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Books published by publisher American Heritage Press

  • Argonautica; or, The quest of Jason for the golden fleece,

    Rhodius Apollonius, Edward P. Coleridge, Moses Hadas, A. Tassos

    Hardcover (Heritage Press, March 15, 1960)
    Oversized hardback; 1960 Heritage edition in very good condition; minor foxxing to inside boards and first four pages; illustrations by A.Tassos; slip case has fading and has wear to top edging; ships bubble wrapped from Upstate NY
  • Alexander and the magic mouse

    Martha Sanders, Philippe Fix

    Hardcover (American Heritage Press, Jan. 1, 1969)
    The Old Lady, her Magical Mouse, a Brindle London Squatting Cat, a Yak, and Alexander, the smiling alligator, lived together on a hill without any friends until the thirty-day rain endangered the town below them.
  • Ancient Rome

    Robert Payne

    Hardcover (American Heritage Pr, )
    A spelendid panorama of the Roman world, its history, culture and people. In its sheer scope, the Roman epoch is unsurpassed in history. What has endured to our own time is its great legacy to Western civilization, in law, language, architecture and the art of government, and of course the fascination of its story. Ancient Rome presents the history and heritage of that remarkable era. In this richly illustrated volume, the reader can enjoy an all-round introduction to the politics, people, culture and everyday life of the world ruled by Rome. Unlike most general histories of the subject, it enables the reader to know the Romans not only from reading about them, but by hearing directly from them in their own words, through the works of orators, philosophers, historians, poets, playwrights and satirists.
  • Extraordinary Lives: The Art and Craft of American Biography

    William Zinsser, Jean Strouse, William Knowlton Zinsser

    Hardcover (American Heritage Press, May 15, 1986)
    Six illustrious biographers describe their work, using as examples their mostrecent book or the one they're currently writing.
  • Trappers and mountain men,

    Evan Jones

    Hardcover (American Heritage Pub. Co, March 15, 1961)
    Nearly a thousand years ago, Norsemen sailed their dragon ships across the stormy Atlantic to open the first trade with the copper-skinned natives of a new world. The wealth brought home was fur. Yet the history of North America must have been very different except for one of those odd turns fashion sometimes takes. The introduction of the beaver hat into Europe in the mid-fifteenth century brought about a sartorial revolution comparable in scope to the changes in dress that occurred in nineteeenth-century England, when Beau Brummell's example led men of the Western world to give up their peacock finery and dress in subdued blacks, browns, blues, and grays. A good beaver hat over a period of almost four hundred years was a symbol of status, a social necessity. A swift-paced narrative written for young readers here touches upon some of the high lights of the centuries-long history of the North American fur trade, while also mirroring something of a unique and unforgettable way of life, together with its heroes, a tough, colorful, sometimes cruel, always superbly skilled breed of men called by the French coureurs de bois, by the English woods runners, by Russians promyshlenniki, and by the Americans trappers, released men, and mountain men. It is to be hoped that those who read this book, young and old, will go onto read the original narratives bequeathed to us by many of the participants in this splendidly-colored history. For their stories, today as in past generations, challenge the imaginations of all who are interested in men and in the world they create.
  • The Book of Giant Stories

    David L

    Hardcover (American Heritage Press, Aug. 16, 1972)
    Hardcover Publisher: American Heritage Press; book club edition (1972)
  • The alphabet boat;: A seagoing alphabet book

    George Mendoza

    Hardcover (American Heritage Press, March 15, 1972)
    An alphabet book illustrates the needs of a boat from anchor to zephyr.
  • Look! I can cook

    Angela Burdick

    Hardcover (American Heritage Press, March 15, 1972)
    More than fifty international recipes, such as moussaka, orange mousse, and soda bread, are explained in text and pictures.
  • Waggy and His Friends

    Patricia M Scarry, Cyndy Szekeres

    Hardcover (American Heritage Press, )
    None
  • Lots and lots of bedtime stories,

    Virginia Parsons

    Hardcover (American Heritage Press, )
    None
  • HUCKLEBERRY FINN – ILLUSTRATED By NORMAN ROCKWELL 1940

    Mark Twain, Norman Rockwell

    Hardcover (Heritage Press, March 15, 1940)
    a great classic in great shape
  • The French and Indian Wars,

    Russell, Francis,

    Hardcover (American Heritage, Jan. 15, 1962)
    In the colonization of North America, Great Britain, France, Spain, the Netherlands, and Sweden each sought a share. By the eighteenth century, only Great Britain and France remained as rivals for the heart of the continent. Three times, beginning in 1690, warfare arose between New France and New England. Settlements were destroyed, and armies clashed, yet nothing was settled. Each country regarded the Ohio Valley as its own. A small skirmish in 1754 touched off a war that spread to Europe, then to Africa, Asia, and even to islands in the Atlantic and Pacific. The fate of North America hung in the balance. This conflict, the Great War for the Empire, may well be called the first of the world wars. Here, award-winning historian Francis Russell brings to life the vast panorama that formed the background for this struggle in which the English redcoats fought side by side with American colonists against French soldiers and their Indian allies.