The Bibliography of the Publications by Classmates in the Yale Class Of

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Bibliography of the Publications by Classmates in the Yale Class Of The Bibliography of the Publications by Classmates in the Yale Class of 1956: Includes Work by Wives of Classmates, Work in the Book Exhibit of the 50th Reunion and Listings in the ABEbook Exchange as of 02-09-2018. Introduction Here is a list of 476 publications by 95 Classmates and 10 of their wives, which is probably the first of its kind of any Yale College Class, and, if not, should compare well with any other in scope. But then again, this compilation of so many by so few might symbolize the autumn of book-binding’s age that stretched from Gutenberg’s invention till today and might suggest that publications, free of paper words and numbers, be in bytes to digitally whisk the world-wide-web. Will this new era mark the waning of the printing press as it had once replaced bespoken Latin scripts? Will knowledge be transmitted more efficiently both to and from a heaping, horizontal cloud? NB: Publication data obtained directly from authors has been verified; the data from the Exchange has not been verified. Compiled by W. H. H. Rees Index: Adebonojo, Festus O., Page 3 Helmstadter, Richard J., Page13 Tuggle, Joyce, Page 27 Alegi, Peter C., Page 3 Hodge, Paul W., Page 13 Tunney, John Varick, Page 28 Ambach, Gordon M., Page 3 Huber, Paul B., Page 14 Tveskov, Peter H., Page 28 Anderson, Jeremy H., Page 3 Hutt, Peter Barton, Page 14 Vare, Edwin C., Page 28 Andersson, Theodore M., Page 3 Jaffe, Sheldon M., Page 14 Velsey, Donald W., Page 28 Baker, F. Terry, Page 4 Jeffords, James M., Page 14 Vennum, Jr., Thomas, Page 28 Barker, Vincent Allan, Page 4 Berman, Rochel U., Page 5 Kaplan, Marshall M., Page 15 Wheeler, Wendy Allen, Page 28 Bilsky, Lester J., Page 5 King III, C. Judson, Page 15 Wilkinson III, Theodore S., Page 29 Boasberg III, Emanuel, Page 5 Kleiger, Robert E., Page 15 Woloch, G. Michael, Page 29 Bradner, Lawrence H., Page 5 Kolowrat, Ernest, Page 15 Young Robert R., Page 29 Braun, Linda A., Page 5 Kugelman, Thomas P., Page 15 Zietlow, Paul N., Page 29 Braun, Peter, Page 6 Lanham, Richard A., Page 15 Zimmermann, Warren, Page 29 Brier, Nurith Goldschmidt, Page 6 Lapham, Lewis H., Page 16 Brier, Peter A., Page 6 Leppelmeier, Gilbert W., Page 17 Brown, Frederick E., Page 6 Levin, Jr., N. Gordon, Page 17 Brown, Harry Joe, Page 6 Linderman, Gerald F., Page 17 Brown, Katharine L., Page 7 Lloyd, David G., Page 17 Brown, W. Stanley, Page 7 Mason, Robert W., Page 17 Buggie, Frederick D., Page 7 Massey, William F., Page 18 Chasin, Richard M., Page 8 McLaughlin, Herbert P., Page 18 Chatfield, Donald F., Page 8 Morley, Samuel A., Page 18 Cohen, Jordan, J., Page 8 Morse, Carl R., Page 19 Cooper, Jr., Henry S. F., Page 8 Moser, Charles A., Page 19 Crawford-Mason, Clare, Page 9 Nassau, Michael J., Page 19 Dewey, Jr., C. Forbes, Page 9 Oates, John F., Page 20 Diebold, Jr., A. Richard, Page 9 O’Flaherty, Ellen J., Page 20 Dickerson, Jr., George G., Page 9 Pearce John N., Page 20 Donald, Jonathan, Page 9 Perry, Fred T., Page 20 Eaton, John L., Page 9 Phair, John P., Page 20 Eimas, Peter D., Page 10 Poorvu, WIllliam J., Page 21 Emerson, Andres G., Page 