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A Short List of<br />

Motorscooters,<br />

Scooterists<br />

and Mods!<br />

Bay Leaf eList 11<br />

June 2014


1. Cornish, H.G. Vespa: The Official Handbook Covering Rod-Type, G, GL2, 42L2 and GS V.S.1 Models. London: C. Arthur<br />

Pearson Limited, 1960, second edition. Hardcover with dust jacket, 13cm by 19cm, 183 pp., 95 illustrations. Light<br />

wear and grease marks on the boards and bumping to the corners, LOTS of greasy fingerprints on the endpapers and<br />

throughout the text – this was a well-used copy. The jacket is poor with grease, edge wear, chipping and grime. Before<br />

Haynes, this was the manual to keep your Vespa running smoothly. Includes seven pages of Vespa-related ads at the<br />

back. $65.00<br />

2. Fort, Matthew. Eating Up Italy: Voyages on a Vespa. London: Fourth Estate, 2004, first edition, first printing. Hardcover<br />

with dust jacket, 15.5mm by 21.5mm, 320 pp. The hardcover has bumping to the upper corners and light wear at<br />

the head and tail of the spine. The jacket has light edge wear,<br />

some minor creases, and a chip at the bottom edge of the front<br />

flap crease. From the jacket: “In an epic scooter trip from the<br />

South to the North of Italy, award-winning food writer Matthew<br />

Fort explores the local gastronomy, culinary culture and tumultuous<br />

history of a country … As he travels on his scooter, Fort examines<br />

the country through its food and the people who produce it.<br />

$18.00<br />

3. Hajjaj, Hassan; Katia Hadidian, ed., intro. By Hassan Hajjaj:<br />

Photography, Fashion, Film, Design. London: Rose Issa Projects,<br />

2014, first printing. Hardcover with printed boards, no jacket as<br />

issued, 203mm by 253mm, 117 [3] pp. Near fine with light bumping<br />

to the lower corners and head and tail of the spine. Includes<br />

the Taymour Grahne Gallery exhibit announcement and list of<br />

works (light creases). This volume, to accompany the Taymour<br />

Grahne Gallery (New York) exhibit “Kesh Angels” features the vivid<br />

photography of the artist/designer/photographer Hassan Hajjaj.<br />

The images are heavily influenced by Hajjaj’s involvement in<br />

the music and design scenes and his dual upbringing in Morocco<br />

and London. By Hassan Hajjaj includes sections on “My Rock<br />

Stars,” “Dakka Marrakesh,” and “’Kesh Angels,” which features<br />

images that borrow from traditional African portrait studio and<br />

glossy fashion styles to present a series of Moroccon women on<br />

scooters and motorcycles – hence the Hell’s Angels play on words.<br />

$60.00


4. Scoot Expo 97 Poster.<br />

Pasadena, California:<br />

Pasadena Vespa Club,<br />

1997. Poster printed on<br />

glossy, heavy paper, 21<br />

by 30-inches. Very good<br />

with faint thumb wear.<br />

A wonderful black and<br />

white image of a pair of<br />

vintage Vespa scooters.<br />

Sponsors line the bottom<br />

of the poster. $20.00<br />

5. [Vespa] Count the<br />

Many Reasons Why…<br />

Vespa Brochure. This<br />

c.1956 brochure features<br />

some wonderful ‘50s<br />

graphics while listings<br />

the benefits of a Vespa;<br />

Convenience, Versitility,<br />

Riding Fun, etc. The eight<br />

-panel brochure measures 10cm by 17cm folded, and 10cm by 80cm<br />

unfolded. Fine. $35.00<br />

6. [Vespa] Vespa, Vespa, Vespa… Brochure. Genoa, Italy: Ditta<br />

Giuseppe Lang S.p.A, c.1955. Staple-bound brochure, 14.5cm by 20cm,<br />

12 pp. Near fine with some faints stains of the back cover. This vintage<br />

brochure features amazing graphics by Zambelli of the Lang studios – well known for his work with Piaggio – and uses<br />

the illustrations and sparse text to show the benefits of using a Vespa rather than an automobile. $50.00<br />

