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Nombre: Optimus Prime

Afiliación: Autobots

Línea: Transformers Prime First Edition

Clase: Voyager

Año: 2012

Número de adquisición: 507

 

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Name: Optimus Prime

Allegiance: Autobots

Line: Transformers Prime First Edition

Class: Voyager

Year: 2012

Number in Collection: 507

 

blog.mdverde.com

“The Blue Poetry Book” was Andrew Lang's first and only “colored” book of poetry. It collects nearly 150 poems by masters such as Blake, Wordsworth, Scott, Longfellow, Burns, Byron, Shakespeare, Poe, Marlowe, Coleridge, Milton, Macaulay, among others. The poems are accompanied by 100 black and white illustrations by Henry J. Ford and Lancelot Speed.

 

Andrew Lang (1844 -1912) was a Scots poet, novelist, literary critic, and contributor to the field of anthropology. He is best known as a collector of folk and fairy tales and for his twelve “colored” fairy books, published between 1889 and 1910. Each volume is distinguished by its own color, beginning with “The Blue Fairy Book” (1889) and ending with “The Lilac Fairy Book” (1910). In all, 437 tales from a broad range of cultures and countries are presented. The series was immensely popular, helped by Lang's reputation in folklore, and by the packaging device of the uniform books. The series proved of great influence in children's literature, increasing the popularity of fairy tales over tales of real life.

 

From "The Rhinegold & The Valkyrie" by Richard Wagner. New York: Doubleday Page & Co., 1910. First American Edition

Comets have a long history as bad omens and unwelcome visitors, but H. G. Wells’ novel “In the Days of the Comet” turns that silly superstition on its head. A comet enters the Earth’s atmosphere and disintegrates, turning the nitrogen of the air into a healing gas that brings happiness, peace and generosity to even the most violent of humans.

 

It is interesting to note that Earth was destined to pass through the tail of Halley’s comet in 1910, just four years after the book’s publication. One of the substances discovered in the comet’s tail by spectroscopic analysis was the toxic gas cyanogen. The astronomer Camille Flammarion claimed that, when Earth passed through the tail, the gas "would impregnate the atmosphere and possibly snuff out all life on the planet." His pronouncement led to panicked buying of gas masks and quack "anti-comet pills" and "anti-comet umbrellas" by the public. [Source: Wikipedia]

 

I promise I did get further than the title page! ^-^

Yeah, but I did spend a long time looking at it!

Branksea St Mary's Church on the Isle of Branksea, Poole, Dorset, England.

The Illustrated News of the World – First Edition 1858.

‘The Illustrated News of the World and National Portrait Gallery of Eminent Personages’ was a new publication with the strong visual emphasis of numerous large woodcuts to illustrate local and world events, and also featuring a number of fine steel engravings of eminent persons. The publishers stated their hopes that the publication would match or supplement the existing illustrated magazines:- The Illustrated London News and Punch Magazine .

Published by Illustrated News of the World, The Strand, London. Annual bound collection, red cloth boards 338 pages 42cm x 29cm.

 

Willy Ley (1906-1969) was a German-American science writer and space advocate who helped popularize rocketry and spaceflight both in Germany and in the United States. He was a rocket designer and co-founder of the world’s first rocket airfield in Berlin. In 1935, he fled Nazi Germany for Great Britain and then the United States.

 

Willy Ley also enjoyed writing about the mysteries of natural history and was one of the early chroniclers of cryptozoology. He wrote about Sea Serpents, Yeti and the possibilities of living dinosaurs. He also suggested that some legendary creatures (e.g. the Sirrush, the Unicorn and the Cyclops) might have been based on real species (or the misinterpretation of certain animals or their fossils or remains).

 

Many of his articles published in journals, newpapers and magazines were on cryptozoological topics. The German book “Drachen Riesen” (Dragon Giants) appears to be the German edition of Willy Ley’s “Dragons in Amber: Further Adventures of a Romantic Naturalist,” first published in the UK in 1951. It is an early example of Ley’s cryptozoological writings where he describes strange animals from yesterday and today and makes amazing connections between science and legend. He writes about extinct animals and animals from the distant past that are still living in hidden corners of the earth.

 

To celebrate the marriage of Princess Victoria of England and Prince Frederick of Prussia.

The Illustrated News of the World – First Edition 1858.

‘The Illustrated News of the World and National Portrait Gallery of Eminent Personages’ was a new publication with the strong visual emphasis of numerous large woodcuts to illustrate local and world events, and also featuring a number of fine steel engravings of eminent persons. The publishers stated their hopes that the publication would match or supplement the existing illustrated magazines:- The Illustrated London News and Punch Magazine .