10 Post, Jerrold, M., Page 21 Esselstyn, Jr., Caldwell B., Page 10 Rawson, Hugh, Page 21 Euston, Susanna M., Page 10 Ruchkin, Daniel S., Page 22 Fisher, Robert L., Page 10 Ruddy, Shaun, Page 22 Fitz Gibbon, John G., Page 10 Salinger, Gerhard L., Page 22 Fleck, George M., Page 11 Scher, Stephen K., Page 23 Gansler, Jacques S., Pages 11 Scotch, Benson D., Page 23 Goldman, Richard P., Page 11 Selig, Edward I., Page 23 Goodman, Aubrey L., Page 11 Selin, Ivan, Page 23 Goodwin, Rufus S., Page 11 Slavitt, David R., Page 23 Gordon, Donald A., Page 11 Soth, Lauren, Page 27 Greer III, Rowan A., Page 11 Speicher, John F., Page 27 Hankins, Thomas L., Page 12 Steiner, Nicholas V., Page 27 Hanyan, Craig R., Page 12 Strauss, Lawrence A., Page 27 Hayden, Casey, Page 12 Supino, David J., Page 27 Heikkinen, Henry W., Page 13 Teter, D. Park, Page 27 Festus 0. Adebonojo 1. How Baby Grows: A Parent's Guide to Infant Nutrition, (co-author with E. Sherman and L.C. Jones), 1985, Arbor House Peter C. Alegi 1. Italian Income Tax- Consolidated Text, (co-translator with C. Marciasini), 2nd ed., 1993, Alegi & Associates 2. Business Operations in Italy, (Tax Management: Foreign Income Portfolios), (co-author with D. Trivi and K. Stagi), 6th ed., 2005, Tax Management, Inc. Gordon M. Ambach 1. Changing Stagesof Learning, Inaugural Addressas Presidentofthe Universityof New YorkandCommissionerofEducation, 1977, State of New York Education Department 2. The State of Learning, New York, 1977-1987: A Ten Year Report to the Board of Regents and the University of the State of New York, 1987, State of New York Education Department 3. Federal Action Essential for Education Reform, National Issues in Education: The Past is Prologue, Ed. J. F. Jennings, Phi Delta Kappa and The Institute for Educational Leadership Jeremy H. Anderson 1. Space Play: The Collected Poems of Jeremy Anderson, 2003, Gorham Press Theodore M. Andersson 1. The Problem of Icelandic Saga Origins: A Historical Survey, 1964, Yale University Press 2. The Icelandic Family Saga: An Analytic Reading, 1967, Harvard University Press 3. Bibliography of Old Norse-Icelandic Studies 1968: Some Ambiguities in Gisla Saga, A Balance Sheet, 1969, Copenhagen: Royal Library (Munksgaard) 4. Foreign Languages in the Elementary School: A Struggle Against Mediocrity, 1969, University of Texas Press 5. Bilingual Schooling in the United States, (in two volumes), (with Mildred Boyer), 1970, U. S. Government Printing Office/Southwest Educational Development Laboratory 6. Literary Context of Chaucer's Fabliaux, (with Larry D. Benson), 1971, Bobbs Merrill 7. The Epic Source of Niflunga Saga and Nibelungenlied, in: Arkiv For Nordisk Filonogi: (88), 1973, Lund 8. Bilingual Schooling in the United States: History, Rationale, Implications and Planning, (with Mi Id red Boyer), 1976, Elaine/Ethridge Books Page 3 9. Early Ep;c Scenery: Homer, Virgd, and the Med;eval Legacy, 1976, Cornel I University Press 10. Resource Gu;de to BWngual Education: A Selective B;bhography of Recent Pubhcahons, (Educational Bibliographies Series: 1), 1978, National Educational Laboratory Publications Series: 3), 1978, National Educational Laboratory Publications 11. The Legend of Brynhdd, 1980, Cornel I University Press 12. Gu;de to Famdy Read;ng ;n