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Books published by publisher W. W. Norton

  • Guns, Germs, And Steel - The Fates Of Human Societies

    Jared Diamond

    Hardcover (W. W. Norton & Co, March 15, 1999)
    Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies, commonly cited as Guns, Germs, and Steel, is a 1997 transdisciplinary non-fiction book by Jared Diamond, professor of geography and physiology at the University of California, Los Angeles. Originally published: 1997 Author: Jared Diamond LC Class: HM206.D48 1997 ISBN: 0-393-03891-2 (1st edition, hardcover) Dewey Decimal: 303.4 21 Awards: Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction, Phi Beta Kappa Award in Science
  • Blue at the Mizzen

    patrick o'brian

    Hardcover (w.w. norton, March 15, 1999)
    None
  • Shaking the Nickel Bush

    Ralph Moody

    Hardcover (Norton, Jan. 1, 1962)
    Skinny and suffering from diabetes, Ralph Moody is ordered by a Boston doctor to seek a more healthful climate. Going west again is a delightful prospect. His childhood adventures on a Colorado ranch were described in Little Britches and Man of the Family, also Bison Books. Now nineteen years old, he strikes out into new territory hustling odd jobs, facing the problem of getting fresh milk and leafy green vegetables. He scrapes around to survive, risking his neck as a stunt rider for a movie company. With an improvident buddy named Lonnie, he camps out in an Arizona canyon and "shakes the nickel bush" by sculpting plaster of paris busts of lawyers and bankers. This is 1918, and the young men travel through the Southwest not on horses but in a Ford aptly named Shiftless. New readers and old will enjoy this entry in the continuing saga of Ralph Moody.
  • Dear America: Letters Home from Vietnam

    New York Vietnam Veterans Memorial Commission, Bernard Edelman, Jr. William Broyles

    Hardcover (W W Norton & Co Inc, April 1, 1985)
    This collection of letters, poems, and petitions from the front, written mostly by infantrymen to their families and friends, evokes the mingled emotions of an intense longing for home, fear, hope, grief, and anger aroused by the Vietnam War
  • Endurance: An Epic of Polar Adventure

    Frank Arthur Worsley, Patrick O'Brian

    Hardcover (W W Norton & Co Inc, April 15, 1999)
    "You seriously mean to tell me that the ship is doomed?" asked Frank Worsley, commander of the Endurance, stuck impassably in Antarctic ice packs. "What the ice gets," replied Sir Ernest Shackleton, the expedition's unflappable leader, "the ice keeps." However, it did not get the ship's twenty-five crew members, all of whom survived an eight-hundred-mile voyage across sea, land, and ice to South Georgia, the nearest inhabited island. First published in 1931, Endurance tells the full story of that doomed expedition and incredible rescue, as well as relating Frank Worsley's further adventures fighting U-boats in the Great War, sailing the equally treacherous waters of the Arctic, and making one final (and successful) assault on the South Pole with Shackleton. It is a tale of unrelenting high adventure and a tribute to one of the most inspiring and courageous leaders of men in the entire history of exploration. A native New Zealander, Frank A. Worsley served as a reserve officer in the Royal Navy before becoming captain of the Endurance. He commanded two ships in World War I, for which he was decorated, sailed with Shackleton again in 1921, and in 1925 was the joint leader of the British Arctic Exploration. He died in 1943.
  • Man Of The Family

    Ralph Moody

    Hardcover (W. W. Norton, Jan. 1, 1962)
    None
  • In Short: A Collection of Brief Creative Nonfiction

    Judith Kitchen, Mary Paumier Jones

    Hardcover (W W Norton & Co Inc, July 1, 1996)
    A collection of brief essays offers reflections on hummingbirds, ice cream, a cemetery, nostalgia, and sighing
    Z
  • Endurance; an Epic of Polar Adventure

    F. A. Worsley, Illus. with photos

    Hardcover (W.W. Norton, March 15, 1999)
    None
  • The Ambassadors

    Henry James

    Hardcover (W. W. Norton, Jan. 1, 1963)
    Heritage Press edition bound in red cloth with gold lettering, color ills. by Leslie Saalburg. A Fine copy in near fine slipcase. Club Prospectus, the Sandglass, laid-in loose.
  • Helter Skelter Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company

    Vincent Bugliosi

    Unknown Binding (WW Norton & Co, Jan. 8, 2002)
    None
  • Helicopter pilot

    W. E Butterworth

    Hardcover (Norton, March 15, 1967)
    None
  • The Brothers Karamazov: The Constance Garnett translation revised by Ralph E. Matlaw : backgrounds and sources, essays in criticism

    Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Ralph E. Matlaw, Constance Garnett

    Hardcover (W. W. Norton & Co., March 15, 1976)
    The Brothers Karamazov is the final novel by the Russian author Fyodor Dostoyevsky. Dostoyevsky spent nearly two years writing The Brothers Karamazov, which was published as a serial in The Russian Messenger and completed in November 1880. Dostoyevsky intended it to be the first part in an epic story titled The Life of a Great Sinner, but he died less than four months after its publication. The Brothers Karamazov is a passionate philosophical novel that enters deeply into the ethical debates of God, free will, and morality. It is a spiritual drama of moral struggles concerning faith, doubt, and reason, set against a modernizing Russia. Dostoyevsky composed much of the novel in Staraya Russa, which is also the main setting of the novel. Since its publication, it has been acclaimed all over the world by thinkers as diverse as Sigmund Freud, Albert Einstein, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Martin Heidegger, Cormac McCarthy, Kurt Vonnegut and Pope Benedict XVI as one of the supreme achievements in literature.