today.

Toy & Moveable Books

When Waldo Hunt presented his collection of illustrated children's books to the Department in 1991, it included a large number of historic toy & moveable books. Since that time we have added a significant number of more recent novelty productions to those books. The Collicott book (one of 100 copies) and the Thielen (one of 10 copies) are particularly welcome since they were made here in Los Angeles; the MBS publication is an impressive piece of self-promotion. Hofstra is one of the most imaginative (& expensive) practitioners working today with pop-up mechanisms.

From the bottom up
New York: Mutual Broadcasting System, ca.1950

Chris Collicott
[Recycling book]
Los Angeles: The author, 1990

Beth Thielen
Sentences - words spoken in prison to an artist
Pasadena: The artist, 1990

Sjoerd Hofstra
7 empty bookcases
Amsterdam; New York: ZET, 1996


Literature

Children's Literature

The curious adventures of a little white mouse; or, A bad boy changed, in a very comical manner, into a good boy
London: Printed and sold by all the booksellers in town and country, ca.1780

This is an irresistible story of a troublesome boy (from a dysfunctional family) who, because of his misbehavior, is transformed into a mouse & relocated in London. There he must fend for himself; eventually he learns the manners & attitudes appropriate to civilized behavior &, finally, becomes the king of his realm. The woodcuts were quite obviously made for this story; no other copy is listed in the online English Short Title Catalogue.

The curious adventures of a little white mouse; or, A bad boy changed, in a very comical manner, into a good boy
London: Printed for W. Lane, at the Minerva, ca.1790

The story was reissued about ten years later, by the Minerva Press, a firm specializing in multi-volume gothick novels. It's interesting to note that although the text is pretty much a line-for-line reprint, with the original woodcut illustrations, the long f has been abandoned. Our collection of children's books from the Minerva Press is very likely the largest anywhere.

Polish tyrant
London: Tabart & Co., 1809

The history of harlequinades, or "turn-ups," is obscure. What is sure is that these publications are an early form of pop-up. Each one generally has four main vertical panels, accordion-folded; each of these panels has a flap pasted at the top & bottom that gives another perspective of the engraved image on the main panel. The whole is often hand-colored. Our collection of harlequinades is very likely the largest anywhere: we have nearly 50 different examples. The Friends of the UCLA Library enabled us to purchase this one, known to Marjorie Moon, the bibliographer of Tabart publications, only by a catalog description from ca.1970.

Scripture characters, by a parent for his children
London: W. Darton, 1811

This is the earliest example we have of a children's book bound so that the text can be begun at either end. Good people range from Abel (Genesis iv. 4) to Epaphras (Colossians iv. 12); the bad ones from Cain (Genesis iv. 1) to Demas (2 Timothy iv. 10). So fugitive is this little work, even in its recased state, that there was not a copy included in the exhibition of Darton publications mounted by the Lilly Library in 1992. This copy was purchased with funds provided by the family of Wilbur J. Smith, Head of the Department of Special Collections from 1951-1971.

Lucinda, the orphan; or, The costumes, a tale: Exhibited in a series of dresses
London: Printed for S. and J. Fuller, 1812

Between 1810 & about 1816, the Fullers issued several sets of paper dolls: Ellen; or, The naughty girl reclaimed, Frederick; or, The effects of disobedience, Young Albert, the Roscius, &c. The opportunity of adding a tenth set, Lucinda, to our collection was irresistible, especially since that is the name of the Rare Books Assistant. This copy is complete, with all seven dresses & seven hats. (The hats tended to disappear from these sets fairly regularly.)

Africa, neatly dissected
London: Darton, 1818

In connection with "Childhood Re-Collected," a 1994 conference held at Christ Church, Oxford, the Provincial Booksellers Fairs Association sponsored a book fair. There were many wonderful books & objects for sale; this, I think, is my favorite purchase that weekend. All the pieces of the puzzle are present, the original wooden box is in reasonable condition, and the publisher's & bookseller's labels are intact. This is a fine example of the quality of amusements that were being produced for children in the time of, say, Jane Austen.

