Ban Bombs No Bongs!
Np: 1982. 5 1/2 x 8 1/2" handbill, printed in color. Leaflet for the 1982 smoke-in at the White House. Illustrated with a photograph of a woman holding a bong and wearing an anarchy pin. Fine. More
Np: 1982. 5 1/2 x 8 1/2" handbill, printed in color. Leaflet for the 1982 smoke-in at the White House. Illustrated with a photograph of a woman holding a bong and wearing an anarchy pin. Fine. More
Paris: Chez Janet, 1816. First edition. 18mo, (2), 152 pp, title page with engraved, hand-colored rose, six plates bearing 36 engraved flowers, all hand-colored, and two plates featuring engravings of cards, all with original tissue guards present. Bound in blue waxed boards. A.e.g.First edition of this remarkable early 19th century..... More
Girard, Kansas: Haldeman-Julius, 1924. 32mo, saddle-stapled wraps. Gibbs 95b, second wrapper state. Wraps somewhat faded, with a small snag at heel. Near fine. More
New York: Revolting News, 1970. First edition. Tabloid format, 16 pp, offset printed on newsprint with spot color. Debut issue of this highly underground periodical edited by Tuli Kupferberg, along with Elizabeth Craig, Ralph Feichling, Dan Hamburg, Lannes Kenfield, Pearly Nowygrod, Stephen Petroff, and Natasha Rosseau. The periodical includes the..... More
[San Francisco]: Zephyrous Image [Zephyrus Image], [1972]. First edition. 8 x 11" broadside, letterpress and linocut on newsprint. One of the earliest broadsides from the press, illustrated with a distinctive linocut of before and after pictures of an arm and track marks. One of the most striking and ephemeral productions..... More
San Francisco: Zephyrus Image, nd. First edition. 9 1/4 x 14" broadside, linocut no newsprint. An early broadside from the press, dating from the Collins Street days, and with the newsprint paper utilized, and early spelling of the press name as "Zephyrous", similar in feel to the companion pieces Help..... More
[San Francisco]: Zephyrus Image, [1970]. First edition. 6 1/2 x 12 1/2", linocut in green on newsprint. The rare first state of the broadside, originally distributed by posting them on telephone poles around Berkeley. One of the greatest posters of the 70's, deriving a strange power from Myer's masterful linocut..... More