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Posts tagged with commonwealth books.
Rafael Sabatini, The Life of Cesare Borgia (London: Stanley Paul & Co, 1912)

Rafael Sabatini, The Life of Cesare Borgia (London: Stanley Paul & Co, 1912)

Commonwealth Books, Boston.
Friday Commonwealth Books. I’ve been “trying” to limit my lunch-break walks over there since I really should be buying Christmas presents instead…

Edit: I don’t feel too bad about it because the Panofsky is amazing.

Friday Commonwealth Books. I’ve been “trying” to limit my lunch-break walks over there since I really should be buying Christmas presents instead…

Edit: I don’t feel too bad about it because the Panofsky is amazing.

Favorite purchase from my first-ever trip to Commonwealth Books the other day. I’ve wanted to get my hands on more Northern Renaissance material for a while, and this book rules. Beyond the amazingly primitive color-print frontispiece of Jan van Eyck’s The Arnolfini Portrait, the text has such a great conversational tone, e.g., “A ‘Madonna and Child,’ No. 774, is a charming picture usually given to [Dirk] Bouts, and as no one knows for certain who painted it, we may as well consider and enjoy it under his name.”

Favorite purchase from my first-ever trip to Commonwealth Books the other day. I’ve wanted to get my hands on more Northern Renaissance material for a while, and this book rules. Beyond the amazingly primitive color-print frontispiece of Jan van Eyck’s The Arnolfini Portrait, the text has such a great conversational tone, e.g., “A ‘Madonna and Child,’ No. 774, is a charming picture usually given to [Dirk] Bouts, and as no one knows for certain who painted it, we may as well consider and enjoy it under his name.”