7. [Vespa] Topps<br />

World on Wheels<br />

Hoffmann-Vespa<br />

Trading Card. NP:<br />

Topps, 1954-55, number<br />

129 in the “World<br />

on Wheels” series.<br />

95mm by 67mm.<br />

Very good with minor<br />

corner bumping.<br />

$12.00


Periodicals<br />

8. A Broken Run of American Scooterist: Vespa Club of America Member Magazine. Cleburne, Texas (and later Oklahoma<br />

City, Oklahoma): Vespa Club of America, 1992-2013. Staple-bound periodicals, glossy color covers with a mix of<br />

color and black and white contents. Very good to near fine. Light sun fading along the edges of issue one and light rubbing<br />

on the covers of the 1993 and ’94 issues. Still in publication, the quarterly American Scooterist started life as Vespa<br />

Club of America Member Magazine in 1992 and changed names a few years later. Typical of club publications, they<br />

feature club events and member profiles, as well as scooter reviews, touring stories, scooter history, and coverage of<br />

Amerivespa, the club’s annual rally. This collection includes 41 issues, including the scarce premier issue: Vol. 1 Nos. 1<br />

and 2 (1992) and 3 (1993); Vol. 2 Nos. 1 and 2 (1993) and 3 (1994); Summer, Autumn and Winter 1998; Spring, Summer<br />

and Autumn/Winter 1999; Winter 2000; all four issues from 2001; all four issues from 2002; all four issues from 2003;<br />

Spring 2004 (they then started a numbering system) and numbers 45 (2004) through 61 (2013) (numbers 48/49 and<br />

54/55 are single volumes). $250.00<br />

9. A Full Run [Almost] of Scoot! Quarterly/Scoot! Magazine. San Francisco (and later<br />

San Jose and Santa Clara): Scoot Quarterly/Scoot Magazine, 1998-2011. Staplebound<br />

periodicals, glossy color covers with a mix of color and black and white contents.<br />

