Display Signed Copies Only Display All Inventory on Abebooks

Available Copies from Independent Booksellers

Julia Peterkin (text). Doris Ulmann (photographs). Roll, Jordan, Roll. Robert O. Ballo, NY, 1933.

Price: US$100.00 + shipping

Condition: Fair

Description: Cloth over spine, soiled and faded and partially split on one side, with some loss. PON ffe dated 1936. Edges of leaves gently toned. Candidate for interpretive rebinding, especially given the progressive nature of this watershed work. African American.

Seller: Johnnycake Books ABAA, ILAB, Salisbury, CT, U.S.A.

Julia Peterkin & Doris Ulmann. Roll, Jordan, Roll. Robert O. Ballou, New York, 1933.

Price: US$200.00 + shipping

Condition: Fair

Description: First Edition (1933.) Hardcover lacking dust jacket. 8vo with 251 pages. The book is in fair condition with rubbing and fading to spine. Front free end paper is missing. Incredible photography by Doris Ulmann. A classic. Blue spine/gold text. #033940 Size: 8vo

Seller: JERO BOOKS AND TEMPLET CO., SANTA MONICA, CA, U.S.A.

Peterkin, Julia (text). Roll, Jordan, Roll. Robert O. Ballou, New York, 1933.

Price: US$350.00 + shipping

Condition: Very Good

Description: 251pp.; HB blue w/blk.; rubbed w/wear on edges&corners; heavy sun on spine; edges w/sun; lt.tape,ft.endpaper;some lt.tan w/clean,tight pgs. History of US slavery. b/w photos.

Seller: Xochi's Bookstore & Gallery, truth or consequences, NM, U.S.A.

Peterkin, Julia; photographic studies by Doris Ulmann. Roll, Jordan, Roll. N.Y.: Robert O. Ballou, 1933.

Price: US$400.00 + shipping

Condition: Very Good

Description: 1st trade printing after limited edition. Binding tight; pages clean; spine very slightly cocked; boards faded at top. DJ shows edgewear and large chips to top (see photos). A major work documenting "the colorful life of the American Negro of the South," with seventy full-page sepia photos. Uncommon in any condition. 251 pages.

Seller: Washington Square Autographed Books, New York, NY, U.S.A.

PETERKIN, Julia and Doris Ulmann. Roll, Jordan, Roll. Robert O. Ballou, New York, 1933.

Price: US$500.00 + shipping

Condition: Very Good

Description: First trade edition, first issue. Octavo. 251pp. Illustrated from photographs. Blue cloth. Spine sunned, modest wear on the boards, about very good and lacking the dustwrapper. Peterkin's text about the descendants of slaves on a coastal South Carolina plantation, accompanied by 90 of Ulmann's inspired and exceptional photographs. A classic collaboration which brought out the best in both of the participants. *Roth 101*.

Seller: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, U.S.A.

PETERKIN, Julia and Doris Ulmann. Roll Jordan, Roll: The Text is by Julia Peterkin, the Photographic Studies by Doris Ulmann. Robert O. Ballou, New York, 1st edition, 1st printing, 1933, 1933.

Price: US$650.00 + shipping

Condition: Very Good

Description: Hbk 251pp illustr b+w photos including frontispiece and 75 double-sided plates lacks dj very good clean dark blue cloth over fine firm boards showing some fading to stamped gilt spine titles but still legible and now housed in removable custom acetate jacket light even toning to both endpapers and text block with its deckled edges book will be supplied altogether a very good clean tight unmarked copy

Seller: Sutton Books, Norwich, VT, U.S.A.

Peterkin, Julia:. Roll, Jordan, Roll. Robert O Ballou New York, 1933.

Price: US$955.53 + shipping

Condition: Very Good

Description: 1st trade edition, 251pp, uncut, 75 photographs, blue cloth boards, gilt titles, dustwrapper. The book is in very good condition. The dustwrapper has been repaired with tape verso and there is a little loss to the rear panel and general grubbiness. Julia Mood Peterkin's celebrated account of the Gullah African - American tenant farmers of the Sea Islands and coastal regions of South Carolina and Georgia. Illustrated with superb photographs by Doris Ulmann. A rare book, particularly in its dustwrapper

Seller: Gerald Baker, Bristol, United Kingdom

Julia Peterkin. Roll, Jordan, Roll. Robert O. Ballou, New York, 1933.

