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Seller's Description:
Very good in very good dust jacket. First Edition. Crippen & Landru 2006 first edition. Pages clean and bright, binding firm, minor shelf wear to dust jacket. ALL ITEMS ARE SENT BY ROYAL MAIL.
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Seller's Description:
First Edition; Tight binding, very gently leaning; Clean, sturdy boards; Pages completely free of markings; Un-clipped dust jacket in Very Good condition w/ no significant flaws to disclose; Jacket now housed in protective mylar to ensure further preservation; An exceptional copy, fit for any collectors library; Stored and shipped in protective polybag; Secure packaging for safe delivery.
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Seller's Description:
Cross, Gail and Erin S. Wells. Fine in Fine jacket. Book 1st edition, so stated, Fine, unread copy in dust jacket. (currently out-of print). The 22nd title in the "Lost Classics" series. Low print run as the publisher states that "The first printing of each book will be small perhaps 400-500 copies, divided between clothbound copies in dustjacket, and trade softcover." Best known for her creation of the Medieval sleuth Brother Cadfael, Ellis Peters (the pseudonym of Edith Pargeter, 1913-1995), also wrote many novelettes and short stories full of atmospheric settings and, as Martin Edwards says in his introduction, characters "with the warmth and humanity that was her hallmark: ' During the ELLIS PETERS 1950's she wrote long stories for the British magazine market about decent young women and men caught up in mystery and suspense, sometimes with archeology as the background, sometimes with ancient manuscripts, and sometimes set in the mountains of Italy or southern France. A decade later, she contributed short-short, twist-in-the-tail, stories to American newspaper supplements. Even at only a few hundred words, she created a variety of settings and plots. These were followed by her greatest period, with stories set in English villages, including the classic title story about the clues produced by a cat. The book concludes with "The Man Who Held Up the Roof: ' a previously unpublished biter-bit tale.