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The ring always believes that the finger lives for it.
London: Tom Stacey Ltd, Date: 1971. First Edition. hardcover. Good/Good. 9x6x1. Signed. D/J has light rubbing to top edge with two small closed tears, crease to bottom edge of front D/J with inch long closed tear. Inscribed 'To Madame tussaud's - With Best Recollections Author L. Vladimirov 1971'. Paper band included however it is torn in two. 1971. Tom Stacey Ltd ISBN 0854680233 9780854680238 [GB]
ISBN10: 0854680233, ISBN13: 9780854680238, [publisher: Tom Stacey Ltd] Hardcover First Edition D/J has light rubbing to top edge with two small closed tears, crease to bottom edge of front D/J with inch long closed tear. Inscribed 'To Madame tussaud's - With Best Recollections Author L. Vladimirov 1971'. Paper band included however it is torn in two. [Stroud, GLOS, United Kingdom] [Publication Year: 1971]
Tom Stacey Ltd 1971 First Edition hardcover Good in Good jacket Size: 9x6x1; D/J has light rubbing to top edge with two small closed tears, crease to bottom edge of front D/J with inch long closed tear. Inscribed 'To Madame tussaud's-With Best Recollections Author L. Vladimirov 1971'. Paper band included however it is torn in two.
London Tom Stacey Ltd 1971 1st Edition Hardcover Very Good in Very Good jacket 8vo-over 7¾-9¾" tall. 1st Printing. Very good with slight rounding to corners and normal toning to paper. No markings, no bookplate. In very good dust jacket with some bubbling to lamination along left edge of front panel. Light edgewear, no jacket chips, not price-clipped. INCLUDES scarce wraparound band promoting the foreword by Anatoli Fedoseyev, a Russian scientist who defected in 1971. The band is printed on orange orange paper and there is some fading to the paper on the band along the spine. Uncommon with wraparound band.
London: Tom Stacey Ltd, Date: 1971. Presumed First Edition, First printing. Hardcover. Good. 192 pages. Illustrations. Maps Index. Ex-library with the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory library markings. Preface by Lord St. Oswald. Foreword by Anatoli Fedoseyev. Part One: The First Sputnik; Part Two: 'Vostok'--the East; Part Three 'Voskhod'--the Rising of the Sun; and Part Four: The Setting of the Sun. Leonid Vladimirov was a department head at a Soviet equivalent of Popular Mechanics magazine, where he introduced his readers to the glory of Soviet science and technology. In 1966, he defected to Great Britain, and since he had no other skills, he began to introduce his readers to the disgrace of Soviet science and technology, in particular space exploration. The R-7 rocket family ("Vostok", "Voskhod", "Soyuz" and so on) is the most mass-produced and the most reliable rocket in the history of space exploration; according to astronautix, by the year 2000 it had been launched over 1628 times, and 97.5% of the launches were successful. Nevertheless, Vladimirov calls this rocket "a very complicated, expensive and inconvenient solution" and spends many pages on its demerits. From the Foreword: It is the great merit of Leonid Vladimirov's book that, for the first time, he provides a complete and convincing explanation of the strange twists and turns of the Soviet space 'programme' and reveals the sad state of Russian science and technology in the field of space research. 1971. Tom S ...
ISBN10: 0854680233, ISBN13: 9780854680238, [publisher: Tom Stacey Ltd, London] Hardcover First Edition Very good with slight rounding to corners and normal toning to paper. No markings, no bookplate. In very good dust jacket with some bubbling to lamination along left edge of front panel. Light edgewear, no jacket chips, not price-clipped. INCLUDES scarce wraparound band promoting the foreword by Anatoli Fedoseyev, a Russian scientist who defected in 1971. The band is printed on orange orange paper and there is some fading to the paper on the band along the spine. Uncommon with wraparound band. [Fullerton, CA, U.S.A.] [Publication Year: 1971]
London Tom Stacey Ltd 1971 Presumed First Edition, First printing Hardcover Good 192 pages. Illustrations. Maps Index. Ex-library with the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory library markings. Preface by Lord St. Oswald. Foreword by Anatoli Fedoseyev. Part One: The First Sputnik; Part Two: 'Vostok'--the East; Part Three 'Voskhod'--the Rising of the Sun; and Part Four: The Setting of the Sun. Leonid Vladimirov was a department head at a Soviet equivalent of Popular Mechanics magazine, where he introduced his readers to the glory of Soviet science and technology. In 1966, he defected to Great Britain, and since he had no other skills, he began to introduce his readers to the disgrace of Soviet science and technology, in particular space exploration. The R-7 rocket family ("Vostok", "Voskhod", "Soyuz" and so on) is the most mass-produced and the most reliable rocket in the history of space exploration; according to astronautix, by the year 2000 it had been launched over 1628 times, and 97.5% of the launches were successful. Nevertheless, Vladimirov calls this rocket "a very complicated, expensive and inconvenient solution" and spends many pages on its demerits. From the Foreword: It is the great merit of Leonid Vladimirov's book that, for the first time, he provides a complete and convincing explanation of the strange twists and turns of the Soviet space 'programme' and reveals the sad state of Russian science and technology in the field of space research.
ISBN10: 0854680233, ISBN13: 9780854680238, [publisher: Tom Stacey Ltd, London] Hardcover First Edition 192 pages. Illustrations. Maps Index. Ex-library with the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory library markings. Preface by Lord St. Oswald. Foreword by Anatoli Fedoseyev. Part One: The First Sputnik; Part Two: 'Vostok'--the East; Part Three 'Voskhod'--the Rising of the Sun; and Part Four: The Setting of the Sun. Leonid Vladimirov was a department head at a Soviet equivalent of Popular Mechanics magazine, where he introduced his readers to the glory of Soviet science and technology. In 1966, he defected to Great Britain, and since he had no other skills, he began to introduce his readers to the disgrace of Soviet science and technology, in particular space exploration. The R-7 rocket family ("Vostok", "Voskhod", "Soyuz" and so on) is the most mass-produced and the most reliable rocket in the history of space exploration; according to astronautix, by the year 2000 it had been launched over 1628 times, and 97.5% of the launches were successful. Nevertheless, Vladimirov calls this rocket "a very complicated, expensive and inconvenient solution" and spends many pages on its demerits. From the Foreword: It is the great merit of Leonid Vladimirov's book that, for the first time, he provides a complete and convincing explanation of the strange twists and turns of the Soviet space 'programme' and reveals ...
DISCLOSURE:
When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission at no extra cost to you. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network, Amazon and Alibris.