Eduardo Gageiro:Lisbon Down Memory Lane 1954/1974 / Lisboa no cais da memoria
- cópia assinada 1974, ISBN: 9789729646911
Edição encadernada
Lisbon, Livraria Bertrand, 1959.. FIRST EDITION. 8°, original wrappers (a bit soiled, with light waterstain and minor foxing; upper outer corner of front wrapper somewhat dog-eared). Go… mais…
Lisbon, Livraria Bertrand, 1959.. FIRST EDITION. 8°, original wrappers (a bit soiled, with light waterstain and minor foxing; upper outer corner of front wrapper somewhat dog-eared). Good condition overall; internally very good. Author's signed and dated ("Ls. 1959") ten-line presentation inscription to Acúrcio Pereira on half title. A few passages underlined or otherwise marked or annotated in ink by Acúrcio Pereira. Author's "sinete" (an eagle) of authentication stamped on verso of title page. 288 pp., (2 ll.), errata slip. *** FIRST EDITION. Aquilino Ribeiro (Carregal da Tabosa, Beira Alta, 1885-Lisboa, 1963) is considered one of the best twentieth-century Portuguese novelists: in 1960, he was nominated for the Nobel Prize. Ribeiro was politically active in the Republican cause from 1907 until the fall of the monarchy in 1910. He was imprisoned in November 1907, but escaped in January 1908. He lived clandestinely in Lisbon, then went into exile in Paris, where he entered the Faculty of Letters at the Sorbonne in 1910. As librarian and conservator of the Biblioteca Nacional de Lisboa from 1919 until 1927, he associated with Raul Proença and Jaime Cortesão of the "Grupo da Biblioteca". Ribeiro was one of the founders of the important review Seara nova (1921). From 1927 to 1932 he participated in several revolts, was imprisoned, escaped, and went into exile in Paris, the French Basque country, and Galicia; he also lived in Portugal clandestinely. In 1956, he founded and became the first president of the Sociedade Portuguesa de Escritores. Ribeiro was involved in the opposition to António de Oliveira Salazar and the Estado Novo. Several of his books were censored.Provenance: Acúrcio Pereira (1891-1977) was considered the dean of Portuguese journalists; he wrote for practically every daily newspaper published in Lisbon and Porto during the 1930s, 40s, and 50s, as well as for literary reviews and magazines. In 1911 he joined the Diário de notÃcias, then headed by Alfredo da Cunha, rising rapidly from reporter to important editorial positions, serving 27 years as editor-in-chief. In addition to several books on diverse subjects, he collaborated on a number of theatrical pieces. See Grande enciclopédia XXI, 110; Actualização IX, 187. Also Dicionário cronológico de autores portugueses, III, 431. *** Biblioteca Nacional, Aquilino Ribeiro (1885-1963): catálogo da exposição comemorativa 152. On Aquilino Ribeiro, see Oscar Lopes in Machado, ed., Dicionário de Literatura Portuguesa, pp. 415-16; Urbano Tavares Rodrigues in Biblos, IV, 776-81; Dicionário cronológico de autores portugueses, III, 320-24; João Pedro de Andrade in Jacinto de Prado Coelho, ed. Dicionário de Literatura (4th ed.), III, 933-34., Lisbon, Livraria Bertrand, 1959., 0, Lisbon, Portugália, 1938.. FIRST EDITION. 8°, original beige printed wrappers (spine darkened, minor wear). Light browning. Overall in very good condition. Author's signed five-line presentation inscription to Maria Archer as well as a booktag ("Ex libris Ainda") on half-title. 102 pp., (1 l.). *** FIRST EDITION of a collection of speeches whose subjects include Santo António, Gil Vicente and women in politics. Luis de Abreu Alarcão de Oliveira Guimarães (1900-1998) also wrote many pieces for the theater, and was a lawyer and poet. His first literary work, a book of poems entitled Bonecas que amam, appeared in 1921. Between 1937 and 1940 he abandoned his juridical career to devote himself entirely to letters.Provenance: Maria Archer (1899-1982), spent her childhood and young adult years in Moçambique (1910-1913 and 1921-1926), Guiné (1916-1918), and Angola (1930-1934). Journalist, author of fiction, and playwright, she lectured in Portugal on Portuguese Africa. Her writing is marked by the courage with which she depicts women at a time when to do so was not politically correct. She was a fierce opponent of the Salazar regime, spending 1954-1974 in forced exile in Brazil, returning to Portugal in 1977 to die five years later, ignored and in misery.