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Books published by publisher Harcourt, Brace and Company

  • Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats

    T. S. Eliot, Edward Gorey

    Paperback (Harcourt Brace & Co., Aug. 30, 1982)
    Eliot’s famous collection of nonsense verse about cats-the inspiration for the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical Cats. This edition features pen-and-ink drolleries by Edward Gorey throughout.
    U
  • The Sleeping Beauty

    The Brothers Grimm, Felix Hoffmann

    Hardcover (Harcourt, Brace and Company, Aug. 16, 1960)
    None
  • Nineteen Eighty-Four

    George Orwell

    Hardcover (Harcourt, Brace and Company, Jan. 1, 1949)
    Newspeak, Doublethink, Big Brother, and the Thought Police - the language of 1984 has passed into the English Language as a symbol of the horrors of totalitarianism. George Orwell's story of Winston Smith's fight against the all-pervading party has become a classic, not the least because of its intellectual coherence.
    Z+
  • Till We Have Faces

    C. S. Lewis

    Hardcover (Harcourt, Brace and Company, March 15, 1956)
    None
    W
  • Last Flight

    Amelia Earhart, George Palmer Putnam

    Hardcover (Harcourt, Brace and Company, March 15, 1937)
    Informal, gay, filled with the spirit of high adventure, this is Amelia Earhart's own story of her great flight, nearly around the world, which ended in tragic disappearance somewhere in mid-Pacific.
  • The white deer

    James Thurber

    Hardcover (Harcourt, Brace and Company, March 15, 1945)
    hardcover with dust jacket
  • The Pictish Child

    Jane Yolen

    Paperback (Harcourt Brace and Company, April 1, 2002)
    None
  • The Human Comedy

    William Saroyan, Don M. Freeman

    Hardcover (Harcourt, Brace and Company, Feb. 1, 1943)
    The Human Comedy, Saroyan's first novel, is the story of an American family in wartime, and in particular of Homer Macauley, the fastest messenger in San Joaquin valley. With all the qualities of warmth, cheer, and humanity which have endeared Saroyan to his reading public, The Human Comedy abounds in unforgettable scenes. Homer running the Two-Twenty hurdles; little Ulysses imprisoned in a bear trap in Covington's store; old-time telegraph operator Willie Grogan, with a bottle in the desk drawer to fuzz the sharp reality of the everflowing messages of love and hope and pain and death; Spangler, with a love for the whole world and every living thing; Homer's older brother Marcus singing, as the troop train in which he sits hurtles away from home. Saroyan has done many things, but he has here done something which even his oldest friends scarcely dared to predict -- a wartime novel of the home front which succeeds in capturing, and which nowhere oversteps, the modesty of ordinary human beings. It is a very simple novel. It is a very great achievement. With jacket and many drawings by Don Freeman.
  • Brothers

    David McPhail

    Hardcover (Harcourt Brace and Company, Aug. 11, 2014)
    None
  • Murder in the Cathedral

    T.S. Eliot

    Hardcover (Harcourt, Brace and company, Jan. 1, 1935)
    New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1935. First U.S. Edition. Octavo, 86 pp. . Black cloth, gilt spine imprinting, jacket. Fine, sparkling book in a very good jacket showing edgewear and some age darkening, notably at spine. Gallup A29f. Eliot's play, the story of Thomas a Becket, in which a man of God stands as a spiritual beacon against the darkness of a despotic temporal power, was actually banned in Romania under the Ceausescu régime. Generally well regarded - for a play by a poet - it reflects Eliot's philosophical bent while respectfully dallying with dramatic forms of much earlier eras, and in so doing makes the choice of an overused historical vehicle more palatable. Handsome copy. L6
  • ABRAHAM LINCOLN: The Prairie Years by Carl Sandburg from 1926 2 volumes

    Carl Sandburg

    Hardcover (Harcourt, Brace & Company, March 15, 1926)
    Abraham Lincolns prairie years in two volumes.
    W
  • Kon-Tiki and I;

    Erik Hesselberg

    Hardcover (Harcourt Brace & Company, March 15, 1994)
    The author relates the voyage of the Kon-Tiki expedition across 4300 miles of ocean in a raft as he experienced and sketched it.