• 345 pages, softcover The X Pipe and Other Mystagogic Stories for the pipe smoker is a blend of pipe lore, contemplative practice and academic pastiche, stoved and pressed before being sliced into seven tails of two pipe men. Mundungus and Sparks on their singular quest to uncover the truth about a miraculous pipe in the Vatican secret archives. Their search takes them on a wild ride as they bounce in time and space across the globe to travel abroad the last convict ship to Australia, smoke J.S. Bach’s pipe, discuss the sacred pipe religion of the Lakota, and eat black cake with Emily Dickinson. Along the way, they discussed the ultimate mysteries of Pipes smoking expounded in the books of the 19th century Irish Fryer and pipe carver known as Nicholai de Tabakkuk.
  • 61 pages, softcover 2nd edition by Mark Irwin. From 1939 to 1946, Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce starred in a 14 film franchise that would define Sherlock Holmes and his biographer John Watson for generations of moviegoers. The pipes of Basil Rathbone’s Sherlock Holmes offers an informal guided tour of the pipes smoked by Rathbone, Bruce and a host of foes, packed with film stills from each of the films ensure to delight pipe men and devotees of the great detective. This new addition includes a special interview in the afterword with Kapp & Petersons pipe specialist Giacomo Penzo on re-creating Rathbone’s 4AB for the 2021 pipe of the year
  • softcover book 345 pages description below
  • 143 pages, softcover French magazine Spheres focuses on telling stories about those who find solace pursuing their passion. This issue is Spheres first international edition and focuses on pipe smoking. It explores the history of the hobby, pipe smoking in popular culture, and highlights on major figures within the craft who continue to share their love of pipes with the world. Interviews with Tom Eltang and Asami Kikuchi of the Tsuge Ikebana workshop, a profile piece on renowned briar cutter Mimmo Romeo, and an in-depth look at what makes Semois tobacco so unique.
  • 87 pages, softcover Critically acclaimed author, blogger, pipe smoker, and collector, Mark Irwin is the voice behind such books as The Peterson Pipe: The Story of Kapp & Peterson and The Pipes of Basil Rathbone's Sherlock Holmes. Originally published a decade ago, Pipe Smoking in Middle Earth: The Fellowship of the Smoke Rings has been updated for a third edition. The book details the pipes and tobacco of J.R.R. Tolkien's Middle Earth and Peter Jackson's corresponding film adaptations. With expert analysis and accompanying illustrations, Mark takes readers on a journey through Tolkien's seminal works, including an index chronicling all pipe-smoking accounts, a tutorial on smoke rings, and much more.  
  • GUIDE TO PIPE CRAFTING AT HOME 112 pages, 190 illustrations, Soft Cover LEARN HOW TO...
    • Make Briar Pipes
    • Craft Freehands
    • Choose The Materials For Your Pipe
    • Cut Several Pipes From One Briar Piece
    • Drill The Holes By Hand Or In A Drill Press
    • Fit, Bend and Finish Stems
    • Sand, Stain and Polish Pipes
    • Carve Briar
  • softcover book 89 pages read description below
  • 49 pages, softcover Of Pipes and Men by Larry Gosser and Mark Irwin overviews 25 historic pipe-smoking icons — including Jacques Cousteau, Albert Einstein, Greta Garbo, Jackie Kennedy, C.S. Lewis, and J.R.R. Tolkien — detailing their lives and legacies in one-page summaries accompanied by individualistic illustrations. With playful prose and comic-style artwork, Of Pipes and Men tastefully and informatively combines the illustrative prowess of Larry Gosser, an illustrator whose accomplishments include work for Peterson of Dublin as well as a licensed Classic Popeye art-print series, with the literary acumen of Mark Irwin, well known pipe blogger and co-author of The Peterson Pipe: The Story of Kapp & Peterson. It's an ideal resource for every pipe smoker, elevated by quick and easy organization, brief yet detailed biographies, quick wit, and a stylish aesthetic.
  • 447 pages, hardcover The important pipe collection of the Hungarian National Museum, which consists of more than 1300 artefacts, is rightly world-famous. Through the selected items introduced in this book the Readers can be acquainted with the cultural history of tobacco smoking, the smoking habits and equipment of different nations and continents. The elaborately carved and decorated pieces help to trace the past of Hungarian pipe making, a branch of rural craftsmanship and applied art that once had a great tradition and which has been unjustly ignored.

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