Browse all books

Books published by publisher Ayer Co Pub

  • My Memoir

    Edith B. Wilson

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1980)
    None
  • The Boyhood Days of Guy Fawkes: Or, the Conspirators of Old London

    R. Reginald, Douglas Menville

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, )
    None
  • Marie Antoinette

    Hilaire Belloc

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1972)
    Book by Belloc, Hilaire
  • Book of Daniel Drew

    Bouck White

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1910)
    None
  • The Blacker the Berry

    Wallace Thurman

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1969)
    None
  • Child-Rhymes

    James Whitcomb Riley

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1970)
    Riley, James Whitcomb
  • Miracle at Kitty Hawk; The Letters of Wilbur and Orville Wright

    Fred Kelly

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1971)
    None
  • Blue Poetry Book

    Andrew Lang

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1981)
    Book by Lang, Andrew
  • Folks from Dixie

    Paul Laurence Dunbar, Paul L. Dunbar

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 15, 1972)
    None
  • In the Shadow of Liberty

    Edward Corsi

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1969)
    The human side of the Immigration Service on Ellis Island is revealed in the personal observations of a former interpreter at the center
  • Songs of the Free and Hymns of Christian Freedom

    Maria Weston Chapman

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1971)
    None
  • Infants of the Spring

    Wallace Thurman

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1932)
    Modern Library Harlem Renaissance It's 1920s Harlem, and man, the joint is jumpin'. Folks are coming and going and everything's copacetic as long as the gin keeps flowing. This is the scene Stephen Jorgenson dives into when he arrives from Canada for the first time. He is taken to "The Niggerati Manor," an apartment building in Harlem inhabited by aspiring artists whose true talents lie in living, and where everything's black and white--with a lot of grayness in between. Counterbalancing Stephen's embrace of these folks is Raymond Taylor, a writer who is the only truly talented artist in the manor. Raymond's cynical take on the "new Negro artist" is the tightrope he walks between the love and hatred of himself and his people. Characters representing Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, and Alain Locke all appear, and part of the fun of this book is figuring out who's who.