Published by Illustrated News of the World, The Strand, London. Annual bound collection, red cloth boards 338 pages 42cm x 29cm.

 

The pamphlet contains a lecture that James McNeill Whistler first gave in February, 1885, which was his first public appearance as a lecturer on art. Oscar Wilde who was present in Prince’s Hall for the lecture was quite impressed by Whistler’s marvelous eloquence and his utter impertinence when he, “with charming ease and much grace of manner, explained to the public that the only thing they should cultivate was ugliness, and that on their permanent stupidity rested all the hopes of art in the future.”

 

Oscar Wilde goes on to say: “The scene was in every way delightful; he stood there, a miniature Mephistopheles, mocking the majority! He was like a brilliant surgeon lecturing to a class composed of subjects destined ultimately for dissection, and solemnly assuring them how valuable to science their maladies were, and how absolutely uninteresting the slightest symptoms of health on their part would be. In fairness to the audience, however, I must say that they seemed extremely gratified at being rid of the dreadful responsibility of admiring anything, and nothing could have exceeded their enthusiasm when they were told by Mr. Whistler that no matter how vulgar their dresses were, or how hideous their surroundings at home, still it was possible that a great painter, if there was such a thing, could, by contemplating them in the twilight and half closing his eyes, see them under really picturesque conditions, and produce a picture which they were not to attempt to understand, much less dare to enjoy. Then there were some arrows, barbed and brilliant, shot off, with all the speed and splendour of fireworks, and the archaeologists, who spend their lives in verifying the birthplaces of nobodies, and estimate the value of a work of art by its date or its decay; at the art critics who always treat a picture as if it were a novel, and try and find out the plot; at dilettanti in general and amateurs in particular...”

 

Nombre: Optimus Prime

Afiliación: Autobots

Línea: Transformers Prime First Edition

Clase: Voyager

Año: 2012

Número de adquisición: 507

 

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Name: Optimus Prime

Allegiance: Autobots

Line: Transformers Prime First Edition

Class: Voyager

Year: 2012

Number in Collection: 507

 

blog.mdverde.com

The Lancia Stratos HF (Tipo 829), widely and more simply known as Lancia Stratos, is a car made by Italian car manufacturer Lancia. The HF stands for High Fidelity. It was a very successful rally car, winning the World Rally Championship in 1974, 1975 and 1976.

Vol. III, Second Series, First edition.

 

Originally written as newspaper journalism, “Sketches by Boz” is the public record of Dickens’ apprenticeship. The 56 sketches concern London scenes and were originally published in various newspapers and other periodicals between 1833 and 1836, including the “Morning Chronicle,” the “Evening Chronicle,” the “Monthly Magazine,” the “Carlton Chronicle” and “Bell’s Life in London.” Fist published in book form in 1836, the whole work is divided into four sections: “Our Parish,” “Scenes,” “Characters,” and “Tales.” Dickens’ writings are enhanced by the regular inclusion of illustrations by George Cruikshank to highlight key scenes and characters.

“Silent Spring” inspired an environmental movement that led to the creation of the U.S Environmental Protection Agency. The book documented the detrimental effects on the environment – particularly on birds – of the indiscriminate use of pesticides and it brought these environmental concerns to the American public. Carson accused the chemical industry of spreading disinformation and public officials of accepting industry claims unquestioningly. In spite of fierce opposition by chemical companies, the book spurred a reversal in national pesticide policy and led to a nationwide ban on DDT for agricultural uses. [Source: Wikipedia]

Commissioner Yey of Canton was captured and deposed by the British in the Battle of Canton of 1857.

Woodcut from The Illustrated News of the World – First Edition 1858.

‘The Illustrated News of the World and National Portrait Gallery of Eminent Personages’ was a new publication with the strong visual emphasis of numerous large woodcuts to illustrate local and world events, and also featuring a number of fine steel engravings of eminent persons. A competitor to the existing illustrated magazines:- The Illustrated London News and Punch Magazine .

Published by Illustrated News of the World, The Strand, London. Annual bound collection, red cloth boards 338 pages 42cm x 29cm.

 

“Jim standing a siege.”