Very good with light wear to the wraps and one<br />

issue with mailing label on the front cover. Scoot! Lasted<br />

for an impressive sixty issues and was America’s premier<br />

motorscooter publication with a mix of vintage and modern<br />

scooters, touring and club news, reviews, music, and<br />

fashion; they had more of a club/hotrod feel in the beginning,<br />

and then developed a more polished look. Two issues<br />

were released in 1997 and then four per year were<br />

published until five in 2007 through<br />

2009, six issues in 2010, and their final<br />

issue in February of 2011. The name<br />

was changed from Quarterly to Magazine<br />

with the Summer 2004 issue. This<br />

collection includes 58 issues, lacking the<br />

very scarce first and second issues that<br />

were printed in such limited numbers<br />

that much of the material was reprinted<br />

in later issues. Also included are the<br />

2007 and 2009 Scooter Buyer’s Guides<br />

and 28 pieces of ephemera (postcards,<br />

trading cards, decals, buttons, etc.) that<br />

were occasionally included with the<br />

magazine. $500.00


10. Velasquez,<br />

Thomas A., ed. A<br />

Broken Run of<br />

Scootourist: The<br />

Motor Scooter<br />

Digest, 1962-63.<br />

San Francisco:<br />

The Scootourist<br />

Publishing Co.,<br />

1962-63. Glossy,<br />

staple-bound<br />

wraps, 152mm by<br />

227mm, 24 pp.<br />

each. Light rubbing to the wraps. Included are: Vol. 1 No. 3, Oct.<br />

1962; Vol. 1 No. 4, Dec. 1962; Vol. 1 No. 6, Feb. 1963; Vol. 1 No. 7,<br />

March 1963; Vol. 1 No. 8, April 1936; Vol. 2 No. 1, Sept. 1963; and<br />

Vol. 2 No. 2, October 1963. This short-lived, scarce journal focused<br />

on the touring and adventure aspects of scootering. Articles include<br />

a history of Lambretta, the Harley-Davidson Scat Trail Model, riding<br />

and equipment tips, the Fourth Interntional Lambretta Rally, “Mr.<br />

Cushman – Minneapolis,” building a scooter workshop, dealer profiles,<br />

German scooters, profiles of globetrotting scoot-adventurers<br />

Cesare Battaglini, Clive Lewis, Rudi Thurau, Dietmar Carsten, reviews<br />

of the Honda Juno, Honda 50, Sidekick Trail, Yamaha MJ2, Cushman<br />

Trailmaster, letters, and much more. WorldCat shows no holdings.<br />

$125.00<br />

11. [Vespa] Motorcycling with<br />

Scooter Weekly, March 2, 1961.<br />

London: Temple Press Ltd.,<br />

March 2, 1961. Staple-bound<br />

wraps, 20.5cm by 27cm, 32 pp.<br />

Good with a few small edge tears<br />

on the back cover, sun fading<br />

along the fore edge of the front<br />

cover, and a light vertical crease<br />

from the magazine being folded<br />

at one time. A wonderful Vespa<br />

ad graphic on the front cover along with an article on<br />

scooter trials and a review of the Scootermatic Capri 80.<br />

The rest is motorcycle news and reviews. $20.00<br />

Press Photos<br />

12. “30,000 Miles on a Scooter” Press Photo. New York:<br />

Keystone Press Agency, November 10, 1956. Press photo,<br />

15cm by 21cm. Very good with a taped- and glued-on<br />

caption on verso: “30,000 Miles on a Scooter. Michel Brunelat,<br />

29, left Le Harve [north western France] where he is<br />

living in the summer of 1954 for a month’s vaction in<br />

Yougoslavia [sic]. He came back yesterday after covering<br />

30,000 miles on his scooter. Led by his wanderlust he


went from Jugoslavia to Greece, Turkey then Israel, Iraq, Bagdad then<br />

by sea to Mexico, Canada and New York. While in Jugoslavia he spent<br />

five days in jail for taking pictures of a kholkoz. He was also imprisoned<br />

in Bagdad for photographing veiled women.” Brunelat is shown astride<br />

his battered Lambretta LD 150. $40.00<br />

No. 12<br />

13. “And Away He Goes -- To Chile” Press Photo. St. Petersburg: St.<br />

Petersburg Times, July 1, 1962. Press photo, 21.5cm by 16.5cm. Very<br />

good with agency stamps, pen notes and captions affixed to verso. Image<br />

taken by staff photographer Bruse Tibbo. The caption reads: “Jim<br />

Owen, second from left, visited St. Petersburg yesterday and is expected<br />

to stay here today. Owen, 22, is on his way to Chile via Mexico<br />

and the Pan American Highway to marry Miss Ximina Villarroel, of Santiago.<br />

She was an exchange student he met at a northern college and<br />

later wooed by writing love poems she had translated into Spanish.<br />

Escorting him part way are Vespa scooter club members from Venice,<br />