Price: US$1200.00 + shipping

Description: 1st Trade edition. Hardcover in original biding and dust jacket. French blue cloth with chips top + bottom of spine, faded at top and bottom front 0.5" band, spine and 1" vertical band rear board adjacent to spine, 6.25x8.75", 251 pp. Julia Peterkin won the Pulitzer Prize for her novel Scarlet Sister Mary in 1929. EXCERPT FROM THE DUST JACKET: "No happier collaboration could be conceived than that of Julia Peterkin and Doris Ulmann in a book which has for its subject the colorful life of the American Negro of the South. Mrs. Peterkin's Scarlet Sister Mary, and Bright Skin have won for her a deserved reputation as the outstanding chronicler of the American black man's life. Doris Ulmann's photographic studies have similarly made her a foremost figure in the field of art. This book is a powerful picturization, in two mediums, of the Southern Negro. The trade edition consists of seventy full page photographs selected as the best of over one thousand studies of the American negro made by Doris Ulmann and reproduced by offset, with the dramatic stories of the pictured Negroes inimitably told by Julia Peterkin. [.] Julia Peterkin says of the book: 'I have tried to put down here things which will give as full a picture of Negro life in the South as I am able to give, matters which I want to see in print before they are forgotten."

Seller: Jim Crotts Rare Books, LLC, Clemmons, NC, U.S.A.

[AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY & LITERATURE] PETERKIN, Julia (text); ULMANN, Doris (photographs). Roll, Jordan, Roll. Robert O. Ballou, New York, 1933.

Price: US$1375.00 + shipping

Description: First Printing, preceded by a limited edition of 350 copies. Octavo (22cm); blue cloth with titles stamped in gilt on spine; black topstain; dustjacket; 251pp; illustrated with 70 full-page photographs by Doris Ulmann. Hint of sunning to spine ends, some trivial wear to corner tips, with a tiny splash mark to topstain; contents clean; Near Fine. Dustjacket is unclipped (priced $3.50), gently spine-sunned, modest wear to joints and extremities, with shallow loss to crown, several tiny nicks and tears to extremities, and a 2" split at lower front flap fold; Very Good+. One of the great documentary photobooks of the 1930's, examining the lives of black plantation workers in the Gullah coastal region of South Carolina. The idea for the book was originally conceived by American photographer Doris Ullman (1882-1934), who met Julia Peterkin at a literary gathering in 1929 - the same year Ullman had undertaken a project to create a volume of photographic studies of African Americans throughout the South. Ulmann's portraits of the Gullah people were taken on the Lang Syne plantation, owned by the family of Peterkin's husband; paired with text and stories written by Peterkin, Ullman's portraits of the former slaves and their descendants have long been praised for both their quality, and the sense of dignity they convey. Many times scarcer in an attractive jacket than the signed, limited issue, published the same year. BLOCKSON 3932; ROTH 101. PARR-BADGER, Vol.1, p.135.

Seller: Lorne Bair Rare Books, ABAA, Winchester, VA, U.S.A.

Peterkin, Julia and Doris Ulmann. Roll, Jordan, Roll. Robert O. Ballou, New York, 1933.

Price: US$2200.00 + shipping

Description: First Edition. 8vo; 251pp, with 75 photographs on double-sided plates, including frontispiece; original blue cloth, gilt spine, edges faded about 1/8 in, endpapers a bit aged toned, jacket chipped along all edges rubbed ("E" in Peterkin missing on spine) with creases on both front panel, very good in used jacket. Julia Mood Peterkin (1880-1961), South Carolina native, lived on her husband's two-thousand acre plantation and also had a summer home at Murrell's Inlet, a coastal village. She wrote, with realism and dignity, plantation stories and stories of the Gullah African American tenant farmers of the Sea Islands and coastal regions. She was a sympathetic and outstanding commentator of the lives of this vanishing black culture. Doris Ulmann (1882-1934) was a well-respected photographer of the period who specialized in portraying the people of the "Southern Highlands" Appalachia and the coastal blacks Peterkin wrote about. Ulman's photographs of now vanished worlds capture her subjects with respect, insight, and grace and a transcendent quality which embodies the beauty and mystery of human experience. ROLL, JORDAN ROLL is a non-fiction work which portrays the Gullah in a perfect artistic blend of text and picture. American Woman Writers III, pp. 373-374. Jacobs, The Life and Photography of Doris Ulmann. In Focus: Doris Ulmann, Photographs from the J. Paul Getty Museum.

