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Robert Payne Presents The Levis Crowd
AU$400.00 Read MoreAdd to cart[John Embry]
: N.p., No date.A selection from the gay physique photographic archive of Bob Mizer’s Athletic Model Guild (AMG), compiled by Drummer magazine co-founder John Embry under his Robert Payne pseudonym in the years leading up the magazine’s beginnings. The publication brings together masculine imagery of the American outdoorsman in Levi’s, with a centre spread featuring prominent American porn actor and director Fred Halsted.
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Bootlove’s Premier Issue
AU$200.00 Read MoreAdd to cartD. Jackson
Palm Springs: Bootlove’s, 1979.One-shot American magazine devoted to interviews with professional dominatrixes about their footwear. The first in a series of titles by David Jackson’s Strictly Speaking Publishing Company, which went on to become an established force in fem-dom publishing through its long-running Domination Directory International (DDI) and Fantasy Fashion Digest. Unrecorded in OCLC.
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Sweet Gwendoline & Sir Dystic d’Arcy No. 1: The Race for the Gold Cup
AU$2,000.00 Read MoreAdd to cartJohn Willie [John Alexander Scott Coutts]
Los Angeles: J. A. S. Coutts, 1958.The complete cartoon serial of Sweet Gwendoline, reworked, finished, and published by the artist. The character first appeared in Coutts iconic fetish magazine Bizarre, which ran for 26 issues between 1946 and 1959 and remains the most influential fetish periodical of its era. Publishing under the pseudonym John Willie, Coutts work profoundly shaped later artists including Eric Stanton, Gene Bilbrew, and erotica publisher Leonard Burtman. Born in Singapore to British parents, Coutts lived in Brisbane and Sydney from 1926 to 1945, where he developed his signature aesthetic centred on high heels, corsetry, and bondage. During this period he produced photographs and drawings, often featuring his wife and model Holly Anna Faram, much of which informed the imagery of Bizarre’s early issues. After a short stint in the Australian Military Forces, Coutts emigrated to North America in 1945, publishing Bizarre soon after. This standalone title was published after Coutts had sold the magazine and relocated from New York to Los Angeles. The final 55-page narrative that Coutts published in magazine form in November 1958 was a significant reworking of the original Sir d’Arcy d’Arcy comic–almost a complete reimagining. The journey to this completed work had been long and winding, beginning in Bizarre, passing through Wink magazine, and briefly distributed by Irving Klaw as 10×8″ photographic sheets. The bound edition Coutts eventually published remains the only complete version.” (Richard Perez Seves, John Willie: The Story of John Alexander Scott Coutts). A single copy recorded in public institutions, at Yale University.
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Domineta
AU$400.00 Read MoreAdd to cartGene Bilbrew; A. De Granamour; Ralph Gayl; Gene Paul
New York: Art Publications, 1965.3 femdom short stories with illustrations by Gene Bilbrew, noted African American fetish artist of the 1950s and 60s, under his Eneg moniker. Billed as a new Connoisseur publication (whether it was produced by Leonard Burtman, or riding off the back of the collapse of Selbee, is unknown) and as a Collector’s First Edition, together with a call for correspondence to be sent in from readers, however no further issues appear to have been produced. The first author, A. DeGranamour, whose contribution occupies more than half the volume, went on to pen numerous works of erotica published in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
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Tyson-Rose Rubber Garments Catalog (2 Volumes)
AU$100.00 Read MoreAdd to cartTyson-Rose Co.
Guttenberg: Tyson-Rose Company, No date.Two catalogues for New Jersey mail order rubberwear business Tyson-Rose Co.
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Betty’s Latex Fashions Catalog (2 Volumes)
AU$200.00 Read MoreAdd to cartBetty’s Latex Fashions
Erin: Betty’s Services, No date.The first two catalogues for Canadian mail order rubberwear business Betty’s Latex Fashions.
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Secrets of Female Impersonation
AU$150.00 Read MoreAdd to cartHollywood Illusion Studio
Hollywood: Hollywood Illusion Studio, No date.Late 1980s mail-order catalogue offering a comprehensive range of products for male-to-female crossdressing, including corsetry, waist cinchers, brassieres, breast forms, hosiery, garter belts, high-heeled shoes, gloves, wigs, and artificial nails. Features a sizing chart and practical guidance notes aimed at transvestites. Covers and one interior illustration by the pin-up artist Bill Ward.