Two Languages: The Preschool Years, 1981, National Clearing House/University of Texas Press 13. The Th;ef in Beowulf, 1984, The Medieval Academy of America 14. A Preface to the N;belungenhed, 1987, Stanford University Press 15. Norse Values and Society (editor), vol. 60, no. 2, 1988, Scandinavian Studies 16. Contrad;chons: From Beowulf to Chaucer; Select Stud;es of Larry Benson, 1995, Routledge 17. Mork;nsk;nna: The Earhest Jceland;c Chron;cle of the Norweg;an K;ngs (1030-1157) (!sland;ca LI) (with Kari Ellen Gade, translators), 2000, Cornell University Press 18. The Saga of Olaf Tryggvason (!sland;ca) by Oddr Snorrason, translation, 2003, Cornell University Press 19. The Growth of the Med;eval Jceland;c Sagas (1180-1280), 2006, Cornell University Press 20. Law and Literature ;n Med;aeval Iceland: 'Ljosvetn;nga Saga' and 'Valla-Ljots Saga', (with The Partisan Muse in the Early Icelandic Sagas 1200-1250), 2012, Cornell University Press 21. Theodulf ofOrleans: The Verse, (Medieval and Renais Text Studies), (with Aslaug Ommundsen and Leslie S. B. MacCoull), 2014, ACMRS Publications 22. The Saga Norweg;an K;ngs (1130-1265), 2016, Cornell University Library, Division of Rare and Manuscripts Collection 23. Homer 's !had, 2016, Outskirts Press F. Terry Baker 1. Software Architecture and Des;gn: Pr;nciples, Models, and Methods, (co-author with B. I. Witt and E.W. Merritt), 1994, Van Nostrand Reinhold 2. Software Technology: A State of the Art (Trends and Applications 1981, Tutorial Notes), (with Victor Basilli), 1991, IEEE Computer Society Press 3. Structured Programm;ng, Tutor;al on, rev;sed 1997, (with Victor Basili), 1997, IEEE Computer Society Press Vincent Allan Barker 1. Finite Element Solution of Boundary Value Problems: Theory and Computation, (co- author with 0. Axelsson), 2nd ed., 2001, Society for Industrial and Applied Math Page4 Rochal U. Berman (Spouse of George R. Berman) 1. Dignity Beyond Death: The Jewish Preparation for Burial, 2005, Urim Publications 2. Ocean's Apart: A Guide to Maintaining Family Ties at a Distance, 2010, KTAV Publishing Lester J. Bilsky 1. The State Religion of Ancient China, 2 vols., 1975, The Orient Cultural Service 2. Historical Ecology: Essays on Environment and Social Change, Ed. and contributing author, 1980, Kennikat Press Emanuel Boasberg III 1. The Private Practice of Urban Law, Abstract 20, 1969, Case Western Reserve Law Review 2:323-352 2. Historic Preservation Law and Taxation, (co-author with T. Coughlin and J. Miller), 3rd ed., 1st vol., 1989, Matthew Bender & Co, Inc. Lawrence H. Bradner 1. The Plum Beach Light: The Birth, Life and Death of a Lighthouse, 1989, L. H. Bradner Publications Linda W. Braun (Spouse of Peter Braun) 1. Helping Youn Children Learn, (co-author with E.G. Pitcher and S. G. Feinburg and M. G. Lasher), 211 ed., 1974, Charles E. Merrill Publishing Company 2. Helping Parents in Groups: A Leader's Handbook, (co-author with J. K.Coplon and P. C. Sonnenschein), 1984, Resource Communications, Inc. 3. Introducing the Internet to Young Learners; Ready-to-Go Activities and Lesson Plans, 2001, Neal Schuman Publisher 4. The Browseable Classroom: An Introduction to £-Learning for Librarians, (with Carolyn Noah), 2002, Neal-Shuman Net Guide Series, Neal Schuman Publisher 5.
