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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 April 2022
(1) Munger, Ned, Touched By Africa (Pasadena, California: Castle Press, 1983), 200Google Scholar, and see Modiano, Patrick, Out of the Dark, Stump, Jordan, trans. (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1998Google Scholar, first publ. 1996) 16, 31, for the story of a runner in Paris in the 1960s.
(2) Otto Haas at 49a, Belsize Park Gardens, and H. F. Ashbrook at 18c, Belsize Park, both specialized in music literature.
(3) Panofsky, Hans, “Acquisition of Library Materials from Africa,” Library Resources & Technical Services 7 (Winter 1963): 38, 40, 45.Google Scholar
(4) Various correspondence, January through October 1949, between James Packman and Leslie E. Bliss, Huntington Library.
(5) The term derives from Rostenberg, Leona and Stern, Madeleine B., Old Books, Rare Friends (New York: Doubleday, 1997), 4.Google Scholar
(6) Notes on Eric Bonner by C. C. Kohler, July 2, 1999.
(7) Bonner to Pollak, November 10, 1961, correspondence in the author's possession.
(8) Bonner gave a copy of the last title to the author in 1970.
(9) Bonner to Pollak, July 19, 1968.
(10) Taubert, Sigfried and Weidhaas, Peter, eds., The Book Trade of the World (Munich, New York, London, Paris. K. G. Saur, 1984) vol. IV, 285.Google Scholar
(11) The Book Collector, 9 (Autumn 1960) 269. It was reprinted again in 1993.
(12) Munger, Touched by Africa, 193-4.
(13) Book Collector, 8 (Spring 1969) 80. See also Rostenberg, Leona and Stern, Madeleine B., Bookman's Quintet (Newark, Delaware: Oak Knoll Books, 1980).Google Scholar
(14) Arne Hayman, Introduction to The Americana Reference Library of Robert G. Hayman (New Castle, Delaware: Oak Knoll Books, 1999), iv.Google Scholar
(15) Bonner to Pollak, June 4, 1968.
(16) Bonner to Irene Seligman, January 16, 1969.
(17) Bonner to Pollak, October 14, 1971.
(18) Oliver B. Pollak and Karen Pollak, Theses and Dissertations on Southern