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The Making of Mary
AU$100.00 Read MoreAdd to cartMichelle Kristy
King of Prussia: Creative Design Services, 1991.“Follow the transformation of Mark to Mary…” An erotic transitional story with illustrations by the author. Unrecorded in OCLC.
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Atomic Horror Comic
AU$100.00 Read MoreAdd to cartNicky Gray; Sarah Curtis; Bob Clutterbuck; Ian McCorist; Moll
Melbourne: Walker Press, 1977.Anti-nuclear comic addressing uranium mining in Australia, Aboriginal land rights, and radioactive waste, including the Rum Jungle uranium mine and its contaminated tailings. Combines comic-strip illustration by Moll with informational text panels presenting historical and scientific context, situating Australian concerns within the broader global nuclear narrative. Published during a high point of Australian anti-uranium activism, as campaigns against mining on Aboriginal land in the Northern Territory intensified. A representative example of the activist comix tradition, using the underground format for political education rather than pure satire.
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The Electric Automobile: Its Construction, Care and Operation
AU$400.00 Read MoreAdd to cartC. E. Woods
Chicago and New York: Herbert S. Stone & Company, 1900.One of the earliest monographs devoted to electric vehicles, covering their construction, maintenance, and practical operation at a time when electrics were serious competitors to petrol-powered cars. Clinton Edgar Woods (1863-1927), an electrical and mechanical engineer, founded the Woods Motor Vehicle Company in Chicago in 1896 and was a committed advocate of electric propulsion, anticipating that both electric and gasoline vehicles would displace horse-drawn transport. Writing at a moment when the relative futures of electric and gasoline power remained uncertain (though the limitations of battery range were already apparent) Woods expresses a cautious scepticism that would, for much of the following century, be borne out by the dominance of the internal combustion engine. “Will not a battery some time be made to run a vehicle 100 or more miles on one charge? While this may be possible, the writer hardly thinks it probable.”
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Car Lovers
AU$300.00 Read MoreAdd to cartAdina Yurana
Sydney: Howard Publications, 1972.The high point of Howard Publications 1970s Australian erotica output, a fully illustrated exploration of the car’s influence on man’s sexual behaviour. Lengthy text by Adina Yurana accompanies five photographic series of couples making love in and on their cars in Australia’s great outdoors. Featuring a Mercedes-Benz 280C (The Limousine Lover), a Ford Falcon 500 (The Countryman), a Nissan Patrol (The Great White Hunter), and a Meyers Manx dune buggy (Beachbuggy).
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![Lesbian Letters Issue No. 1 [&] Issue No. 2](https://www.thebookmerchantjenkins.com/wp-content/uploads/0037311-300x300.jpg)
Lesbian Letters Issue No. 1 [&] Issue No. 2
AU$400.00 Read MoreAdd to cartHera
Toronto: Stewart Gordon Publications, 1967.Pre-Stonewall lesbian periodical (complete in two parts) published under the pseudonymous editorship of “Hera,” comprising confessional-style narratives presented as authentic letters from lesbian correspondents. Includes purportedly authentic but likely fictionalised first-person accounts of lesbian desire, seduction, and relationships, alongside an advice column attributed to “Dr. G. Klow.” Published by Stewart Gordon Publications, a Toronto and New York erotica house also responsible for editions of de Sade. The publication follows the conventions of 1960s commercial sleaze, with pseudonymous authorship and a thin clinical veneer. A relatively refined example of sensationalist lesbian-themed print culture, adopting a more polished tone while remaining within the conventions of male-oriented commercial erotica.
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The Gay Haunt
AU$400.00 Read MoreAdd to cartVictor Jay
New York: The Olympia Press, 1970.Gay pulp fiction by Victor J. Banis under his Victor Jay pseudonym, one of several he employed for his prolific output of gay paperback fiction in the 1960s and 70s. Banis was a pioneering figure in gay genre fiction, among the first American writers to place openly gay protagonists at the centre of mass-market paperbacks, not as villains, victims, or cautionary figures, but as sympathetic leads in adventure, mystery, and comedy. Part of Maurice Girodias’ The Olympia Press Traveller’s Companion Series, TC-484. “Can a handsome young gay stud go straight and marry the boss’s daughter? Sure, if the amorous ghost of his late boyfriend doesn’t materialize naked in his car, at his parties, and in his bed.” This copy signed by Banis to the title page.