Recommended publications
  • Bibliography of Frank Cook's Early Library
    Bibliography of Frank Cook’s Early Library Frank was a pack rat. He saved every book he ever owned. The following list represents Frank’s early readings, for the most part before his love of plants emerged. Frank gathered these books in a small library kept in his brother Ken’s basement shortly before his death. PHI provides this bibliography to friends interested in seeing some of Frank’s early influences. ALLEN, E. B. D. M. (1960). THE NEW AMERICAN POETRY (Reprint. Twelfth Printing.). GROVE PRESS. Amend, V. E. (1965). Ten Contemporary Thinkers. The Free Press. Anonymous. (1965). The Upanishads. Penguin Classics. Armstrong, G. (1969). Protest: Man against Society (2nd ed.). Bantam Books. Asimov, I. (1969). Words of Science. Signet. Atkinson, E. (1965). Johnny Appleseed. Harper & Row. Bach, R. (1989). A Gift of Wings. Dell. Baker, S. W. (1985). The Essayist (5th ed.). HarperCollins Publishers. Baricco, A. (2007). Silk. Vintage. Beavers, T. L. (1972). Feast: A Tribal Cookbook (First Edition.). Doubleday. Beck, W. F. (1976). The Holy Bible. Leader Publishing Company. Berger, T. (1982). Little Big Man. Fawcett. Bettelheim, B. (2001). The Children of the Dream. Simon & Schuster. Bolt, R. (1990). A Man for All Seasons (First Vintage International Edition.). Vintage. brautigan, R. (1981). Hawkline Monster. Pocket. Brautigan, R. (1973). A Confederate General from Big Sur (First Thus.). Ballantine. Brautigan, R. (1975). Willard and His Bowling Trophies (1st ed.). Simon & Schuster. Brautigan, R. (1976). Loading Mercury With a Pitchfork: [Poems] (First Edition.). Simon & Schuster. Brautigan, R. (1978). Dreaming of Babylon. Dell Publishing Co. Brautigan, R. (1979). Rommel Drives on Deep into Egypt.
    [Show full text]
  • 19 Mapping the Citizen News Landscape: Blurring Boundaries, Promises, Perils, and Beyond
    An Nguyen and Salvatore Scifo 19 Mapping the Citizen News Landscape: Blurring Boundaries, Promises, Perils, and Beyond Abstract: This chapter offers a necessary critical overview of citizen journalism in its many forms and shapes, with a focus on its promises and perils and what it means for the future of news. We will start with a review of the concept of “citizen journalism” and its many alternative terms, then move to briefly note the long history of citizen journalism, which dates back to the early days of the printing press. This will be followed by our typology of three major forms of citizen journal- ism (CJ) – citizen witnessing, oppositional CJ, and expertise-based CJ – along with an assessment of each form’s primary actions, motives, functions, and influences. The penultimate part of the chapter will focus on CJ’s flaws and pitfalls – especially the mis/disinformation environment it fosters and the “dialogue of the deaf” it engenders – and place them in the context of the post-truth era to highlight the still critical need for professional journalists. The chapter concludes with a brief review of the understandably but unnecessarily uneasy relationship between citi- zen and professional journalism and calls for the latter to adopt a new attitude to work well with the former. Keywords: citizen journalism, alternative journalism, citizen witnessing, social media, fake news, post-truth 1 One thing, many labels? Within a short time, citizen journalism (CJ) went from something of a novelty to a naturalized part of the news ecosystem and entered the daily language of journal- ists, journalism educators, and a large segment of the global public.
    [Show full text]
  • Lowney Turner Handy Library Collection (PDF)
    Department of Special Collections Cunningham Memorial Library Indiana State University BOOKS FROM THE LOWNEY TURNER HANDY LIBRARY AT THE COLONY List Prepared & Edited by David Vancil June 8, 2001 / Rev. July 30, 2001 / April 26, 2002 Lowney Turner Handy, writing teacher of James Jones and others, maintained a writing school in southern Illinois. Her teaching approach included the use of various works from her library which students had to read and copy by hand or by using a typewriter in the process of becoming familiar with accomplished writing styles. Most of the books listed below are fiction and poetry, although an occasional title in a different realm is also included. Many of the books are annotated by Handy with comments, sometimes on the pastedown, sometimes in the body of the work.. A few items, notably his own works, were gifts from James Jones. Also included in the collection are published works of other successful students, e.g., Jere Peacock., Tom Chamales, and Edwin Daly. These books were about to be discarded when Elizabeth Bevington, an antiquarian bookseller and member of the Friends of the Cunningham Memorial Library, retrieved them and donated them to the library as the Lowney Turner Handy Library Collection to be housed within the Rare Books Collection. List of Donated Books Acworth, Bernard. Swift. London: Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1947. Rare Books PR3726.A58 1947s. Dinesen, Isak. The Angelic Avengers by Pierre Andrézel. New York: Random House, 1947. Rare Books PT8175.B545 G43 1947s. Arlen, Michael. The Flying Dutchman: A Novel. New York: Doubleday, Doran & Co., 1939. Rare Books PR6001.R7 F6 1939s.
