Browse all books

Books published by publisher Ginn and Co., MA

  • Smiling Hill Farm

    Miriam Evangeline Mason

    Hardcover (Ginn and Co, March 15, 1937)
    The Wayne family helps settle Indiana in 1817 after leaving Virginia. The family names their farm Smiling Hill Farm and the story follows the family and farm until 1937.
  • Finding New Neighbors

    David Harris Russell, Gretchen Wulfing, Odille Ousley

    Hardcover (Ginn and Co, March 15, 1964)
    Children reader
  • BLAST OFF

    Linda C. Cain and Susan Rosenbaum, Leo and Diane Dillon

    Paperback (Ginn and Co, March 15, 1985)
    None
  • Finding New Neighbors

    David H. Russell, Gretchen Wulfing, Odille Ousley, Ray Quigley, Charlotte Ware

    Hardcover (Ginn and Co, March 15, 1948)
    GINN BASIC READER BOOK! collectible!
  • Trail blazers of American history

    Miriam Evangeline Mason

    Hardcover (Ginn and Co, Jan. 1, 1961)
    None
  • Summer fun,

    J. Mace Andress

    Hardcover (Ginn and Co, March 15, 1932)
    Ginn and Co (1932) Language: English ASIN: B00085RDZC
  • Science Plans for Tomorrow

    John Craig, Gerald S. And Urban

    Hardcover (Ginn and Co., March 15, 1951)
    None
  • This Is Our Valley

    Sister M. Marguerite and Miriam Mason

    Hardcover (Ginn and Co., March 15, 1949)
    None
  • Bo, the cave boy,

    Wilbur W Fiske

    Unknown Binding (Ginn and Co, March 15, 1941)
    None
  • Indians of the Oaks

    Melicent Humason Lee

    Hardcover (Ginn and Co, March 15, 1937)
    In the first of these two tales a young white boy relates his experiences living with the Kumeyaay, also known as Diegueäno, Indians of Southern California and in the second a young girl from the same tribe learns a new kind of medicine when she falls ill and is cared for by a white doctor.
  • Gods and Heroes - or The Kingdom of Jupiter

    Francillon. R.E.

    (Ginn and Co, Boston, MA, Jan. 1, 1915)
    R.E. Francillon’s Gods and Heroes, or the Kingdom of Jupiter looks at some of the oldest and most enduring mythological tales crafted by modern society’s distant ancestors. From the preface: “It will be seen that the Mythology adopted throughout is strictly of the old-fashioned kind which goes to Ovid as its leading authority, and ignores the difference between the gods of Greece and the gods of Rome. I have deliberately followed this plan because, while there is not the remotest fear—quite the contrary—that young people, when or if they become scholars, will not be duly initiated into the mysteries of scientific and comparative mythology, there is considerable danger that the stories of the gods and heroes which have saturated literature, and have become essential portions of the thought and life of ages, may become explained away only too thoroughly. It is easy for my readers to acquire the science of the subject hereafter; but where mythology is concerned, the poetry must come before the prose, and it will be a distinct loss for them if, under scientific teaching, they have never been familiar with the ancient stories as they were read by [vi] the makers of literature in the præ-critical times. Without the mythology of the Latin poets, modern literature in all languages becomes almost a dead letter: hundreds of allusions become pointless, and thousands of substances fade into shadows. Of the three mythologies, the Greek, the Roman, and the Poetic or Conventional, I have selected the last.”
  • Finding New Neighbors Ginn Basic Readers

    David H. RUSSELL

    Hardcover (GINN AND CO, March 15, 1948)
    Publisher: GINN AND CO; First Edition edition (1948) Has multiple stories and great first reader to expand a child's comprehension of words.