 

“Tom Sawyer Abroad” features Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn in a parody of adventure stories like those of Jules Verne. In the story, Tom, Huck, and Jim set sail to Africa in a futuristic hot air balloon, where they survive encounters with lions, robbers, and fleas to see some of the world’s greatest wonders, including the Pyramids and the Sphinx. The story is told using the first-person narrative voice of Huck Finn and is a sequel, set in the time following the title story of the Tom Sawyer series, “Adventures of Tom Sawyer.” [Source: Wikipedia]

Cujo is a two-hundred-pound Saint Bernard, the beloved family pet of the Joe Cambers of Castle Rock, Maine, and the best friend ten-year-old Brett Camber has ever had. One day Cujo pursues a rabbit into a cave inhabited by some very sick bats. What happens to Cujo, and to those unlucky enough to be near him, makes for a terrifying story by master of horror Stephen King and is the basis of a 1983 film.

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=v0k21yeVMbM

Here's another literary masterpiece printed at the Windmill Press in Kingswood, Surrey: The Winter of our Discontent by the mighty John Steinbeck. This first edition was published in the UK by Heinemann in 1961.

 

This was Steinbeck’s last novel. He wrote 33 books in all, and was the recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature. Some of his other titles are household names – East of Eden for example; The Grapes of Wrath, Of Mice and Men and Cannery Row.

 

The Windmill Press was set up by Frank Doubleday, chairman of William Heinemann, and among its authors were not only Steinbeck, but luminaries such as Graham Greene, Nevil Shute, HG Wells, John Galsworthy, Somerset Maugham, Monica Dickens and John Masefield.

 

The Press stood in extensive grounds in Kingswood. It opened in 1928 and ceased operations in 1997.

 

♦ While you’re here… I have two Galleries that might interest you: a Bookshops gallery and a Public Libraries gallery. Happy browsing!

John Glenn is a former U.S. Marine Corps aviator, engineer, astronaut and United States Senator. He was selected as one of the "Mercury Seven" group of military test pilots selected in 1959 by NASA to become America's first astronauts and fly the Project Mercury spacecraft. On February 20, 1962, Glenn flew the Friendship 7 mission and became the first American to orbit the Earth and the fifth person in space, after cosmonauts Yuri Gagarin and Gherman Titov and the sub-orbital flights of Mercury astronauts Alan Shepard and Gus Grissom. John Glenn returned to space on October 29, 1998, at age 77, aboard the space shuttle Discovery. [Source: Wikipedia]

John B. Mitchell, owner of the Seven X Ranch, started out with a few saddle horses that wasn't his and a long rope. He left Texas, in a hurry, in the late 1870's and drifted northward. Half a century later he was the monarch of a pretty fair sized outfit -- sixty miles long and over forty miles wide, with rivers and two mountain ranges and fine rolling country -- and thousands of cattle.

 

This is the story of life on the Seven X, of the Mitchell family and the cowboys who worked for them: of young Austin Mitchell and his sister June, and of the "pilgrims" from the East who invited themselves to the Seven X one summer to find out what "real" ranch life was like.

 

Without pulling a single six-gun, fanning a trigger, or using any other stock device of Western fiction, Will James tells the story of life on the Seven X Ranch during the early 1900s. This authentic portrait of a ranching family details their dangerous work, their dreams and aspirations, and the rugged land they lived in.

Just Love Festival is back and better than ever! The first edition started and ended strong and we're looking forward to the next two. Check out highlights from Just Love Festival Edition 1 now!

 

justlovefestival.org

A photo of Frederic Brown is on the cover. The following is a brief biography of Fredric Brown (1906-1972) from the Goodreads website (at www.goodreads.com/author/show/51503.Fredric_Brown):

 

"Fredric Brown was an American science fiction and mystery writer. He was one of the boldest early writers in genre fiction in his use of narrative experimentation. While never in the front rank of popularity in his lifetime, Brown has developed a considerable cult following in the almost half century since he last wrote. His works have been periodically reprinted and he has a worldwide fan base, most notably in the U.S. and Europe, and especially in France, where there have been several recent movie adaptations of his work. He also remains popular in Japan.

 

"Never financially secure, Brown - like many other pulp writers - often wrote at a furious pace in order to pay bills. This accounts, at least in part, for the uneven quality of his work. A newspaperman by profession, Brown was only able to devote 14 years of his life as a full-time fiction writer. Brown was also a heavy drinker, and this at times doubtless affected his productivity. A cultured man and omnivorous reader whose interests ranged far beyond those of most pulp writers, Brown had a lifelong interest in the flute, chess, poker, and the works of Lewis Carroll. Brown married twice and was the father of two sons."

Nombre: Hot Shot

Afiliación: Autobots

Línea: Transformers Prime: Robots In Disguise

Clase: Deluxe

Año: 2012

Número de adquisición: 554

 

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Name: Hot Shot

Allegiance: Autobots

Line: Transformers Prime: Robots In Disguise

Class: Deluxe

Year: 2012

Number in Collection: 554

 

blog.mdverde.com

The Illustrated News of the World – First Edition 1858.