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The Gay Haunt
AU$200.00 Read MoreAdd to cartVictor Jay
New York: The Other Traveller, 1972.Gay pulp fiction by Victor J. Banis under his Victor Jay pseudonym, one of several he employed for his prolific output of gay paperback fiction in the 1960s and 70s. Banis was a pioneering figure in gay genre fiction, among the first American writers to place openly gay protagonists at the centre of mass-market paperbacks, not as villains, victims, or cautionary figures, but as sympathetic leads in adventure, mystery, and comedy. This copy signed by Banis to the title page.
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Occupied Spaces
AU$200.00 Read MoreAdd to cartBen Roberts; Naomi Colvin
London: Here Press, 2012.Photographic documentation of the private and communal spaces of the 2011-2012 Occupy London protest, with a short essay by Naomi Colvin. First edition, one of 250 copies (a second edition of 100 copies was printed in 2014).
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Opiologia ad mentem Acadamiae Naturae Curiosorum
AU$4,000.00 Read MoreAdd to cartGeorg Wolfgang Wedel
Jenae: Johannis Fritschii, 1674.First edition of this rare and early treatise on the pharmacological and therapeutic aspects of opium. The large title vignette one of the earliest illustrations of scoring and bleeding the poppy. Georg Wolfgang Wedel (1645-1721) was a German professor of surgery, botany, theoretical and practical medicine, and chemistry.
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L’Enfer de Joseph Prudhomme savoir Deux Gougnottes et La Grisette et L’Etudiant
AU$2,500.00 Read MoreAdd to cart[Henry Monnier]; [Jean Dulac]
Paris: Sans la Permission Roy Louis Philippe, No date.Clandestine edition, circa 1929, illustrating Henry Monnier’s Prudhomme. One of 20 deluxe copies on Imperial Japan paper (from a total edition of 320), with the erotic plates in a second state in black and white with remarques, and an additional rejected plate not included with the standard issue. This is the first edition illustrated by Jean Dulac; a later edition with an entirely new suite of illustrations by Dulac was issued a few years afterward. DUTEL 1481. Finely bound by Henri Alix, with the original wrappers bound in.
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Fantastic Worlds: North Africa’s Magazine of Cinema Fantasy and the Unknown
AU$400.00 Read MoreAdd to cartDavid Soren
Cambridge, Mass.: Fantastic Worlds Magazine, [1972].Issue one of the horror and Hammer Films fanzine published by American archaeologist David Soren (1946-). “So one day we went to Hammer – we just walked right in a announced that we were publishers of a fanzine (fan magazine) about horror films in the U.S. and we asked for the addresses and phones numbers of David’s favorite Hammer stars so we could interview them – and we got them!! So for the next couple of years, whenever we were in London, we sought out and interviewed stars… To keep us honest, David had to actually produce the fanzine where these interviews were published, and so he wrote and distributed Fantastic Worlds Magazine, Issues 1 and 2, a real collector’s item today!” (Noelle Soren) Indeed rare, with only 1 holding recorded in OCLC, at the University of Georgia.
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Black & Gay: The Survey of Interracial Homosexual Practices
AU$400.00 Read MoreAdd to cartVictor Dodson
North Hollywood: Barclay House, 1969.Non-fiction sexological pulp being a survey of interracial homosexual practices by partner team Victor J. Banis and Sam Dodson. Banis was a highly influential gay fiction author and has been called “the godfather of modern popular gay fiction”. This copy signed by Banis to the title page.
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The Crisis by Eugene Field
AU$500.00 Read MoreAdd to cartEugene Field; [Colin B. Berckelman]
Athens [ie. Sydney]: The Vaginal Press, 1938.The vulgarity of the sexual slang in this scurrilous, pseudonymously published piece of verse would have been regarded in 1938 Australia as being at the very extremes of obscenity. Written and “hand-printed for subscribers only” by bibliophile Colin Berckelman in an (unsurprisingly) small edition of 25 copies, the publication can now be considered a genuine rarity: 11 of the 25 copies have found their way into public collections. Berckelman’s use of the non-de-plume Eugene Field is almost certainly an allusion to the late nineteenth century American writer of the same name who, aside from producing poetry for young readers, wrote The Love Affairs of a Bibliomaniac (1896). Berckelman, for reasons that were either genuine or perverse, evidently felt some affinity with Field. “On top, the pumping method; or lying on the side, Or spread upon her billowing bum, a-la the blushing bride, Or stand up, or sitting down, or resting on all four, Whereby the visitor could take his choice of either door, Or dressed, or naked,… every way her genius could invent To catch the silvery substance that tickleth as ’tis spent.”