*** On the author, see Grande enciclopedia XIX, 405 and Rebello, 100 anos de teatro português pp. 82-83. Porbase locates three copies: Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal, Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, and Biblioteca Pedro Veiga-Faculdade de Letras da Universidade do Porto. Jisc repeats British Library only. Not located in NUC., Lisbon, Portugália, 1938., 0, Lisbon, Livraria Bertrand , [1951].. FIRST EDITION . 8°, original printed wrappers (minimal foxing and minor soiling; small nicks to head and foot of spine). Good to very good condition overall; internally fine. Author's signed and dated ("Ls. 1951") eight-line presentation inscription to Acúrcio Pereira on half-title. Author's "sinete" (an eagle) of authentication stamped on verso of title page. 362 pp., (1 blank l.). *** FIRST EDITION of these essays, the second of four books by Ribeiro on the human geography of an isolated part of Beira Interior. It was preceded by Aldeia, terra, gente e bichos, and followed by Arcas Encoiradas, and O Homem da Nave. Each stands on its own as an independent work. They are based on articles in O Jornal do Comércio and O Século. Aquilino expanded the ideas in those articles, creating broad thematic panels. Aquilino Ribeiro (Carregal da Tabosa, Beira Alta, 1885-Lisboa, 1963) is considered one of the best twentieth-century Portuguese novelists: in 1960, he was nominated for the Nobel Prize. Ribeiro was politically active in the Republican cause from 1907 until the fall of the monarchy in 1910. He was imprisoned in November 1907, but escaped in January 1908. He lived clandestinely in Lisbon, then went into exile in Paris, where he entered the Faculty of Letters at the Sorbonne in 1910. As librarian and conservator of the Biblioteca Nacional de Lisboa from 1919 until 1927, he associated with Raul Proença and Jaime Cortesão of the "Grupo da Biblioteca". Ribeiro was one of the founders of the important review Seara nova (1921). From 1927 to 1932 he participated in several revolts, was imprisoned, escaped, and went into exile in Paris, the French Basque country, and Galicia; he also lived in Portugal clandestinely. In 1956, he founded and became the first president of the Sociedade Portuguesa de Escritores. Ribeiro was involved in the opposition to António de Oliveira Salazar and the Estado Novo. Several of his books were censored.Provenance: Acúrcio Pereira (1891-1977) was considered the dean of Portuguese journalists; he wrote for practically every daily newspaper published in Lisbon and Porto during the 1930s, 40s, and 50s, as well as for literary reviews and magazines. In 1911 he joined the Diário de notÃcias, then headed by Alfredo da Cunha, rising rapidly from reporter to important editorial positions, serving 27 years as editor-in-chief. In addition to several books on diverse subjects, he collaborated on a number of theatrical pieces. See Grande enciclopédia XXI, 110; Actualização IX, 187. Also Dicionário cronológico de autores portugueses, III, 431. *** Biblioteca Nacional, Aquilino Ribeiro (1885-1963): catálogo da exposição comemorativa 174. On Aquilino Ribeiro, see Oscar Lopes in Machado, ed., Dicionário de Literatura Portuguesa, pp. 415-16; Urbano Tavares Rodrigues in Biblos, IV, 776-81; Dicionário cronológico de autores portugueses, III, 320-24; João Pedro de Andrade in Jacinto de Prado Coelho, ed. Dicionário de Literatura (4th ed.), III, 933-34., Lisbon, Livraria Bertrand , [1951]., 0, Lisbon, Livraria Bertrand , [1955].. FIRST EDITION. 8°, original printed wrappers (minor foxing). Good to very good condition overall; internally very good to fine. Author's signed and dated ("Ls. 1955") eight-line presentation inscription to Acúrcio Pereira in purple ink on half title. Author's "sinete" (an eagle) of authentication stamped on verso of title page. Marginal annotations and a few minor corrections to the text, both in pencil and pen, in the hand of Acúrcio Pereira. 