‘The Illustrated News of the World and National Portrait Gallery of Eminent Personages’ was a new publication with the strong visual emphasis of numerous large woodcuts to illustrate local and world events, and also featuring a number of fine steel engravings of eminent persons. The publishers stated their hopes that the publication would match or supplement the existing illustrated magazines:- The Illustrated London News and Punch Magazine .

Published by Illustrated News of the World, The Strand, London. Annual bound collection, red cloth boards 338 pages 42cm x 29cm.

 

The Sun Rising in a Mist by Turner.

The Illustrated News of the World – First Edition 1858.

‘The Illustrated News of the World and National Portrait Gallery of Eminent Personages’ was a new publication with the strong visual emphasis of numerous large woodcuts to illustrate local and world events, and also featuring a number of fine steel engravings of eminent persons. The publishers stated their hopes that the publication would match or supplement the existing illustrated magazines:- The Illustrated London News and Punch Magazine .

Published by Illustrated News of the World, The Strand, London. Annual bound collection, red cloth boards 338 pages 42cm x 29cm.

 

A page from the first edition of the Wonderful Wizard of Oz

Nombre: Optimus Prime

Afiliación: Autobots

Línea: Transformers Prime First Edition

Clase: Voyager

Año: 2012

Número de adquisición: 507

 

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Name: Optimus Prime

Allegiance: Autobots

Line: Transformers Prime First Edition

Class: Voyager

Year: 2012

Number in Collection: 507

 

blog.mdverde.com

The Writers' Museum, Lawnmarket, Edinburgh.

The pamphlet contains a lecture that James McNeill Whistler first gave in February, 1885, which was his first public appearance as a lecturer on art. Oscar Wilde who was present in Prince’s Hall for the lecture was quite impressed by Whistler’s marvelous eloquence and his utter impertinence when he, “with charming ease and much grace of manner, explained to the public that the only thing they should cultivate was ugliness, and that on their permanent stupidity rested all the hopes of art in the future.”

 

Oscar Wilde goes on to say: “The scene was in every way delightful; he stood there, a miniature Mephistopheles, mocking the majority! He was like a brilliant surgeon lecturing to a class composed of subjects destined ultimately for dissection, and solemnly assuring them how valuable to science their maladies were, and how absolutely uninteresting the slightest symptoms of health on their part would be. In fairness to the audience, however, I must say that they seemed extremely gratified at being rid of the dreadful responsibility of admiring anything, and nothing could have exceeded their enthusiasm when they were told by Mr. Whistler that no matter how vulgar their dresses were, or how hideous their surroundings at home, still it was possible that a great painter, if there was such a thing, could, by contemplating them in the twilight and half closing his eyes, see them under really picturesque conditions, and produce a picture which they were not to attempt to understand, much less dare to enjoy. Then there were some arrows, barbed and brilliant, shot off, with all the speed and splendour of fireworks, and the archaeologists, who spend their lives in verifying the birthplaces of nobodies, and estimate the value of a work of art by its date or its decay; at the art critics who always treat a picture as if it were a novel, and try and find out the plot; at dilettanti in general and amateurs in particular...”

 

"The Man Inside" is a utopian novel published in the midst of the Great Depression. The narrative is in the form of notes, diaries and newspaper clippings. An anthropologist who is disenchanted with both Western civilization and his personal life travels to a remote part of Africa. In his diary, he reviews experiments by Jolie Coeur, a scientist who engages in scientific tests in hypnosis. Coeur hypnotizes young people to feel extreme sexual attraction as well as revulsion; he demonstrates painless pregnancies under hypnosis; he places both humans and animals in states of suspended animation; he even forces a person to commit suicide by suggestion. Although the experiments lead to disaster for all parties, Coeur contends that he has discovered the key to both peace and justice in the axiom, "Those who control the means of suggestion control the community," and asserts that he has already created a utopia in embryo." [Source: www.jstor.org/stable/20718095?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents]

Students celebrating the 1858 marriage of Princess Victoria (daughter of Queen Victoria) to Crown Prince Frederick of Prussia.

The Illustrated News of the World – First Edition 1858.

‘The Illustrated News of the World and National Portrait Gallery of Eminent Personages’ was a new publication with the strong visual emphasis of numerous large woodcuts to illustrate local and world events, and also featuring a number of fine steel engravings of eminent persons. The publishers stated their hopes that the publication would match or supplement the existing illustrated magazines:- The Illustrated London News and Punch Magazine .