from left, Bob Ver Pault, Paul Job, and Rupe Brown.” All four appear to<br />

be riding Vespa’s GS, though it’s hard to tell the exact model. $30.00<br />

14. “Bill Hurst, The Scooter-Riding Nightclub Operator” Press Photos.<br />

Two press photos from the St. Petersburg Times (Florida). Included<br />

are: June 27, 1963, by staff photographer Weaver Tripp, 20.5cm by<br />

25.5cm. Good with crop marks and photographer’s stamp on the<br />

front, and pen and wax pencil notes and taped-on caption on verso:<br />

“Bill Hurst, the scooter-riding nightclub operator, rolls his scooter out<br />

of a repair shop on Central Avenue bound for Mexico. All the gear<br />

he is taking is stowed in the bags on the leg-shield;” and September<br />

26, 1963, by staff photographer Dan Hightower, 20.5cm by 25.5cm.<br />

Very good with pen and pencil notes and taped-on caption on verso:<br />

“ECONOMY TOUR OF THE UNITED STATES … is planned by Bill Hurst<br />

who’s traveling via motor scooter on a low, low budget plan.” Both<br />

images show Hurst on a Vespa (model unknown). $50.00/Both<br />

No. 13<br />

15. “Free Wheeling” Press Photo. New York: United Press International,<br />

July 1, 1959. Press photo, 18cm by 23cm. Very good with<br />

light rippling along the bottom,<br />

press agency stamp and gluedand<br />

taped-on caption on verso:<br />

“Free Wheeling. New York: Zigging<br />

and zagging her way across<br />

town, pretty publicist Irene<br />

Brooks maneuvers her motor<br />

scooter through traffic in New<br />

York City. Miss Brooks, who has<br />

to call on clients in all sections of<br />

the city, finds the trim scooter<br />

just what the doctor ordered in<br />

getting places in a hurry.” Under<br />

that wide-brimmed hat is a Vespa<br />

150. $50.00<br />

No. 14<br />

No. 14<br />

16. “Modern Charioteers” Press<br />

Photo. New York: United Press


No. 16<br />

No. 8<br />

No. 15<br />

No. 18<br />

No. 19


No. 20<br />

No. 17<br />

Associates, April 26, 1957. Press photo, 18cm by 23cm. Light crease with a vertical crease just below the scooterists<br />

and two drip marks, one of which is in the open space near the top of the arch and looks like the moon. Press stamps,<br />

pens notes and a glued-on caption on verso. From the Cleveland Press archive, the caption reads: “Modern Charioteers.<br />

Rome: The age-scarred stones on Rome’s famed Arch of Constantine, which reverberated with the rumble of<br />

horse-drawn chariots centuries ago, forms a frame for a new breed of charioteers -- members of a motor scooter club.<br />

In the background, at the end of the tree-lined road, is the modern headquarters of the Food and Agriculture Organization<br />

of the United Nations.” The scooterists are all uniformly dressed and all appear to be riding Lambrettas. $28.00<br />

17. “Ousted President Juan D. Perón” Press Photo. Chicago: United Press Associates, October 1, 1955. Press photo,<br />

23cm by 18cm. Very good with only light wear. UPA stamp on verso. The caption reads: “BUENOS AIRES: Ousted<br />

President Juan D. Peron is shown leading a motor scooter parade of members of the Secondary Students Union<br />

through Buenos Aires in late 1954. Close behind are some of the girls in the Union who were entertained in the Presidential<br />

residences. Nelly Rivas, Peron’s 16-year-old girlfriend, told authorities 9/30 that the Union girls fought among<br />

themselves to attend Peron’s parties. On the left is Atilio Renzi, majordomo of the Presidential household. Peron’s<br />

love letters to Nelly Rivas told her to contact Renzi while waiting to join him in exile. UNITED PRESS TELEPHOTO from<br />

files.” Perón is riding an early Lambretta 125 LD, followed by a couple other Lambrettas and Harleys. $30.00<br />

18. “Pat and Ann Take to Horse Jumping” Press Photo. New York: Keystone Press Agency, July 19, 1960. Press photo,<br />

20cm by 25.5cm. Near fine with press agency stamps and a glued on caption on verso: “pat and Ann Take to Horse<br />

Jumping. Motor rally champions, Pat Moss and Ann Wisdom, who are unbeatable on four wheels, have now teamed up<br />

to see if they can beat the world’s women on four hooves. Pat and Ann last night took their chestnut horse ‘Danny Boy’<br />

to the White City [London], where Pat rode it in the Metropolitan Stakes at the Royal International Horse Show – but<br />

were unplaced. Pat is the rider of the team and Ann the groom. Photo shows: Pat Moss (driving the scooter), and Ann<br />