One of the number
Eireeneespaid'agathoontegigantaiosphilos, the good-natured giant:
a story adapted to the capacities of children and old people. With illustrations by C. W. Sheeres.
London: Hope and Co., 1852

As the author points out in his (or her) preface, literature is full of stories of giants terrifying naughty men & women, boys & girls, but rarely - if ever - has a story been told about a sweet-tempered one. There are a number of curiosities about this edition: the illustrator seems to have been otherwise an engraver of other people's work; the Osborne Collection doesn't have a single book from this publisher. Although there is a copy of this story in the British Library, there doesn't seem to be another one in North America.

Eighteenth - Twentieth Century Literature
Bibliography

Montague Summers
A gothic bibliography
London: The Fortune Press, 1940

The culmination of more than 40 years' research, Summers' bibliography spans nearly 200 years of the school of sensational fiction, 1728-1916. This most popular of literary genres had barely been explored at the time Summers published his preliminary work and he was able to provide many new titles as well as document more familiar ones. This copy, numbered 749 of 750, is inscribed by the author "First copy received/14 December, 1940./Author's copy." It is full of his notes & additions.

Nineteenth Century Literature
Primarily Sadleir authors

Lady (Sydney) Morgan
St. Clair; or, The heiress of Desmond
Dublin: Printed by Brett Smith, for Messrs. Wogan, Brown, Halpin, Colbert, Jon, Dornin, Jackson, and Medcalf, 1803

Lady Morgan was one of Michael Sadleir's favorite authors & he collected her books diligently. This first edition of her first novel, however, escaped his net. Lady Morgan's autobiography provides clear evidence that this version, actually published toward the end of 1802, precedes the edition in Sadleir's collection, which did not appear until the summer of 1803.

A catalogue of books in the library of Christopher D. Bellew, Esq., Mount-Bellew
Galway: Printed by Geo. Conolly, 1813

The discovery of the Mount Bellew library in the West of Ireland was one of the three events of major importance in Michael Sadleir's pursuit of nineteenth century British fiction. The library, formed between 1800 and 1830, consisted of books read no more than one time & then stored under ideal conditions. On the death of the owner, the books were forgotten; discovered a century later, the books were "crisp and radiant, with labels dead white and perfect, with spines sound and round and flawless at the hinge, with strawboards clear-cut and fore-edges sinuous and sharp." Christopher Bellew issued two printed catalogs of his library; we've had the second version for decades, but only last year we were able to obtain a copy of the first, original list. According to the printed label on the front cover, it's one of 15 copies.

Richard Creed
[Correspondence with the Edgeworth family]
v. p., 1820-1850

Richard Creed worked for the British Treasury & the Foreign Office in Paris from about 1817 to 1827, at which time he returned to England. It was during this ten-year period that he began his friendship with the Edgeworth family, most especially with Maria. Their epistolary relationship & the correspondence documenting it are unknown to Maria Edgeworth's biographers. We were very fortunate to have been the successful bidders when this collection was offered at auction in 1983. Although we now have 19 letters written by Maria to Creed & 16 from him to her, it's obvious that there are many gaps in this correspondence.

Leigh Hunt
Sir Ralph Esher; or, Memoirs of a gentleman of the court of Charles II. 3v.
London: Henry Colburn & Richard Bentley, 1830

The publishing history of this work is complicated. Sadleir had a set dated 1832 in his collection, but suspected that there were - beyond the one noted in the British Museum - sets dated 1830. Described by one source as a "black tulip of British fiction," this set was acquired through special funding of the then University Librarian, Russell Shank.

Sarah Stickney Ellis.
Pictures of private life, ser.1-3
London: Smith, Elder, 1833-37

These collections of Mrs. Ellis's moral tales constitute her first published work. Although they were frequently reprinted, first editions seem scarce: none is listed on OCLC nor in the National Union Catalogue. Sadleir found only the second series (bound in morocco cloth) for his collection. Recently we obtained a complete set, the first two volumes in publisher's morocco with gilt edges. The binding is stamped in the lower left corner "Barritt & Co."