Seller: Priscilla Juvelis Inc., ABAA, Kennebunkport, ME, U.S.A.

Peterkin, Julia; Doris Ulmann. Roll, Jordan, Roll. Robert O. Ballou, New York, 1933.

Price: US$2500.00 + shipping

Condition: Very Good

Description: First edition, first printing. Bound in publisher's blue cloth with spine lettered in gilt. Very Good with lean and light sunning to spine, pages toned. In a Very Good dust jacket, rubbed at the extremities with wear at the head, foxing and light staining.

Seller: Burnside Rare Books, ABAA, Portland, OR, U.S.A.

Peterkin, Julia and Doris Ulmann (Photographer). Roll, Jordan, Roll Peterkin's text about the descendants of slaves on a coastal South Carolina plantation, accompanied by 71 full-page gravure photographs by Doris Ulmann.. Robert O. Ballou, New York, 1933.

Price: US$2500.00 + shipping

Description: Near fine in finely woven dark blue cloth stamped brightly in gilt on the spine. Very clean and tight throughout; with a previous owner's name in ink on the front endpaper. Merest touch of rubbing to the top edges of the spine; front bottom corner lightly bumped. With bright blue top-staining. In a striking pictorial dust jacket. With the original price of $3.50 at the bottom of the front and reart inside flaps. Very light wear and chipping to the top and bottom of the spine ends. Touch of soiling to the white margins of the rear panel. First issue jacket with the rear panel advertising 7 titles, beginning with Steinbeck's "To A God Unknown," and ending with Goethe's "Faust," translated by Alice Raphael. All 71 full-page photographic gravures are present. A collector's copy of this landmark work. One of the great documentary photographic books of the 1930's, examining the lives of black plantation workers in the Gullah coastal region of South Carolina. The idea for the book was originally conceived by American photographer Doris Ullman (1882-1934), who met Julia Peterkin at a literary gathering in 1929 - the same year Ullman had undertaken a project to create a volume of photographic studies of African Americans throughout the South. Ulmann's portraits of the Gullah people were taken on the Lang Syne plantation, owned by the family of Peterkin's husband; paired with text and stories written by Peterkin, Ullman's portraits of the former slaves and their descendants have long been praised for both their quality, and the sense of dignity they convey. Many times scarcer in an attractive jacket than the signed, limited issue, published the same year. (Blockson) First Edition with: "New York Robert O. Ballou" at the bottom of the title page; with 1933 copyright page date, and "By Doris Ullman and Julia Peterkin" in one line at the top, and "Printed in the United States of America" at the bottom of the copyright page.

Seller: Brainerd Phillipson Rare Books, Holliston, MA, U.S.A.

PETERKIN, Julia and Doris Ulmann. Roll, Jordan, Roll. Robert O. Ballou, New York, 1933.

Price: US$2750.00 + shipping

Condition: Near Fine

Description: First trade edition, first issue. Contemporary gift inscription in pencil: "For Jennie with Harleston's love. Charleston April '34" on front fly, light sunning along the topedge of the boards else near fine in very good dust jacket with old internal repairs, and a couple of small chips at the crown. Peterkin's text about the descendants of slaves on a coastal South Carolina plantation, accompanied by 75 of Ulmann's inspired and exceptional gravure photographs. A classic collaboration which brought out the best in both of the participants. There was also a limited edition of three hundred copies signed by both Peterkin and Ulmann, now prohibitively expensive.

Seller: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, U.S.A.

PETERKIN, Julia. ULMANN, Doris.. Roll, Jordan, Roll.. Robert O. Ballou, New York, 1933.