    [Show full text]
  • Available Videos for TRADE (Nothing Is for Sale!!) 1
    Available Videos For TRADE (nothing is for sale!!) 1/2022 MOSTLY GAME SHOWS AND SITCOMS - VHS or DVD - SEE MY “WANT LIST” AFTER MY “HAVE LIST.” W/ O/C means With Original Commercials NEW EMAIL ADDRESS – [email protected] For an autographed copy of my book above, order through me at [email protected]. 1966 CBS Fall Schedule Preview 1969 CBS and NBC Fall Schedule Preview 1997 CBS Fall Schedule Preview 1969 CBS Fall Schedule Preview (not for trade) Many 60's Show Promos, mostly ABC Also, lots of Rock n Roll movies-“ROCK ROCK ROCK,” “MR. ROCK AND ROLL,” “GO JOHNNY GO,” “LET’S ROCK,” “DON’T KNOCK THE TWIST,” and more. **I ALSO COLLECT OLD 45RPM RECORDS. GOT ANY FROM THE FIFTIES & SIXTIES?** TV GUIDES & TV SITCOM COMIC BOOKS. SEE LIST OF SITCOM/TV COMIC BOOKS AT END AFTER WANT LIST. Always seeking “Dick Van Dyke Show” comic books and 1950s TV Guides. Many more. “A” ABBOTT & COSTELLO SHOW (several) (Cartoons, too) ABOUT FACES (w/o/c, Tom Kennedy, no close - that’s the SHOW with no close - Tom Kennedy, thankfully has clothes. Also 1 w/ Ben Alexander w/o/c.) ACADEMY AWARDS 1974 (***not for trade***) ACCIDENTAL FAMILY (“Making of A Vegetarian” & “Halloween’s On Us”) ACE CRAWFORD PRIVATE EYE (2 eps) ACTION FAMILY (pilot) ADAM’S RIB (2 eps - short-lived Blythe Danner/Ken Howard sitcom pilot – “Illegal Aid” and rare 4th episode “Separate Vacations” – for want list items only***) ADAM-12 (Pilot) ADDAMS FAMILY (1ST Episode, others, 2 w/o/c, DVD box set) ADVENTURE ISLAND (Aussie kid’s show) ADVENTURER ADVENTURES IN PARADISE (“Castaways”) ADVENTURES OF DANNY DEE (Kid’s Show, 30 minutes) ADVENTURES OF HIRAM HOLLIDAY (8 Episodes, 4 w/o/c “Lapidary Wheel” “Gibraltar Toad,”“ Morocco,” “Homing Pigeon,” Others without commercials - “Sea Cucumber,” “Hawaiian Hamza,” “Dancing Mouse,” & “Wrong Rembrandt”) ADVENTURES OF LUCKY PUP 1950(rare kid’s show-puppets, 15 mins) ADVENTURES OF A MODEL (Joanne Dru 1956 Desilu pilot.
    [Show full text]
  • PERFECTION, WRETCHED, NORMAL, and NOWHERE: a REGIONAL GEOGRAPHY of AMERICAN TELEVISION SETTINGS by G. Scott Campbell Submitted T
    PERFECTION, WRETCHED, NORMAL, AND NOWHERE: A REGIONAL GEOGRAPHY OF AMERICAN TELEVISION SETTINGS BY G. Scott Campbell Submitted to the graduate degree program in Geography and the Graduate Faculty of the University of Kansas in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. ______________________________ Chairperson Committee members* _____________________________* _____________________________* _____________________________* _____________________________* Date defended ___________________ The Dissertation Committee for G. Scott Campbell certifies that this is the approved version of the following dissertation: PERFECTION, WRETCHED, NORMAL, AND NOWHERE: A REGIONAL GEOGRAPHY OF AMERICAN TELEVISION SETTINGS Committee: Chairperson* Date approved: ii ABSTRACT Drawing inspiration from numerous place image studies in geography and other social sciences, this dissertation examines the senses of place and regional identity shaped by more than seven hundred American television series that aired from 1947 to 2007. Each state‘s relative share of these programs is described. The geographic themes, patterns, and images from these programs are analyzed, with an emphasis on identity in five American regions: the Mid-Atlantic, New England, the Midwest, the South, and the West. The dissertation concludes with a comparison of television‘s senses of place to those described in previous studies of regional identity. iii For Sue iv CONTENTS List of Tables vi Acknowledgments vii 1. Introduction 1 2. The Mid-Atlantic 28 3. New England 137 4. The Midwest, Part 1: The Great Lakes States 226 5. The Midwest, Part 2: The Trans-Mississippi Midwest 378 6. The South 450 7. The West 527 8. Conclusion 629 Bibliography 664 v LIST OF TABLES 1. Television and Population Shares 25 2.