Mary Martha Butt Sherwood
[Diary]
1840-1844

Mrs. Sherwood, the prolific author of evangelical stories for children, is a fine contrast to Maria Edgeworth's somewhat more indulgent world view. Her 15-volume manuscript journal, which she began in 1835, was after her death severely edited by her daughter & published in 1854. We were able to acquire that holograph set (with the deletions noted), along with a large collections of Mrs. Sherwood's publications that once belonged to her grand-daughter & great-grand-daughter. About this same time, we obtained her manuscript diary for 1840-44, with its day-to-day record of her literary endeavors (& earnings). Bound into this volume are assorted letters, notes, flowers, &c.

Catherine Sinclair
Charlie Seymour; or, The good lady and the bad lady.  3d ed.
Edinburgh: William Whyte, 1844

Catherine Sinclair
The lives of the Caesars; or, The juvenile Plutarch.  2d ed.
London: Religious Tract Society, n.d.

Sadleir had a 10-volume presentation set of Catherine Sinclair's works "bound in full vellum, elaborately gilt on front, spine, and back. Initials 'C.S. to D.P.' centred on front...". The identity of D.P. is not known. Imagine my delight to be telephoned from London (this was before our fax machine was installed) with an offer of two more volumes from the set.

Mrs. Gore
The inundation; or, Peace and pardon, a Christmas story
London: Fisher, Son, & Co., [1847]

The titlepage subtitle of Sadleir's copy is Pardon and peace; this copy, which arrived recently, has the subtitle matching that on both covers, Peace and pardon. It's hard to imagine just what went wrong - and when.

Frederick Chamier
The life of a sailor.  New ed.
London: Richard Bentley, 1850

The Bentley's Standard Novels series was the prototype for cheap reprints of popular novels. The original series contained 136 volumes; this is no.120. (Two subsequent series added another 148 volumes or so.) Sadleir was unable to find five titles in the First Series. In the years since the collection came to UCLA, we have acquired four of them, The life of a sailor being the most recent. We're still looking for no.69, Edward Howard's Rattlin the reefer (1838) - though there's a tattered non-UCLA copy at SRLF.

Frederick Saunders
Salad for the solitary
London: Richard Bentley, 1853

The bindings of Bentley publications tended to be the brightest, the most imaginative, of any being issued in London. Bentley's bibliography briefly describes the bindings of each of the books that the firm issued. This one is supposed to be in plain green cloth, with a note of the series, Parlour Book-Case, on the spine. We recently acquired this unrecorded variant, perhaps bound for presentation by the author. In addition to the different cloth, the blind stamping on the covers of the green cloth binding are much more elaborate & different, more ornate, tools were used to stamp the pattern on the spine.

Valentine Durrant
Saul Weir.  12 pts.
Edinburgh: William Blackwood, 1878-79

Valentine Durrant is about as obscure a Victorian novelist as there is. Blackwood, however, had sufficient faith in his talent to publish two or three of his novels, first in monthly parts, as here, and then in two-volume sets. Apparently, Blackwood was trying to revive the earlier practice of issuing novels in parts, but without the success that this format had once had. The note in Wolff ends "A pencil note ... indicates that Valentine Durrant was the pseudonym of Admiral Beneventura Hinton. If so, he needed one." The eponymous protagonist is a journeyman carpenter whose usual pastime after work is improving his mind. Imagine the difficulties that got him into.

Ebenezer Jones
Studies of sensation and event. Poems
London: Pickering and Co., 1879

Long before the Ahmanson Foundation enabled us to assemble what has become the largest collection extant of Aldine imprints, we were collecting other books with the Aldine dolphin & anchor on the titlepage - books published by William Pickering and his heirs. William started out as a seller of old & used books in 1820; later that year he issued his first book. Pickering texts were scrupulously edited and, in contrast to much of the publishing of the period, the design of their books was austere & elegant. This copy has, in addition to its photographic frontispiece, four duplicate leaves bound at the end with authorial changes. (In honesty, it must be pointed out that this edition does not have the dolphin & anchor on the titlepage.) In addition to his utilization of the Aldine device, Pickering deserves credit for his introduction, in 1820, of the first full bindings in cloth.