Price: US$3250.00 + shipping

Description: The Text by Julia Peterkin. The Photographic Studies by Doris Ullman. 251 pp. Illustrated with photographic studies by Doris Ulmann. 8vo, publisher's blue cloth in dust jacket. First trade edition. A near fine copy, the cloth bright and unworn with a few very slight marks; unopened; with a small ownership stamp on the front free endpaper; in a jacket with some light edgewear and a few nicks.

Seller: Jeffrey H. Marks, Rare Books, ABAA, Rochester, NY, U.S.A.

Peterkin, Julia and Doris Ulmann. ROLL, JORDAN ROLL. The Text by Julia Peterkin. The Photographic Studies by Doris Ulmann. [Limited Edition, Signed.]. Robert O. Baillou [1933], New York, 1933.

Price: US$22500.00 + shipping

Description: New York: Robert O. Ballou, [1933]. 341 pages. 90 full-page, hand-pulled photogravures (including the frontispiece, all reckoned in the pagination). Lacking the extra, laid-in photogravure, being a duplicate of one of the images in the book, that is found with most copies. Early full vellum with gilt spine and cover lettering and gilt centerpiece on the front cover. 29 x 22 cm. Near fine. The photogravures are all in excellent condition. The text shows some very faint offsetting from the plates throughout, and a half dozen or so of the text pages show moderate foxing. Tissue guards, laid-in throughout, appear to be recent replacements. Housed in a plain linen slipcase, evidently of the same vintage as the binding. FIRST EDITION. #44 of 350 COPIES SIGNED BY JULIA PETERKIN AND DORIS ULMANN. One of the most celebrated American photobooks, "Roll, Jordan Roll "provides a stunning portrait of rural African American life in the low country of South Carolina. Most of the photographs were taken at Lane Syne, the plantation home of author, Julia Mood Peterkin (1880-1961), located near Fort Motte in Calhoun County. Peterkin had previously published "Green Thursday" (1924), a collection of short stories, "Black April" (1927), her bestselling first novel, and "Scarlet Sister Mary" (1928), for which she won the Pulitzer Prize. Her last novel, "Bright Skin" appeared in 1932. During her short career, she garnered praise from both whites and influential blacks for her sympathetic depictions of African Americans and her rendering of the Gullah dialect. A wealthy New Yorker, Doris Ulmann (1882-1934) studied photography with Clarence H. White, a former colleague of Alfred Stieglitz. She was admired for her technical virtuosity and her photographs were exhibited at prominent studios in New York and other major cities. Much of her early work consisted of portrait photography of notable members of society, including several series on physicians and prominent literary editors. However, her focus soon shifted to studies of rural America, including Shakers and other religious sects, traditional Appalachian craftspeople and musicians, and Native American communities in North Carolina. While she continued to live in New York, where she had an apartment and studio on Park Avenue, Ulmann traveled widely for her work. In the spring of 1929, during one of her trips to the South, she met Julia Peterkin, and the pair quickly formed a deep and lasting friendship. Ulmann’s visits to Lane Syne solidified her commitment to documenting African American life and provided her with a rich source of subject matter. The resulting collaboration between author and photographer, "Roll, Jordan Roll", was first issued in a trade edition in December 1933 and received widespread critical acclaim. James Weldon Johnson wrote that ""Roll, Jordan Roll" is the most beautiful and charming book about plantation Negroes of the deep South I that I know of. Doris Ulmann’s photographs alone will work a great change in the general ideas about the Southern rural Negro." –qt. in Jacobs, "The Life and Photography of Doris Ulmann", p. 126. However, the reproductions of the photographs in the trade edition were disappointing, to Ulmann as much as anyone. This was rectified the following month with the issue of this sumptuous, limited edition, which offered a larger format, text finely printed in letterpress on wove paper, and most importantly, photogravures that did justice to Ulmann’s camera work. Andrew Roth writes, "Ullman’s soft-focus photos -- rendered as tactile as charcoal drawings in the superb gravure reproductions here -- straddle Pictorialism and Modernism even as they appear to dissolve into memory" --"The Book of 101 Books : Seminal Photographic Books of the Twentieth Century", p. 78. IN ADDITION TO THE SUPERB QUALITY OF THE REPRODUCTIONS, THE LIMITED EDITION ALSO OFFERED TWENTY IMAGES THAT DID NOT APPEAR IN THE TRADE EDITION. The original publisher's binding for the deluxe editio

Seller: Eilenberger Rare Books, LLC, I.O.B.A., Durham, NC, U.S.A.