Wisdom, giving their chestnut Danny Boy some exercise yesterday, when they were getting ready for the Royal International<br />

Horse Show.” Prominently featured in the photo is a pristine Lambretta 125 or 150 from 1959 or ’60. $30.00<br />

19. Reese James “Scooter Riding Stimulates Fresh Ideas” Press Photo. St. Petersburg: St. Petersburg Times, September<br />

8, 1963. Press photo, 16.5cm by 21.5cm. Very good with a taped-on caption, date stamp and pencil notes on verso.<br />

Reese James Jr. was a cartoonist and creator of the very recognizable – and very ‘60s – Giddies comic strip that featured<br />

harry, nude characters lamenting about love, housework and alcohol. It was James who coined the phrase<br />

“home in where the booze is.” Taken by staff photographer Bob Hannah, the caption reads: “Scooter riding stimulates<br />

fresh ideas … for cartoonist Reese James Jr.” James is shown atop his 1962 Vespa 150 GL that is adorned with Giddies<br />

characters. $30.00<br />

20. “Trieste: A New Day Dawns” Press Photo. New York: Keystone Press Agency, not dated but based on the scooters<br />

it was taken in 1952 or ’53. Press photo, 25.5cm by 20.5cm. Near fine with press agency stamps and a glued on caption<br />

on verso: “Trieste [Italy]: A New Day Dawns. Early morning rush hour in the busy streets. Motor-scooters are popu-


lar with the businessmen and women.” Pictured are three Vespa 125’s, an early Lambretta 125, and an Ariete 150 – all<br />

Italian machines. $30.00<br />

Mods and Sods…<br />

21. Hunt, Chris, ed. NME Originals: Mod – Interviews, Reviews & Rare Photos. London: IPC Ignite, Vol. 2 No. 2, 2005.<br />

Perfect-bound wraps, 21cm by 28.5cm, 146 pp. Very good with only light wear to the wraps. Heavily illustrated, this<br />

special issue brings together New Musical Express’ coverage of the Mod music and movement including The Who,<br />

Small Faces, The Jam, Scooters, Mods vs. Rockers, and Quadrophenia. $25.00<br />

22. The S.E.T. The First Two Issues of The Inset Mod Zine. Dorset: The S.E.T., not dated [1985].<br />

Staple-bound self-wraps, 20cm by 28cm and 21cm by 29.5cm, 20 pp. each. Light wear to the covers,<br />

a couple of small glue spots on the cover of issue one, and some rusty staple marks on the<br />

cover of issue two. The first two issues of this British Mod zine that informs us that “We The<br />

S.E.T. [Style Every Time] have tried to be Different and not feature the same articles/bands as a<br />

lot of Modzines do. For anyone who hasn’t heard of us before,we are a group of<br />

Modernists from Bournemouth…” Despite this The Inset is pretty standard ‘zine<br />

fare with show and record reviews, band interviews (Makin’ Time, The Scene),<br />

fashion write-ups (a Mod must), pilfered articles, etc. And of course there are<br />

scooters on the covers. Mod ‘zines are much more scarce than there punk<br />

counterparts so it is of no surprise that WorldCat shows only a single holding.<br />