Mrs. (Maria Georgiana Carleton) Fetherstonhaugh
For old sake's sake: A sketch
London: Richard Bentley, 1882

Here's another example of Bentley's imaginative bindings: wood-grained paper boards over a cloth spine, discreetly stamped in gold.

Twentieth Century Literature
See Also: History of Printing - Modern Fine Printing & Graphic Arts

Alice B. Toklas
Correspondence with Louise & Redvers Taylor, 1922-1966

After Gilbert Harrison gave us his extensive collection of material by & about Gertrude Stein, Mary Emma Davis, a UCLA alumna, & her husband made a donation that enabled us to add significant items to it. In addition to correspondence to & from Stein we were able to acquire the publisher's copy of typescripts of more than 170 letters written by Toklas. As it happened, only 121 of these letters actually made it into the volume of her correspondence, Staying on alone, that was published in 1973.

Arthur Rimbaud [twentieth century printings]
A season in hell
Paris: Edward W. Titus at the sign of the Black Manikin Press, 1931

The Davis's gift also enabled us to obtain material produced by expatriate Americans publishing in Paris at the time that Stein & Toklas were living there. The Crosby book has illustrations colored by pochoir, the only Black Sun book that was produced this way. We were also able to obtain the publisher's file for an edition of Rimbaud that Edward Titus intended to issue. For whatever reason - very likely the Great Depression - the book was never published & these dummies, sketches, &c, are all that remain. This archive complements nicely our virtually complete holdings of Black Manikin imprints and our extensive collection of Rimbaud editions.

Caresse Crosby
Crosses of gold
Paris: [Léon Pichon for Black Sun Press,] 1925


Photography

Edinburgh Industrial Brigade. Home for Destitute and Friendless Boys
[Register]
Edinburgh: The Brigade, ca.1870

Each of the 34 original photographs in this collection is accompanied by a biographical statement, most likely composed & written by a member of the Brigade or a volunteer. Some of the narratives surpass in pathos anything that Dickens contrived.

Grading Palisades del Rey
Los Angeles: s.n., 1925

Our photography collection serves many purposes, but showing the historical development of its technology and documenting local activities are two of the most important. Panoramic photographs are a particularly interesting form & we have dozens of them. This one, showing a bit of local real estate (& the advanced state of industrial technology) seventy years ago, was bought two years ago at an auction of Historical Society of Southern California duplicates.

Portraits of presses. Photographs by Ski Harrison of Fleece, Gregynog, I. M. Imprimit, Old Stile, Rampant Lions, Rocket, Tern, Whittington & CTD. With commentaries by the printers
Risbury, Herefordshire: The Whittington Press, 1997

In 1987, we were given the opportunity to purchase the second most complete archive of publications of The Whittington Press (the most complete holdings are at the University of Minnesota). The Press, which has been in operation since 1972, has, from its first book, issued important new texts that are imaginatively and elegantly produced. The Press has what is probably the largest collection of Monotype matrices extant; this enables it to select the most appropriate typeface for each book that it prints. Whittington books are often illustrated with wood engravings printed direct from the block. The proprietors, John & Rose Randle, have offered occasional printing courses both in England and Los Angeles and sponsor an annual open house at Whittington, near Cheltenham, the first weekend in September.


Travel & Exploration

Monarchs of ocean: Columbus and Cook
Edinburgh: William P. Nimmo, 186-?

[Toy globe]
Germany, ca.1840-60?

Our collection of material relating to Captain Cook's voyages is based on the one created by Sir Maurice Holmes; it came to UCLA in 1961. It contained virtually all of the contemporary editions of Cook's exploration, & a good thing, too, since the increasing interest in Pacific voyages has put most offerings far beyond our means. We have, however, been able to add modestly to Sir Maurice's endeavors. The book - unrecorded in this country - came in an exchange for some hours' labor at the University of Virginia; the globe, tracing Cook's three voyages, was financed by the Friends of the UCLA Library.


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