List price: $39.95 (that's 30% off!)
Also, the editor did a great job with the appendices and the footnotes - they are as entertaining and informative as the letters themselves.
However, there are serious problems with this book as it stands. First, it is a major disservice to publish a book mostly about Hartley and Bluemner that is completely in black and white -- there are NO color photos in this book. Both artists are excellent colorists and much is lost because all twenty of the book's illustrations are B&W. Although the book's description lists 208 pages, there are actually 190 numbered pages and of those, over 50 (!) are full of footnotes (most of which are just source references, not additional reading material) and bibliographic information. Further, the book contains no index, limiting its usefulness as a reference work. Biographical information is very limited for all artists, focusing almost exclusively on the years around their time spent in Germany. Finally, one chapter very briefly discusses other German-influenced American artists -- Bloch, Feininger, and Demuth -- but does not include any pictures of their paintings and does not add much to the discussion. Thus, [the price] is an awful lot of money for a small (6"x9"), short, black-and-white art book. If you need a very focused essay on the German influence of early twentieth century American modernist painters, especially a detailed bibliography, then you might find this book helpful. Otherwise, while interesting, it is very expensive for what it delivers.
This book probably would not be of interest to you unless you had an interest in Hartley, but if you want to understand him and his paintings this book would be a good place to start.