$50.00<br />

23. Isler, Scott, ed. Trouser Press, June 1982. New York: Trouser Press/Ira A.<br />

Robbins, Vol. 9 No. 4, June 1982. Staple-bound wraps, 20.5cm by<br />

27.5mm, 58 pp. Light wear to the wraps. The great American music<br />

magazine with a penchant for British rock, punk and new wave. Features<br />

“Make Mine Mod” by The Jam’s Paul Weller, as well as Joan Jett<br />

(on the cover), Lou Reed, a Ramones autodiscography, etc. $15.00<br />

24. The Who / Quadrophenia Pin-Back Button. A vintage “Q” badge<br />

dating to 1973 or 1974. A perfect fit for any Mod’s Vietnam-era parka,<br />

this original pin has light yellowing on the front side and no rust.<br />

$30.00


25. Mods and<br />

Rockers “Battle of<br />

Hastings” Press<br />

Photo. London:<br />

Keystone Press<br />

Agency Ltd., 4 August,<br />

1964. Press<br />

photo of Mods parading<br />

along the<br />

center of Hastings,<br />

10 1/8 by 8-inches.<br />

Minor wear and<br />

rubbing at corners.<br />

Verso are Kestone<br />

stamps and a<br />

mimeo caption<br />

glued on: “4-8-64 /<br />

The ‘Mods and<br />

Rockers’ – Battle of<br />

Hastings.. Keystone<br />

Photo Shows:…<br />

Scene in the centre<br />

of Hastings – as<br />

‘Mods and Rockers’<br />

stroll around – they<br />

were kept on the<br />

move by the Police<br />

– to stop them getting into mischief…” A wonderful image of Mods in their Bank Holiday finest, a few parkas in the<br />

bunch, and what looks to be two police officers – a situation they will soon be unable to control (see detail of this image<br />

on the cover of this list). Called the “Second Battle of Hastings” by the sensationalist press, thousands of Mods,<br />

hundreds of Rockers, and overwhelmed police clashed from Brighton to Hastings, forever memorialized in the film<br />

Quadrophenia. While it’s been revealed that many of the “battlefield scenes” between Mods and Rockers were staged<br />

by press photographers with pounds to spend, Hastings did have a violent outcome and marked the beginning of the<br />

end for the first wave Mod culture. $50.00<br />

26. Mods and Rockers – Teenage Girls Fight<br />

It Out Press Photo. Cleveland, Ohio: Cleveland<br />

Press via United Press International, 20<br />

May 1964. Press photo, 230mm by 179mm.<br />

A somewhat grainy image with light crazing<br />

and light corner creases. Agency stamps and<br />

pen notes on verso along with a taped-on<br />

UPI caption: “MARGATE, ENG.: Two teenage<br />

girls fight here, May 17, while another girl<br />

stands by during an eruption of violence between<br />

two rival gangs – the ‘Mods’ and<br />

‘Rockers’ – in this South Coast resort town<br />

during the Whitsun (Pentecost) Weekend.<br />

The youths fought among themselves and<br />

with passersby, terrorized shopkeepers and<br />

resisted police. Two policemen were injured<br />

and some 40 youths were arrested.” $30.00


Bay Leaf Used & Rare Books<br />

G.L. Konrád, Bookseller<br />

79 State Rd., Newaygo, MI 49337<br />

(231) 652-2665 bayleafbooks@sbcglobal.net www.bayleafbooks.com<br />

Thank you for taking time to explore our list; please feel free to call or email with any questions. All items subject to prior<br />

sale; please call or email to reserve. Unless otherwise stated, signed volumes do not have inscriptions. Photographs<br />

can be emailed upon request.<br />

Terms: All items are packed and posted with care. Domestic shipping via Media Mail is $3.50 for the first item, and<br />

$1.00 for each additional item (adjustments are made for small booklets, pamphlets, bookplates, etc.). Priority rates are<br />

available. Foreign shipping is billed at cost.<br />

Payment is accepted via MasterCard, Visa, Discover, PayPal, money orders or checks (U.S. funds drawn on a U.S. bank).<br />

Trade discounts are available and institutional purchase orders are welcome. Michigan residents must add 6% sales<br />

tax. Approved, prompt returns accepted.<br />

We are members of the Antiquarian Booksellers Association of America, the International League of Antiquarian<br />

Booksellers, and the Independent Online Booksellers Association and adhere to those organizations’ standards of<br />

professionalism and ethics.

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