Julia Peterkin. Roll, Jordan, Roll Limited First Edition, Copy # 124 of 350 Printed.. Robert O. Ballou, New York, 1933.

Price: US$28000.00 + shipping

Description: Hardcover in original quarter white linen and brown paper-covered beveled boards. Housed in a modern custom clamshell folio box covered in brown cloth w/ leather spine label. This is hand-numbered (in ink on the colophon) copy #124 of 350 (327 sold) of the First Limited Edition. Signed by author and photographer. 8.5" x 11.75", 341 pp, 90 full-page, hand-pulled copper photogravures with modern tissue guards. The plates are all immaculate with virtually no markings of any kind on the rag sheets and with only slight rubbing on the front panel and rear endpaper. Julia Peterkin won the Pulitzer Prize for her novel Scarlet Sister Mary in 1929. "No happier collaboration could be conceived than that of Julia Peterkin and Doris Ulmann in a book which has for its subject the colorful life of the American Negro of the South. Mrs. Peterkin's Scarlet Sister Mary, and Bright Skin have won for her a deserved reputation as the outstanding chronicler of the American black man's life. Doris Ulmann's photographic studies have similarly made her a foremost figure in the field of art. This book is a powerful picturization, in two mediums, of the Southern Negro. Julia Peterkin says of the book: 'I have tried to put down here things which will give as full a picture of Negro life in the South as I am able to give, matters which I want to see in print before they are forgotten."

Seller: Jim Crotts Rare Books, LLC, Clemmons, NC, U.S.A.

Peterkin, Julia; Ulmann, Doris. Roll, Jordan, Roll; The Text By Julia Peterkin; The Photographic Studies By Doris Ulmann. Robert O. Ballou, New York, 1933.

Price: US$28500.00 + shipping

Condition: Very Good

Description: Quarto, [10], 13-341pp, [1]. Original brown paper-covered boards, three-quarter white linen corners and spine. Title in gilt on spine, portrait stamped in blind to front cover. Top edge gilt. Solid text block, foxing to cloth, some rubbing to gilt title on spine. Housed in the publisher's brown slipcase, small points of restoration with archival glue to corners. Complete with 90 full-page photographs depicting former enslaved peoples, their families, and their homes. All plates remain vibrant, most lacking tissue guards. Includes an original photograph by Ulmann, laid-in at front with her signature in pencil on the bottom right corner. Stated on limitation page: "Of this special edition of Roll, Jordan, Roll, 350 copies, each numbered and signed by Julia Peterkin and Doris Ulmann, have been printed by letterpress and copper-plate photogravure. Of these 327 are for sale. This is copy number 122, signed by both Peterkin and Ulmann on the colophon. This collaboration between Ulmann and Peterkin focuses on a group of former slaves and their descendants in the Gullah region of South Carolina. This is the first appearance of the text, followed by the first trade edition published the same year.

Seller: The First Edition Rare Books, LLC, Cincinnati, OH, U.S.A.

Peterkin, Julia [Text]; Ulmann, Doris [Photographic Studies]. ROLL, JORDAN, ROLL. Robert O. Ballou, New York, 1933.

