Almanac & C.: A Collection of Early American Almanacs.
Westvaco, 1985. Limited edition. Brown cloth.
Westvaco, 1985. Limited edition. Brown cloth.
Amistad Press, [ca. 1985]. Red leatherette-backed, decorated paper boards, no dust jacket.
Greenwood Reprint Corporation, 1970. First Greenwood printing. Gray cloth decoratively stamped in red and black.
Folio Society, 2007. First printing thus. Glazed boards, no dust jacket.
The Colophon Ltd, 1930. 1st Edition. Pictorial Boards. Includes Dard Hunter's "A Signature of Handmade Paper"
Pynson Printers, 1938. 1st Edition. Decorative cloth, no dust jacket.
Oxford, 1973. Later printing. Blue cloth, no dust jackets. Includes original publisher's magnifying glass in sliding tray.
Editions for the Armed Services, no date (1950's). Blue cloth, no dust jacket. Includes title and author lists of the entire series.
London. Holland Press, 1985. First edition thus. Green cloth-grained boards. two volumes.
Librairie Ancienne Hoepli, 1954. Japanese vellum boards with illuminated initials stamped on front.
John F. Cuneo Company, 1951. 1st Edition. Green cloth, no dust jacket.
New York. Burt Franklin, 1969. Reprint. Red cloth, no dust jacket. in two volumes.
London. Faber and Faber, 1969. First edition thus. Grey cloth in dust jacket.
Van Nostrand, 1969. Second printing.
Design Press, 1989. First edition, first printing.
St. Martin's Press, 2002. First edition, first printing.
Government Printing Office, 1915. First edition, first printing. Rebound in one-quarter tan moroccor with leather label.
International Graphoanalysis Society, 1995. Glazed boards, no dust jacket.
Printing Historical Society. 1976. Reprint. Green cloth, gilt spine title. No dust jacket.
San Francisco: Chronicle Books, 2000. First edition first printing.
Harper & Row, 1989. Revised edition, first printing.
HarperCollins, 2005. First edition.
Cistercian Publications, 1994. First edition, first printing.
Aegypan, 2006. Blue cloth, lacking dust jacket. Originally published in 1906, The Devil's Dictionary is a satirical dictionary written by American journalist Ambrose Bierce, consisting of common words followed by humorous and satirical definitions.