359 pp. *** FIRST EDITION of these essays containing literary criticism, memoirs, religious opinions, historical observations, and much more. The dedication-preface to Jaime Cortesão occupies pp. 7-12.Aquilino Ribeiro (Carregal da Tabosa, Beira Alta, 1885-Lisboa, 1963) is considered one of the best twentieth-century Portuguese novelists: in 1960, he was nominated for the Nobel Prize. Ribeiro was politically active in the Republican cause from 1907 until the fall of the monarchy in 1910. He was imprisoned in November 1907, but escaped in January 1908. He lived clandestinely in Lisbon, then went into exile in Paris, where he entered the Faculty of Letters at the Sorbonne in 1910. As librarian and conservator of the Biblioteca Nacional de Lisboa from 1919 until 1927, he associated with Raul Proença and Jaime Cortesão of the "Grupo da Biblioteca". Ribeiro was one of the founders of the important review Seara nova (1921). From 1927 to 1932 he participated in several revolts, was imprisoned, escaped, and went into exile in Paris, the French Basque country, and Galicia; he also lived in Portugal clandestinely. In 1956, he founded and became the first president of the Sociedade Portuguesa de Escritores. Ribeiro was involved in the opposition to António de Oliveira Salazar and the Estado Novo. Several of his books were censored.Provenance: Acúrcio Pereira (1891-1977) was considered the dean of Portuguese journalists; he wrote for practically every daily newspaper published in Lisbon and Porto during the 1930s, 40s, and 50s, as well as for literary reviews and magazines. In 1911 he joined the Diário de notÃcias, then headed by Alfredo da Cunha, rising rapidly from reporter to important editorial positions, serving 27 years as editor-in-chief. In addition to several books on diverse subjects, he collaborated on a number of theatrical pieces. See Grande enciclopédia XXI, 110; Actualização IX, 187. Also Dicionário cronológico de autores portugueses, III, 431. *** Biblioteca Nacional, Aquilino Ribeiro (1885-1963): catálogo da exposição comemorativa 92. On Aquilino Ribeiro, see Oscar Lopes in Machado, ed., Dicionário de Literatura Portuguesa, pp. 415-16; Urbano Tavares Rodrigues in Biblos, IV, 776-81; Dicionário cronológico de autores portugueses, III, 320-24; João Pedro de Andrade in Jacinto de Prado Coelho, ed. Dicionário de Literatura (4th ed.), III, 933-34. Porbase locates three copies at Biblioteca João Paulo II-Universidade Católica Portuguesa, two at Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal, and one each at Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian and Instituto Politécnico de Beja. Jisc locates what appears to be the same edition (n.d., same collation) at Oxford University. Hollis cites only the third edition, published the same year. No edition located in Orbis., Lisbon, Livraria Bertrand , [1955]., 0, Lisbon, Portugal: Apoios, 2004. This is a near fine hardcover copy with a near fine dust jacket. Completely clean. Light wear to jacket rear panel top edge. Text in English and Portuguese. Texts by Jorge Sampaio and Antonio Valdemar. Eduardo Gageiro (1935- ) is a Portuguese photographer and photojournalist. He published his first photograph on the cover of a Portuguese magazine when he was 12 years old. He went on to work for many magazines and newspapers in Portugal and is regarded as Portugal's most well known and accomplished photographer. This volume contains many unpublished photographs from the early years of Gageiro's career, which coincides with the last years of Portugal's dictator's reign (Antonio de Oliveira Salazar, ca. 1933- 1968). Portugal would continue under authoritarian rule until the Carnation Revolution of April 1974. Gageiro, like Henri Cartier-Bresson and other photo-journalists of his generation, worked almost exclusively in black & white. The many photographs in this book are superbly printed by Punkte Art in Lisbon. Brief texts, photographs on every page. Bibliography. 10" high X 12" wide, 318 pages. Large heavy book, foreign shipping will be extra. This book will be securely wrapped and packed in a sturdy box and shipped with tracking.. Hard Cover. Near Fine/Near Fine., Apoios, 2004, 4<