Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
First Edition. Ex-lending library. (no external markings to the dust jacket). Only marking is a lending library slip to the back page. Very Good book in a Very Good dust jacket.
Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
Very Good in Very Good jacket. Book 1st ed. edgewear, slight spine slant, pages browning, else very good in dust jacket, not price clipped ($2.50 price still intact), a few closed tears, spine lightly sunned. Author's first book.
Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
Very Good in Good jacket. Steve Considine is tasked with guarding a wealthy lush. Lightly bumped with a bit of rubbing at the edges, previous owner's name on the rear end paper. Jacket rubbed with small chips and tears, in Brodart.
Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
New York. 1953. October 1953. Pocket Books. 1st Pocket Books Paperback Printing. Wear To Bottom Spine, Otherwise Good in Slightly Worn Wrappers. 215 pages. paperback. 975. Cover illustration by James Meese. keywords: Vintage Paperbacks Mystery. FROM THE PUBLISHER-A tense thriller about man hunts, kidnapping and MURDER! BLOOD IN YOUR EYE is about: a bottle-chasing lush named Charles Gillespie who witnessed a horrible knifing in Central Park and then disappeared off the face of the earth; a private-eye called Steve Considine who was supposed to take care of Gillespie and instead found himself being tracked by four rib-smashing, bloodthirsty goons; a lovely girl named Carla who was picked up in a fancy bar by Considine the night of the murder and then was forced to flee for her life through the streets of Manhattan; and assorted low-down characters who knew their way around the dives of Greenwich Village and the Bowery and never visited either neighborhood without leaving a trail of violence and blood behind! Robert Patrick Wilmot has been compared by Anthony Boucher of the New York Times to the young Dashiell Hammett. inventory #41526.