Finding Aid for the Robert Lowry papers
Table of Contents
Finding aid prepared by Mandeep Singh Condle under the direction of Jacqueline Morin, 2010
Summary Information
- Repository
- USC Libraries Special Collections
- Creator
- Lowry, Robert, 1919-1994
- Title
- Robert Lowry papers
- Collection no.
- 0149
- Date [inclusive]
- 1939-1976
- Extent
- 3.0 Linear feet, 4 boxes
- Language
- English
- Textual materials [Box]
- 1-4
- Abstract
- Typescripts and galleys of various books by American journalist, editor, and novelist Robert Lowry (1919-1994).
Preferred Citation
[Box/folder# or item name], Robert Lowry papers, Collection no. 0149, Special Collections, USC Libraries, University of Southern California
Biography
Robert Lowry was born on March 29, 1919, in Cincinnati, Ohio. He began his writing career at the age of eight, by his ninth year he was publishing stories in Cincinnati's daily newspaper. After his graduation from Withrow High School in 1937, Lowry entered the University of Cincinnati, where he founded and edited the magazine The Little Man in between jobs as an apple-picker in nearby orchards and salesman in a downtown dapartment store.
Lowry left his hometown in 1938 to "tour the United States as a hitch-hiker". After much travel and a brief stay in New York, in 1939 Lowry returned to Cincinnati. There he published his first major story, Defense in University City, and followed this success with the founding of his own Little Man Press, publishing his own works until his induction into the army in 1942.
Lowry completed basic training at Fort McClellan, Alabama, and was soon accepted for admittance to the Officers Candidate School, but was transferred overseas with the 953rd Engineers Company before he could join the OCS. Lowry served in Italy, and despite discouragement from the Army and his absence from his home press, Lowry continued to write throughout the war, publishing first The Skyblue Lady (1942) and then Layover in El Paso (1944). Lowry returned to the States and Cincinnati in 1945.
While it is known that Lowry endured many marriages and divorces, the details of these events are not clear. Indeed, in his self-published chronologies Lowry made only passing references to his wives, and excluded entirely any data on the dates of his weddings, divorces, and birth of his children. Lowry apparently married either before the war or while on leave, for after his discharge he returned to his "mother and father and sister and [first] wife Bella". A 1948-49 tour of Europe led Lowry to Rome, which was the site of his honeymoon with his second wife, Frankie. The Lowrys returned to the States when Frankie found she was pregnant and decided she wanted to have her baby in an American hospital. The family settled in an old house in West Redding, Connecticut, and for a time lived happily. Lowry worked to restore the house, wrote book reviews for Time magazine, and worked on his novel, The Violent Wedding. In 1952 things began to go awry, and Frankie committed Lowry to the Fairfield State Hospital where he was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia and given a series of 22 electric shock treatments. Lowry convalesced at the Bronx V.A. Hospital before returning to West Redding and his family. But the marriage was doomed, "especially," Lowry wrote, "since [Frankie] wouldn't tell me why she had to put me in the hospital in the first place." Shortly after his discharge from the hospital, Lowry moved into a hotel and his wife left with baby David for California.
1953 began a long cycle of writing, publishing, and psychotic episodes. Lowry completed and published The Violent Wedding, but didn't manage to enjoy his achievement long before he landed in a psychiatric hospital again; on a drive down to New York, Lowry heard the voice of God telling him that Lowry was God's christ and that he, God, was giving Lowry to the world. Lowry "nicked and bumped a number of cars" on the highway and was arrested and put into Grasslands Hospital. Lowry tranferred to the Harlem Valley State Hospital, then to Fairfield State Hospital in Connecticut, where he was treated previously. A battery of psychiatrists visited Lowry, but he seemed unclear about the nature of his problem. So he convalesced and wrote--Happy New Year, Kamerades! was written in the hospital. Lowry escaped again and travelled to New York to visit the other woman, an actress named Katherine Keller to whom Lowry had taken a shine. Upon his arrival on her doorstep, Keller treated him royally, but her friends called the police and Lowry was removed to Belluvue Hospital. From there he transferred to the Bronx V.A. Hospital, where he was given insulin shock treatments. "Kit" Keller visited him there, and after his release from the hospital Lowry moved to Buffalo to live with her.
In 1954 Lowry flew to Mexico to complete his divorce from Frankie, then moved to New York City with Kit. For a time the couple lived in harmony, with Lowry working industriously on What's Left of April (1956) in a rented studio in Greenwitch Village. But rot of some unidentified sort set in, and Lowry checked into the Bronx V.A. Hopital at Kit's insistence. After a month he was released to move from apartment to rooming house to hotel before he finally moved into New Haven to live with his sister. Kit wrote Lowry there, asking him to "let [her] off the hook" -- perhaps free her from an engagement? Lowry tumbled down to New York in a drunken rage, breaking down the door to Kit's apartment when she refused to admit him. Again, Lowry was arrested, and again he was hospitalized, in King's Park State Hospital.