Published by Illustrated News of the World, The Strand, London. Annual bound collection, red cloth boards 338 pages 42cm x 29cm.

 

Lee de Forest (1873-1961) was an American inventor, self-described "Father of Radio", and a pioneer in the development of sound-on-film recording used for motion pictures. He had over 180 patents, but also a tumultuous career — he boasted that he made, then lost, four fortunes. He was also involved in several major patent lawsuits, spent a substantial part of his income on legal bills, and was even tried (and acquitted) for mail fraud. His most famous invention, in 1906, was the three-element "grid Audion", which, although he had only a limited understanding of how it worked, provided the foundation for the development of vacuum tube technology. [Source: Wikipedia]

Leonardo Da Vinci’s “Treatise on Painting,” the most important treatise on art to be written during the Renaissance, was actually compiled by Francesco Melzi, one of Leonardo’s pupils, around 1540. It circulated widely, first in separate manuscripts and later in printed books, and for centuries it was thought to have been written by Leonardo himself. Artists, scientists, and scholars including Galileo, read it avidly as an authoritative record of Leonardo’s thoughts. In the 19th century, when the artist’s original notes became available, scholars realized that the text poorly reflected Leonardo’s sophisticated ideas. The text was very influential nonetheless. For better or worse, it was the primary source for disseminating Leonardo’s art theory in Renaissance and Baroque Europe, from the mid-sixteenth century to the early nineteenth century.

 

[Source: www.treatiseonpainting.org/]

Nombre: Starscream

Afiliación: Decepticons

Línea: Transformers Prime RID

Clase: Voyager

Año: 2012

Número de adquisición: 501

 

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Name: Starscream

Allegiance: Decepticons

Line: Transformers Prime RID

Class: Voyager

Year: 2012

Number in Collection: 501

 

blog.mdverde.com

First, a man and a woman are subjects of a top-secret government experiment designed to produce extraordinary psychic powers. Then, they are married and have a child. A daughter. Early on the daughter shows signs of a wild and horrifying force growing within her. Desperately, her parents try to train her to keep that force in check, to "act normal." Now the government wants its brainchild back - for its own insane ends.

 

"Firestarter" was adapted into a movie in 1984:

www.youtube.com/watch?v=PIIP_4du328

A page from the first edition of the Wonderful Wizard of Oz

Vol. I, First Series, First edition.

 

Originally written as newspaper journalism, “Sketches by Boz” is the public record of Dickens’ apprenticeship. The 56 sketches concern London scenes and were originally published in various newspapers and other periodicals between 1833 and 1836, including the “Morning Chronicle,” the “Evening Chronicle,” the “Monthly Magazine,” the “Carlton Chronicle” and “Bell’s Life in London.” Fist published in book form in 1836, the whole work is divided into four sections: “Our Parish,” “Scenes,” “Characters,” and “Tales.” Dickens’ writings are enhanced by the regular inclusion of illustrations by George Cruikshank to highlight key scenes and characters.

 

"Who the dickens 'Boz' could be

Puzzled many a learned elf,

Till time unveiled the mystery,

And 'Boz' appeared as Dickens's self."

 

Dickens took the pseudonym from a nickname he had given his younger brother Augustus, whom he called "Moses" after a character in Oliver Goldsmith's The Vicar of Wakefield. This, "being facetiously pronounced through the nose," became "Boses", which in turn was shortened to "Boz".

 

[Source: Wikipedia]

 

‘The Illustrated News of the World and National Portrait Gallery of Eminent Personages’ was a new publication with the strong visual emphasis of numerous large woodcuts to illustrate local and world events, and also featuring a number of fine steel engravings of eminent persons. A competitor to the existing illustrated magazines:- The Illustrated London News and Punch Magazine .

Published by Illustrated News of the World, The Strand, London. Annual bound collection, red cloth boards 338 pages 42cm x 29cm.

 

Woodcut from The Illustrated News of the World – First Edition 1858.

‘The Illustrated News of the World and National Portrait Gallery of Eminent Personages’ was a new publication with numerous large woodcuts to illustrate local and world events, and also featuring a number of fine steel engravings of eminent persons. A competitor to the existing illustrated magazines:- The Illustrated London News and Punch Magazine .

Published by Illustrated News of the World, The Strand, London. Annual bound collection, red cloth boards 338 pages 42cm x 29cm.

 

she is my 1st edtion Yasmin, everyone(who see my doll) says that she is one of the most ugly from my collection.

ok, she is here to prove that she can be beautiful!

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