Price: US$30000.00 + shipping

Description: Quarto, [12], 13-341 pages. Good. Bound in publisher's three quarter white linen, embossed brown paper boards, spine with gilt lettering. Top edge gilt. Some staining and discoloration to spine, particularly along hinges, from water. Tide-marks along upper and lower gutter throughout volume, in some cases touching the plates. Lacking publisher's slipcase. Illustrated with 90 full-page, hand-pulled copper photogravures after photographs by Ulmann depicting the formerly enslaved alongside their descendants in the Gullah coastal region of South Carolina. All plates with tissue guards, one tissue guard loose. Some offsetting from photogravures, as usual. With the additional signed photogravure loose within, a duplicate of the photogravure on page 129. Some offsetting to front pastedown and endpaper from photogravure. "When all the sisters' feet are washed, the basins and towels are handed over to the brothers, who wash each other's feet." [page 124]. WP consignment. Shelved case 3. "Peterkin, a popular novelist who won the Pulitzer Prize in 1929, was born in South Carolina and raised by a black nursemaid who taught her the Gullah dialect before she learned standard English. She married the heir to Lang Syne, one of the state's richest plantations, which became the setting for Roll, Jordan, Roll, and its black population the subject of Ullman's photograph.Ulmann's soft-focus photos - rendered as tactile as charcoal drawings in the superb gravure reproductions here - straddle Pictorialism and Modernism even as they appear to dissolve into memory" [Andrew Roth, The Book of 101 Books, pages 78-79]. 1367221. Shelved Dupont Bookstore.

Seller: Second Story Books, ABAA, Rockville, MD, U.S.A.

Peterkin, Julia [Text]; Doris Ulmann [Photographs]. Roll, Jordan, Roll. Robert O. Ballou, New York, 1933.

Price: US$35000.00 + shipping

Condition: Near Fine

Description: Signed limited first edition. Copy number 346 of only 350 copies, of which 327 were offered for sale, signed by both photographer Doris Ulmann and Julia Peterkin. Printed by letter press and with 90 superb tissue-guarded full-page copperplate hand-pulled photogravure plates and with an additional original signed photogravure. Bound in publisher's original brown paper boards over half cream cloth with spine lettered in gilt. Lacking the original slipcase but housed in a custom cloth chemise case; tissue guards replaced though originals are present and laid into a custom-made compartment in the slipcase. Near Fine. Neatly recased, light rubbing and color retouching to covers, contents lightly foxed at edges. Toning, light edge wear and light soiling to additional signed photogravure. "Ulmann's photographic collaboration with Julia Peterkin focuses on the lives of former slaves and their descendants on a plantation in the Gullah coastal region of South Carolina. Peterkin, a popular novelist who won the Pulitzer Prize in 1929, was born in South Carolina and raised by a black nursemaid who taught her the Gullah dialect before she learned standard English. She married the heir to Lang Syne, one of the state's richest plantations, which became the setting for Roll, Jordan, Roll. Ulmann's soft-focus photos-rendered as tactile as charcoal drawings in the superb gravure reproductions here-straddle Pictorialism and Modernism even as they appear to dissolve into memory" (Roth, 101 Books).

Seller: Burnside Rare Books, ABAA, Portland, OR, U.S.A.

Peterkin, Julia [Text]; Doris Ulmann [Photographs]. Roll, Jordan, Roll (Julia Peterkin's copy). Robert O. Ballou, New York, 1933.

Price: US$65000.00 + shipping

Description: Signed limited first edition. Author Julia Peterkin's own copy, number #3 of only 350 copies, of which 327 were offered for sale, signed by both photographer Doris Ulmann and Peterkin on the limitation page. Presuambly the first few copies were given to the publisher, author, and photographer. Letter of provenance from a descendant of Peterkin laid in. Printed by letter press and with 90 superb tissue-guarded full-page copperplate hand-pulled photogravure plates and with an additional original signed photogravure. 342 pp. Bound in publisher's original brown paper boards over half cream cloth with spine lettered in gilt. Lacking slipcase. Near Fine with light rubbing and soiling to boards, front hinge a bit free, light foxing to contents, typical offsetting from photos. A very clean, attractive copy. "Ulmann's photographic collaboration with Julia Peterkin focuses on the lives of former slaves and their descendants on a plantation in the Gullah coastal region of South Carolina. Peterkin, a popular novelist who won the Pulitzer Prize in 1929, was born in South Carolina and raised by a black nursemaid who taught her the Gullah dialect before she learned standard English. She married the heir to Lang Syne, one of the state's richest plantations, which became the setting for Roll, Jordan, Roll. Ulmann's soft-focus photos-rendered as tactile as charcoal drawings in the superb gravure reproductions here-straddle Pictorialism and Modernism even as they appear to dissolve into memory" (Roth, 101 Books).

Seller: Burnside Rare Books, ABAA, Portland, OR, U.S.A.