    [Show full text]
  • Books Located in the National Press Club Archives
    Books Located in the National Press Club Archives Abbot, Waldo. Handbook of Broadcasting: How to Broadcast Effectively. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., 1937. Call number: PN1991.5.A2 1937 Alexander, Holmes. How to Read the Federalist. Boston, MA: Western Islands Publishers, 1961. Call number: JK155.A4 Allen, Charles Laurel. Country Journalism. New York: Thomas Nelson and Sons, 1928. Alsop, Joseph and Stewart Alsop. The Reporter’s Trade. New York: Reynal & Company, 1958. Call number: E741.A67 Alsop, Joseph and Catledge, Turner. The 168 Days. New York: Doubleday, Duran & Co., Inc, 1938. Ames, Mary Clemmer. Ten Years in Washington: Life and Scenes in the National Capital as a Woman Sees Them. Hartford, CT: A. D. Worthington & Co. Publishers, 1875 Call number: F198.A512 Andrews, Bert. A Tragedy of History: A Journalist’s Confidential Role in the Hiss-Chambers Case. Washington, DC: Robert Luce, 1962. Anthony, Joseph and Woodman Morrison, eds. Best News Stories of 1924. Boston, MA: Small, Maynard, & Co. Publishers, 1925. Atwood, Albert (ed.), Prepared by Hershman, Robert R. & Stafford, Edward T. Growing with Washington: The Story of Our First Hundred Years. Washington, D.C.: Judd & Detweiler, Inc., 1948. Baillie, Hugh. High Tension. New York: Harper & Brothers Publishers, 1959. Call number: PN4874.B24 A3 Baker, Ray Stannard. American Chronicle: The Autobiography of Ray Baker. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1945. Call number: PN4874.B25 A3 Baldwin, Hanson W. and Shepard Stone, Eds.: We Saw It Happen: The News Behind the News That’s Fit to Print. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1938. Call number: PN4867.B3 Barrett, James W.
    [Show full text]
  • Bottom-Line Pressures in Publishing: a Panel Discussion
    BOTTOM-LINE PRESSURES IN PUBLISHING: A PANEL DISCUSSION http://www.najp.org This is an edited and abbreviated transcript of a National Arts Journalism Program panel on the effect of bottom-line pressures on the publishing industry held at Columbia University on April 17, 1998. Panelists: Susan Bergholz, literary agent based in New York City. Formerly a bookseller, Ms. Bergholz has also worked as a buyer for Endicott. Lee Buttala, Associate Editor at Alfred A. Knopf, where he has worked since 1995. Previous to that, he was an editor at Interview and Metropolitan Home magazines. Jeff Seroy, Vice President and Publicity Director, Farrar, Straus & Giroux. A graduate of Columbia University, Mr. Seroy was awarded a Kellett Fellowship for continuing studies at Cambridge University for the 1976-77 academic year, after which he entered the publishing industry. Elisabeth Sifton, Senior Vice President, Farrar, Straus & Giroux, and Publisher, Hill & Wang. Ms. Sifton has held editorial and executive positions at The Viking Press, Viking Penguin, Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., and Elisabeth Sifton Books, which won the Carey-Thomas Award for Creative Publishing in 1986. William B. Strachan, President and Director, Columbia University Press. Formerly editor in chief at Henry Holt, Mr. Strachan has worked at a number of other trade publishers throughout his career including Viking Press and Anchor Press. Moderators: Ruth Lopez, 1997-98 NAJP Fellow, Book Review editor at The Santa Fe New Mexican. Carlin Romano, 1997-98 NAJP Senior Fellow, literary critic, The Philadelphia
    [Show full text]
  • Asian Art Books.Xlsx
    The FloatingWorld The Story of Japanese Prints By James A. Michener 1954 Random House LOC 54-7812 1st Printng Chinoiserie Dawn Jacobson Phaidon Press Ltd London ISBN 0-714828831 1993 Dust Jacket Chinese Calligraphy Tseng Yu-ho Ecke Philadelphia Museum of Art 1971 1971 LOC 75-161453 Second Printing Soft Cover Treasures of Asia Chinese Painting Text by James Cahill James Cahill The World Publishing Co. Cleveland Copyright by Editions d'Art Albert Skira, 1960 LOC 60- 15594 Painting in the Far East Laurence Binyon 3rd Edition Revised Throughout Dova Publication, NY Soft Cover The Year One Art of the Ancient World East and West The Metropolitan Museum of Art Edited by Elizabeth J. Milleker Yale University Press 2000 Dust Jacket A Shoal of Fishes Hiroshige The Metropolitan Museum of Art The Viking Press Studio Book 1980 LOC 80-5170 ISBN 0-87099-237-6 Sleeve Past, Present, East and West Sherman E. Lee George Braziller, Inc. New York 1st Printing ISBN 