#stephen crane

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It’s Fine Press Friday!On this Fine Press Friday we present some pages from Will Bradley’s design anIt’s Fine Press Friday!On this Fine Press Friday we present some pages from Will Bradley’s design anIt’s Fine Press Friday!On this Fine Press Friday we present some pages from Will Bradley’s design anIt’s Fine Press Friday!On this Fine Press Friday we present some pages from Will Bradley’s design anIt’s Fine Press Friday!On this Fine Press Friday we present some pages from Will Bradley’s design anIt’s Fine Press Friday!On this Fine Press Friday we present some pages from Will Bradley’s design anIt’s Fine Press Friday!On this Fine Press Friday we present some pages from Will Bradley’s design anIt’s Fine Press Friday!On this Fine Press Friday we present some pages from Will Bradley’s design anIt’s Fine Press Friday!On this Fine Press Friday we present some pages from Will Bradley’s design anIt’s Fine Press Friday!On this Fine Press Friday we present some pages from Will Bradley’s design an

It’s Fine Press Friday!

On this Fine Press Friday we present some pages from Will Bradley’s design and printing of Stephen Crane’sWar is Kind, published in New York by Frederick A. Stokes in 1899. Printed on dark grey paper, this is the only edition of Crane’s second collection of poems, published a year before his death.

An artist, illustrator, filmmaker, printer, and type designer, Will Bradley (1868-1962) was one of the foremost American graphic designers of the 20th century, and this work is one of the most visually-memorable American trade publications of the 1890s. Although Bradley’s style exhibits many of the hallmarks of Art Nouveau, his aesthetic was also strongly influenced by the Arts & Crafts movement. Often criticized as an American knock-off of Aubrey Beardsley, Bradley’s early style was already well-established before Beardsley’s popularity in the mid-1890s.

Our copy of War is Kind is yet another gift from our friend Jerry Buff.  

View another post on Will Bradley’s type ornaments.

View moreFine Press Friday posts.


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Star Wars Miniatures Battles, Man-to-Man Combat in the Star Wars Galaxy, by Stephen Crane and Paul M

Star Wars Miniatures Battles, Man-to-Man Combat in the Star Wars Galaxy, by Stephen Crane and Paul Murphy, West End Games, 1991, compatible with WEG’s original D6 Star Wars RPG, featuring Grenadier Models’ Star Wars miniatures by Bob Charrette and Julie Guthrie; winner of Best Miniature Rules at Origins 1991


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saintsebastiensbf:

Olena Kalytiak Davis, Shattered Sonnets, Love Cards, and Other Off and Back Handed Importunities

Sharon Olds, True Love

Stephen Crane, In The Desert

Cameron Awkward-Rich, Meditations in an Emergency

ANTIGONE: The fields were wet. They were waiting for something to happen. The whole world was breathless, waiting. I can’t tell you what a roaring noise I seemed to make alone on the road. It bothered me that whatever was waiting, wasn’t waiting for me.

Jean Anouilh, Antigone

Etel Adnan, The Spring Flowers Own & The Manifestations of the Voyage

I’m trying to give you everything I have. But I can’t find it; I can’t find it yet.

Alice Notley, In The Pines

Anne Carson, Plainwater: Essays and Poetry

& if I were to forgive you (& I know I could)

who would be left

who would be left

to forgive me?

Hieu Minh Nguyen, Afterwards

Mahmoud Darwish, Mural

Fariha Róisín, How to Cure a Ghost

“You kiss the back of my legs and I want to cry. Only / the sun has come this close, only the sun.”

Shauna Barbosa, GPS

Mahmoud Darwish, Mural

Forough Farrokhzad, Another Birth

repetition in poetry // part i

(part ii) (part iii) (part iv)

Lana Turner, Stephen Crane, and Frank Sinatra at The Stork Club in 1943

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