Lowry remained at the King's Park Hospital for 5 months, into 1955. Durnig this time he received visits from a young woman named Anne (Antoinette Lobianco) whom he had met hours before his abortive attack on Kit's door. Lowry and Anne continued to communicate after Lowry was discharged and moved to his parent's home in Cincinnati, where Anne managed to fly to see him several times. Lowry published Cat About Town (1955), The Last Party (1956), and What's Left of April (1956), then moved to New York in 1958 to live with Anne. Movie rights to his story Layover in El Paso had been bought (the movie became That Kind of Woman, starring Sophia Loren) and half of the money--$1,250--received. At Anne's urging, she and Lowry married, and in 1959 the couple's first child Beirne Clem Lowry was born.
The '60s saw a struggling Lowry trying desperately to keep his family afloat. Doubleday (the New York company that had been publishing his work) began rejecting Lowry's material, and his self-published works did not sell well. He did publish stories in magazines, and he attempted to sell his manuscripts and drafts to university libraries (Boston University, Kent State University, and University of Southern California). Correspondences with Lloyd A. Arvidson, curator of the American Literature Collection of the University of Southern California, reveal what a discouraging experience this must have been: original manuscripts, galleys, and first drafts netted offers of $1-25; libraries wished to be gifted with these materials, not buy them. But despite what he saw as parsimonious offers from USC, Lowry sold a good deal of material to the school, actively corresponding with Arvidson through 1963. But though he could offer Lowry encouragement, Arvidson could not offer him much money. But Lowry took a series of jobs to support Anne and their second son, Giacomo Lobianco Lowry, born in 1962. But Anne removed her self and the children from Lowry's home in the fall of 1962; then, failing to convince Anne to return to him, Lowry moved back to his mother's home in Cincinnati.
Lowry worked a variety of jobs in Cincinnati, ranging from telephone solicitor for Klimat Master to Assistant to the Commercial Manager at WCPO-TV. Lowry had a brief stint as copywriter for the Enquirer, but was let go after three months because, he wrote "of the confusion caused in me by a girl who worked in the building and whom I did not even know." Lowry continued to pursue brief affairs, brief careers, and brief periods of freedom in between incarceration at mental hospitals. His mother committed him to Rollman's psychiatric Institute a number of times, though in his notes Lowry wrote he was unsure why she said so, and believed she really had no reason. During this cycle of hospitalization and release Lowry married Mary Lou, a childhood girlfriend. Mary Lou and her mother in turn returned Lowry to Rollman's--again, Lowry was bewildered as to their cause--and in 1968 Mary Lou divorced her husband after less than a year of marriage.
Until at least 1976 Lowry lived on and off with Barbara Goodrich, though he never remarried. His notes end with an account of this relationship and with a list of the various jobs he pursued. Although he wrote and worked as a freelance editor, Lowry published infrequently; most of his last works were printed in small editions at his Little Man Press, salving his vanity but not supporting him. He eventually settled for good in his childhood home with his widowed mother. He remained with her until her death in 1987, then moved to the seedy Dennison Hotel, where he survived on social security and $100 monthly checks from his mother's small estate. In October of 1994, Lowry was hospitalized for an irregular heartbeat, then pneumonia, and on December 5, 1994, Lowry died at the Veterans Administration Medical Center in Cincinnati.
Scope and Content
Typescripts and galleys of various books by American journalist, editor, and novelist Robert Lowry (1919-1994).
The Robert Lowry Collection is an archive of 99 items, mostly original manuscripts and self-published volumes. The dated items range from 1945 to 1976, though there are many papers whose date of creation is uncertain. The collection is housed in four boxes and a map case drawer; the first contains manuscripts of Lowry's novels, the second and third contains manuscripts of short stories, galleys, proofs and mock-ups, original ink illustrations, press clippings, advertisements, Lowry's "Little Man Press" publications, and series of correspondence to and from Lowry. The manuscripts and galleys provide an interesting study of the progression of drafts through the process of publication, and there is considerable autobiographical material in the self-published volumes.
Administrative Information
Publication Information
USC Libraries Special Collections
2010
Doheny Memorial Library 206
3550 Trousdale Parkway
Los Angeles, California, 90089-0189
213-740-5900
specol@usc.edu
Revision Description
Finding aid edited and encoded by Sue Luftschein, October 2010
Conditions Governing Access
COLLECTION STORED OFF-SITE. Advance notice required for access.
Conditions Governing Use
All requests for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts must be submitted in writing to the Manuscripts Librarian. Permission for publication is given on behalf of Special Collections as the owner of the physical items and is not intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be obtained.