0-8076-1064-x Dust Jacket Birds, Beast, Blossoms, and Bugs The Nature of Japan Text by Harold P. Stern Harry N. Abrams, Inc. LOC 75-46630 Cultural Relics Unearted in China 1973 Wenwu Press Peking, 1972 w/ intro in English- Translation of the Intro and the Contents of: Cultural Relics Unearthed During the Period of the Great Cultural Revolution prepared by China Books & Periodicals Dust Jacket & Sleeve Chinese Art and Culture Rene Grousset Translated from the Frenchby Haakon Chevalier E-283 1959 Orion Press, Inc. Paper Second Printing Chinese Bronzes 70 Plates in Full Colour Mario Bussagli Translated by Pamela Swinglehurst from the Italian original Bronzi Cinesi 1969 The Hamlyn Publishing Group Limited Dust Jacket Chinese Art from the Cloud Wampler and other Collections in the Everson Museum Intro by Max Loehr Handbook of the collection by Celia Carrington Riely Frederick A .
    [Show full text]
  • 'Stimulating Our Literature and Deepening Our Culture'
    Quærendo 47 (2017) 222-251 brill.com/qua ‘Stimulating our Literature and Deepening our Culture’ Translated Books as Book-of-the-Month Club Selections, 1926 to 1973 Corinna Norrick-Rühl Gutenberg-Institut für Weltliteratur und schriftorientierte Medien Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz, Germany [email protected] Abstract One of the most prominent book clubs in the US was the Book-of-the-Month Club, established in 1926. The Book-of-the-Month Club marketed books as commodities for consumption, promoting leisurely reading among the growing middle class. But the Book-of-the-Month Club also claimed to be ‘stimulating our literature and deepening our culture’, and in fact, dozens of selected authors went on to receive the Pulitzer Prize or the Nobel Prize for Literature. The body of research on the Book-of-the-Month Club includes Janice A. Radway’s well-known multi-method study A Feeling for Books (1997). But translations among Book-of-the-Month Club selections have not yet been considered. Focusing in particular on books translated into English from German, this paper will present new data on originally foreign-language books that were selected by the Book-of-the-Month Club judges, thereby guaranteeing European authors maximum visibility and exorbitant sales in the US market, which was (and is) usually considered difficult to tap into for non-Anglophone writers. Keywords book sales clubs – Book-of-the-Month Club – translation(s) – German literature Worldwide, millions of readers have accessed their reading material and enter- tainment media through mail-order book sales clubs like Círculo de Lectores, the Nederlandse Boekenclub, Bertelsmann Club or the Book-of-the-Month © koninklijke brill nv, leiden, 2017 | doi 10.1163/15700690-12341383Downloaded from Brill.com09/25/2021 08:08:03PM via free access ‘Stimulating our literature and deepening our culture’ 223 Club.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction
    loye-0-intro 10/14/03 1:08 AM Page 1 INTRODUCTION DAVID LOYE If we take a careful look at what happened to our species scientifically and socially during the twentieth century, two rather unsettling facts become apparent. The first is that we are being shoved into a twenty-first century laden with immense challenges and the most serious kind of questions bearing on the human future with a scientific theory and story of evolu- tion based almost entirely on the study of the past and the prehuman and the subhuman. The second is that some day it will likely be recognized that the single greatest shortcoming of twentieth century science was its failure to achieve a fully human theory and story of evolution. By “fully human” theory and story I mean that twentieth-century science did a magnificent job of making both the theory and the story of cosmic evolution come vividly to life for us via physics. It also gave us what seemed to be a reasonably solid and gripping theory of biological evolution via chemistry and biology. But when it tried to deal with the explosion out of nature of higher brain, mind, consciousness, and every- thing else that came to characterize the emergence of our species and our impact on this planet, it fell so far short of what was needed as to be laughable if it weren’t so tragic. Tragic? How so? I have found the quickest way to make the point is to consider this line of thought. As Silvan Tomkin’s script theory (Carlson, 1995) and our personal experience tells us, we live by story—on this most of us will agree.
