-
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain – First Edition 1885
“All modern American literature comes from one book-Huckleberry Finn.” – Ernest Hemingway
-
Tales of The Jazz Age by F. Scott Fitzgerald First Printing, 1922.
It contains eleven stories, including some of his most celebrated and experimental works such as “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,” “May Day,” and “The Diamond as Big as the Ritz.” These stories reflect Fitzgerald’s fascination with youth, wealth, disillusionment, and the dazzling but disoriented spirit of postwar America.
-
-
1544 (History of The World) by Casper Sturm – Die Kleyn Furstlich Chronica
A rare and richly illustrated 1544 chronicle of world history, bound in a 17th-century antiphonary leaf and one of only two known copies in private hands. The author was historical in his own right by safeguarding Martin Luther at the Diet of Worms.
-
1555 Doctrine of Hippocrates and Galen on Foundations of Classical Medicines & Philosophy
This rare 1555 medical treatise, explores elemental and physiological theories, offering valuable insights into early modern medicine and its lasting influence on Western medical practice. Bound in a 1530 leaf of a post-incunable in Gothic script.