Montezuma Plat Map
. Broadside.
Light stains and a few minor tears. Wrapped in plastic and supported with foam board backing.
12 3/4" x 15 1/2". Map of Montezuma, New York. Scale 200 rods to the inch.
. Broadside.
Light stains and a few minor tears. Wrapped in plastic and supported with foam board backing.
12 3/4" x 15 1/2". Map of Montezuma, New York. Scale 200 rods to the inch.
. William B. Ewert, 1994. Signed Copy. Broadside.
Signed by author without inscription. One of 50 copies. A fine copy.
Measures roughly 7 1/4 x 9 1/2 inches. Deckled bottom edge. This poem previously appeared in The Atlantic Monthly. Title and author name printed in blue ink; rest of text.....
. William B. Ewert, 1998. Signed Copy. Broadside.
Signed by author without inscription. One of 140 copies. A fine copy.
7 1/4 x 10 1/2 inches. Deckled bottom edge. "If opening that drawer quickly you hear your life rattle like hollow dice--we understand each other perfectly."
. William B. Ewert, 1994. Signed Copy. Broadside.
Signed by author without inscription. One of 150 copies. A fine copy.
8 1/4 x 10 3/4 inches. Deckled bottom edge. Title and author name in magenta; rest of text in purple. "Shall we tell them thanks but why reward us who.....
Concord, New Hampshire: William B. Ewert, 1983. Hayden, Mary Ann. Limited Edition. Broadside.
Signed by author and by illustrator without inscriptions. One of 100 copies. Faint smudge along right side.
Measures roughly 11 1/4 x 19 inches. Illustrated by Mary Ann Hayden. "The smallest of hymns, in praise of silk--cornsilk--spiderweb.....
. 2001. Matthews, William. Signed Copy. Broadside.
Signed by Annie Proulx and William Matthews. A very nice copy.
11 x 17 inches. The Evil Companions Literary Award, 2001. An excerpt from her story "People in Hell Just Want a Drink of Water," from the collection "Close Range." Reproduces the frontispiece.....
New York: Knopf, 1993. Limited Edition. Single Sheet.
Signed without inscription on top right portion. Rolled in cardboard tube.
22 3/4 x 10. Thick cream paper stock with a background design. This 37-line poem was originally published in The New Yorker in 1992, Updike's poem July is here printed as.....