    [Show full text]
  • Selections from the State Librarian with Comments Fall 2003 Through Summer 2008
    Selections from the State Librarian With comments Fall 2003 through Summer 2008 Each season for the past five years Jan Walsh, Washington State Librarian, has chosen a theme and then selected at least one adult, one young adult, and one children‟s book to fit her topic. The following list is a compilation of her choices with her comments. The season in which each title was selected is listed in parentheses following its citation. Her themes were: Artists of Washington—spring 2004 Beach Reads—summer 2008 The Columbia River through Washington History—fall 2004 Courage—summer 2005 Disasters—fall 2007 Diversity—winter 2006 Exploring Washington—spring 2008 Geology of Washington State—fall 2005 Hidden People—spring 2007 Lewis, Clark, and Seaman—winter 2004 Life in Washington Territory—fall 2003 Mount St. Helens—spring 2005 Mysteries of Washington—fall 2006 Of Beaches and the Sea—winter 2008 The Olympic Peninsula—winter 2007 The Oregon Trail—spring 2006 Spokane and the Inland Empire—summer 2007 Tastes of Washington—summer 2006 Washington through the Photographer‟s Lens—summer 2004 Washington‟s Native People—winter 2005 NW prefixed books are available for check out and interlibrary loan. RARE, R (Reference), and GWA (Governor‟s Writers Award) prefixed books are available to be viewed only at the State Library. All books were in print at the time of Ms. Walsh‟s selection. January 23, 2009 1 Washington Reads 5 year compilation with Jan‟s comments Adult selections Alexie, Sherman. Reservation Blues. Grove Press, 1995. 306 p. (Summer 2007) NW 813.54 ALEXIE 1995; R 813.54 ALEXIE 1995 “The novel, which won the American Book Award in 1996, is a poignant look at the rise and fall of an Indian rock band, Coyote Springs, and the people and spirits that surround it.
    [Show full text]
  • Five Year Compilation 2003-07
    Selections from the State Librarian Fall 2003 through Summer 2008 Each season for the past five years Jan Walsh, Washington State Librarian, has chosen a theme and then selected at least one adult, one young adult and one children’s book to fit her topic. The following list is a compilation of her choices. The season in which each title was selected is listed in parentheses following its citation. Her themes were: Artists of Washington—spring 2004 Beach Reads—summer 2008 The Columbia River through Washington History—fall 2004 Courage—summer 2005 Disasters—fall 2007 Diversity—winter 2006 Exploring Washington—spring 2008 Geology of Washington State—fall 2005 Hidden People—spring 2007 Lewis, Clark, and Seaman—winter 2004 Life in Washington Territory—fall 2003 Mount St. Helens—spring 2005 Mysteries of Washington—fall 2006 Of Beaches and the Sea—winter 2008 The Olympic Peninsula—winter 2007 The Oregon Trail—spring 2006 Spokane and the Inland Empire—summer 2007 Tastes of Washington—summer 2006 Washington through the Photographer’s Lens—summer 2004 Washington’s Native People—winter 2005 To read Ms. Walsh’s comments about each book go to: http://www.secstate.wa.gov/library/wa_reads.aspx NW prefixed books are available for check out and interlibrary loan. RARE, R (Reference), and GWA (Governor’s Writers Award) prefixed books are available to be viewed only at the State Library. All books were in print at the time of Ms. Walsh’s selection. Five Year Compilation November 2008 1 Adult selections Alexie, Sherman. Reservation Blues. Grove Press, 1995. 306 p. (Summer 2007) NW 813.54 ALEXIE 1995; R 813.54 ALEXIE 1995 Alt, David D.
    [Show full text]