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Books published by publisher Ayer Co Pub

  • Saints and Heroes to the End of the Middle Ages

    George Hodges

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1967)
    None
  • The Ropemakers of Plymouth: A History of the Plymouth Cordage Company, 1824-1949

    Samuel Morison

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1976)
    None
  • How to Live on 24 Hours a Day

    Arnold Bennett

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1976)
    I have received a large amount of correspondence concerning this small work, and many reviews of it—some of them nearly as long as the book itself—have been printed. But scarcely any of the comment has been adverse. Some people have objected to a frivolity of tone; but as the tone is not, in my opinion, at all frivolous, this objection did not impress me; and had no weightier reproach been put forward I might almost have been persuaded that the volume was flawless! A more serious stricture has, however, been offered—not in the press, but by sundry obviously sincere correspondents—and I must deal with it. A reference to page 43 will show that I anticipated and feared this disapprobation. The sentence against which protests have been made is as follows:—"In the majority of instances he [the typical man] does not precisely feel a passion for his business; at best he does not dislike it. He begins his business functions with some reluctance, as late as he can, and he ends them with joy, as early as he can. And his engines, while he is engaged in his business, are seldom at their full 'h.p.'" I am assured, in accents of unmistakable sincerity, that there are many business men—not merely those in high positions or with fine prospects, but modest subordinates with no hope of ever being much better off—who do enjoy their business functions, who do not shirk them, who do not arrive at the office as late as possible and depart as early as possible, who, in a word, put the whole of their force into their day's work and are genuinely fatigued at the end thereof. I am ready to believe it. I do believe it. I know it. I always knew it. Both in London and in the provinces it has been my lot to spend long years in subordinate situations of business; and the fact did not escape me that a certain proportion of my peers showed what amounted to an honest passion for their duties, and that while engaged in those duties they were really living to the fullest extent of which they were capable. But I remain convinced that these fortunate and happy individuals (happier perhaps than they guessed) did not and do not constitute a majority, or anything like a majority. I remain convinced that the majority of decent average conscientious men of business (men with aspirations and ideals) do not as a rule go home of a night genuinely tired. I remain convinced that they put not as much but as little of themselves as they conscientiously can into the earning of a livelihood, and that their vocation bores rather than interests them. Nevertheless, I admit that the minority is of sufficient importance to merit attention, and that I ought not to have ignored it so completely as I did do. The whole difficulty of the hard-working minority was put in a single colloquial sentence by one of my correspondents. He wrote: "I am just as keen as anyone on doing something to 'exceed my programme,' but allow me to tell you that when I get home at six thirty p.m. I am not anything like so fresh as you seem to imagine."
  • Jefferson at Monticello: The Private Life of Thomas Jefferson

    Hamilton W. Pierson

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1971)
    None
  • The Necromancers

    Robert Hugh Benson

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1976)
    None
  • A Thread of Gold: An Anthology of Poetry

    Eleanor Graham, Margery Gill

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1969)
    A collection of 108 poems by English poets on various aspects of Christian life.
  • Narrative of Sojourner Truth

    Olive Gilbert

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, May 1, 1976)
    A symbol of the strength of African-American women, and a champion of the rights of all women, Sojourner Truth was an illiterate former slave named Isabella who became a vastly powerful orator. Dictated to a neighbor and first published in 1850, Truth's celebrated story chronicles her life as a slave in New York State, her 1827 emancipation under state law, her religious experiences and her transformation into an extraordinary abolitionist, feminist, and impassioned speaker. Truth's magnetism brought her fame in her own time, and her narrative gives us a vivid picture of nineteenth-century life in the North, where blacks, enslaved or free, lived in relative isolation from one another.
  • Making His Way: Frank Courney's Struggle Upward

    Horatio Alger

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1975)
    Young Frank Courtney's perseverance, ambition, and high moral character ultimately enable him to triumph.
  • Flute and Violin, and Other Kentucky Tales and Romances

    James Lane Allen

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1977)
    James Lane Allen (December 21, 1849 - February 18, 1925) was an American novelist and short story writer whose work often depicted the culture and dialects of his native Kentucky. His work is characteristic of the late-19th century local color era, when writers sought to capture the vernacular in their fiction. Allen has been described as "Kentucky's first important novelist". "Flute and Violin" was first published in 1891 and is a compilation of six previously published stories: Flute and Violin, King Solomon of Kentucky, Two Gentlemen of Kentucky, The White Cowl, Sister Dolorosa, and Posthumous Fame. (Wikipedia)
  • The Dynamiter

    Robert Louis Stevenson, Fanny Van de Grift Stevenson

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1998)
    None
  • The Sin of Monsieur Pettipon and Other Humorous Tales

    Richard Edward Connell

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1922)
    None
  • Gigolo

    Edna Ferber

    Hardcover (Ayer Co Pub, June 1, 1922)
    None