BLOOD AND GRITS.
New York: Harper & Row, 1979. First edition. Hardcover. Seventeen non-fiction pieces, including the ace, A Walk in the Country. Crisp copy. More
New York: Harper & Row, 1979. First edition. Hardcover. Seventeen non-fiction pieces, including the ace, A Walk in the Country. Crisp copy. More
New York: Harper & Row, 1979. First edition. Hardcover. First edition of the author's tenth book. Essays. Seventeen pieces that were all published, with the exception of "A Night at a Waterfall." The stellar piece, in my opinion, is "A Walk in the Country." The first printing was 6500 copies..... More
New York: Harper & Row, 1979. First edition. Hardcover. First edition of the author's 10th book. Seventeen pieces that were all published with the exception of "A Night at a Waterfall." The stellar piece is "A Walk in the Country." The first printing was 6500 copies. Publisher slip tipped-in. More
New York: Knopf, 1974. First edition. Hardcover. It's not anybody who could write a bawdy, often hilarious, totally unsentimental novel about a legless deaf-mute who earns his keep by doing one-finger stands on arms the size of your average giant's thighs. Marvin Molar lives in a gym with Al --..... More
New York: Knopf, 1973. First edition. Hardcover. At the heart of this novel is George Gattling of Gainseville, Florida, fighting the boredom, the excruciating unimportance of his existence. More
New York: Knopf, 1973. First edition. Hardcover. First edition of the author's sixth novel, one of approx 5000 copies. Author photo and publisher's slip tipped in. More
New York: Harper & Row, 1988. First edition. Hardcover. Signed by Harry Crews on the title page. Enter the seedy world of fighters and musclemen. Eugene Talmadge Biggs, ex-farmboy and ex-boxer (he won 13 fights and lost the next four by knockouts), knows an amazing trick he can knock himself..... More
New York: Wm Morrow, 1969. First edition. Hardcover. The first issue of the author's second book (without the two dots on the copyright page). Tells the tale of a corrupted paradise, the Florida peninsula town of Garden Hills, which once flourished as the site of the world's largest phosphate mine..... More