Controlled Access Headings
Genre(s)
- Galley proofs
- Typescripts
Personal Name(s)
- Lowry, Robert, 1919-1994 -- Archives
Subject(s)
- American literature--20th century--Archival resources
- Authors, American--20th century--Archival resources
Collection Inventory
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What's Left of April 1956 May 24 Scope and ContentNovel; typed draft. |
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Big Cage 1949 Scope and ContentNovel; typed draft. |
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Acknowledgments, title page Kamarades! |
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Be Nice to Mr. Campbell Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Casualty Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Table of contents: Happy New Year, Kamarades! Scope and ContentTyped table of contents for collection. |
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Table of contents Happy New Year, Kamarades! Scope and ContentWritten table for short story. |
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Day He Got Fired Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Defense in University City Scope and ContentShort story; corrected typed draft. |
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Feelthy Poet Scope and ContentShort story/poem; typed draft. |
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For Girlhood and for Love Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Happy New Year, Kamerades! Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Little Baseball World Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Phistairus Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Skyblue Lady Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Victim Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Happy New Year, Kamerades! Scope and Content18 illustrations by Lowry. |
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Happy New Year, Kamerades! 1954 April 5 Scope and ContentMock-ups and proofs. |
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Happy New Year, Kamerades! 1954 Scope and Content15 ink drawings by Lowry. |
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Happy New Year, Kamerades! 1954 Scope and Content3 set galleys. |
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Happy New Year, Kamerades! Scope and Content1 corrected galley proof. |
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Alice Hess Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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All Yellow in the Sun Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Autumn Encounter Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Blond Hair and Blue Eyes Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Broke Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Cruel Day Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Discovery Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Edward, My Monster Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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For Deposit Only Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Gup: Three Adventures Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Hello Margaret, Hello Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Keepsake Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Man on Third Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Modern Story Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Nazi Midgets Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Newspaper Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Party of Dreamers Scope and ContentDrafts of contents and title pages. |
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Pigglesby's Wife Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Race Track of the Dead Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Return of Edgar Allen Poe Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Sandwich Boy Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Sight of Blood Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Small Bouquet for the Armed Forces Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Ten Questions Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Writer's Confession Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Party of Dreamers Scope and ContentGalley proof. |
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Layover in El Paso Scope and ContentShort story. |
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Layover in El Paso 1945 Scope and ContentShort story; typed first draft. |
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Brief Layover in El Paso Scope and Content3 galleys. |
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Airplane Crime 1939 Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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All American Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Artie Bell Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Bambino Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Blaze Beyond This Town Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Blood Wedding in Chicago Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Bridge Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Bus Driver Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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chronology Scope and ContentTyped history. |
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Duck and the Rabbit Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Famous Company 1958 Scope and ContentTyped drafts of initial pages. |
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Floodwater! Floodwater! Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Girl New York Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Glad Rags Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Guys From Ray's Place Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Hero in New York Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Introduction: A Parade of Stories 1958 January 10 Scope and ContentTyped draft. |
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It's Dark in Here Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Je Ne Comprends Pas Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Little Car in Virginia Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Long For This World Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Lost Frontier Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Man Who Followed Grandma Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Marie Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Minerva's Party 1939 Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Murderpie 1939 Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Mustery Bus Ride Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Over Here Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Passing Star Scope and ContentShort story; typed draft. |
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Thirty Years as a Writer Scope and ContentTyped draft. |
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Lily Scope and Content3 galleys. |
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Lily Scope and ContentMiscellaneous galleys. |
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Lily Scope and ContentLittle Man Press order forms. |
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Lily Scope and ContentMiscellaneous clippings. |
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Lily 1966 March 1 Scope and ContentWindfall Press Order forms. |
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Passing Star 1963 April Scope and ContentMagazines. |
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Passing Star Scope and ContentMiscellaneous ads. |
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Chronology of My Life Since 1952 1975 November 21 Scope and ContentSmall press publication. |
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Dreams 1976 Scope and ContentSmall press publication. |
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Nut 1976 Scope and ContentSmall press publication. |
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Nut 1960-1962 |
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Nut May-September Scope and ContentLetters: Lowry-Richter. |
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Nut 1960-1962 Scope and ContentLetters: Arvidson-Lowry. |
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Nut 1960 Scope and ContentGuggenheim Fellowship. |
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| Map-case | Drawer | |||
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Find Me in Fire 1948 Scope and ContentGalley sheets. |
6 | 2 | ||
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A Roar in the Village Scope and ContentGalley sheets. |
6 | 2 | ||
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New York Call Girl Scope and ContentGalley sheets. |
6 | 2 | ||
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What's Left of April Scope and ContentGalley sheets. |
6 | 2 | ||
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Famous Company (New York Call Girl) Scope and ContentGalley sheets. |
6 | 2 | ||
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