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Books published by publisher Heritage Music Press

  • Larry the Lobster - Everyday Songs from Everywhere

    Lisa Ann Parker

    Paperback (Heritage Music Press, April 22, 1993)
    Twenty-four songs for all occasions, from N-S-E-W, near and far, past and present. The songs include story dramatizations, jazz-jive-blues, recorder descants and improvisation, musical games, program openers, seasonal features, rounds, and speech ostinatos. In other words, an year-long source book. Songs feature a wider variety of moods than most elementary song collectionspensive to silly.
  • With a Twist: Humorous Songs and Games for All Ages with Easy Orchestrations and Options

    Konnie Saliba

    Paperback (Heritage Music Press, Oct. 10, 1998)
    Nineteen humorous songs and games for all grades! Options are provided for young and intermediate students. The book is an exciting compilation of traditional and newly composed songs with accessible arrangements. Guitar chords are also provided.
  • An American Tragedy . . . with an introduction by Harry Hansen and with illustrations by Reginald Marsh.

    Theodore Dreiser, Reginald Marsh

    Hardcover (Heritage Press, March 15, 1954)
    An issuance of The Heritage Club by The Heritage Press. Theodore Albert Dreiser (1871-1945) was an American novelist and journalist best known for his pioneer work in the naturalist school. Dreiser's first commercial success was An American Tragedy (1925), which was made into a film in 1931 and again in 1951 (as A Place in the Sun). An opera was also commissioned by the Metropolitan Opera in 2005. But An American Tragedy is more than simply a powerful murder story. Dreiser pours his own dark yearnings into his character, as he details the young man's course through his ambitions of wealth, power, and satisfaction. This slip cased edition was illustrated by Reginald Marsh (1989-1954), an American painter, born in Paris, most notable for his depictions of life in New York City in the 1920s and 1930s. Crowded Coney Island beach scenes, popular entertainments such as vaudeville and burlesque, women, and jobless men on the Bowery are subjects that reappear throughout his work. He studied art under Kenneth Hayes Miller, Guy Pene du Bois, George Luks, and William Sergeant Kendall. He studied fresco under Olle Nordmark and he studied sculpture under Mahonri Young. Reginald Marsh rejected modern art, which he found sterile. Marsh's style can best be described as social realism. His figures are generally treated as types. "What interested Marsh was not the individuals in a crowd, but the crowd itself ... In their density and picturesqueness, they recall the crowds in the movies of Preston Sturges or Frank Capra". Marsh's main attractions were the burlesque stage, the hobos on the Bowery, crowds on city streets and at Coney Island, and women. His deep devotion to the old masters led to his creating works of art in a style that reflects certain artistic traditions, and his work often contained religious metaphors. "It was upon the Baroque masters that Marsh based his own human comedy", inspired by the past but residing in the present.
  • Glow Ree Bee: Traditional Black Spirituals

    Shirley McRae

    Paperback (Heritage Music Press, Sept. 1, 1982)
    Nine traditional black spirituals with Orff accompaniments
  • Erewhon

    Samuel Butler

    Hardcover (The Heritage Press, March 15, 1934)
    Setting out to make his fortune in a far-off country, a young traveller discovers the remote and beautiful land of Erewhon and is given a home among its extraordinarily handsome citizens. But their visitor soon discovers that this seemingly ideal community has its faults-here crime is treated indulgently as a malady to be cured, while illness, poverty and misfortune are cruelly punished, and all machines have been superstitiously destroyed after a bizarre prophecy. Can he survive in a world where morality is turned upside down? Inspired by Samuel Butler's years in colonial New Zealand and by his reading of Darwin's Origin of Species, Erewhon is a highly original, irreverent and humorous satire on conventional virtues, religious hypocrisy and the unthinking acceptance of beliefs.
  • The French Revolution: A History

    Thomas Carlyle, Bernard LaMotte

    Hardcover (Heritage Press, Jan. 1, 1956)
    Special Contents Heritage Press Edition, 1956, first printing, a like-new, unread, unworn, unopened, unmarked, slightly oversized hardcover with its like-new red slip case and almost like-new Sandglass Number III: 21. 629 pages, approx. 7 1/4" X 10 3/4" X 1 1/2".
  • The Eclogues

    Virgil, C. S. Calverley, Vertes, Moses Hadas

    Hardcover (Heritage Press, Jan. 1, 1960)
    We sell Rare, out-of-print, uncommon, & used BOOKS, PRINTS, MAPS, DOCUMENTS, AND EPHEMERA. We do not sell ebooks, print on demand, or other reproduced materials. Each item you see here is individually described and imaged. We welcome further inquiries.
  • Bleak House Illustrated by Robert Ball

    Robert Ball

    Hardcover (The Heritage Press, March 15, 1942)
    Bleak House, a novel by Charles Dickens, was first published as a serial between March 1852 and September 1853, and is considered to be one of Dickens' finest novels, containing vast, complex and engaging arrays of characters and sub-plots
  • The Oregon Trail

    Francis Parkman, Mason Wade, Maynard Dixon

    Hardcover (Heritage Press, March 15, 1943)
    Published by International Collectors Library, American Headquartes, Garden City, NY.
  • The Way of All Flesh introduction by Theodore Dreiser

    Samual Butler.

    Hardcover (Heritage Press, Aug. 16, 1936)
    None
  • William Tell

    Friedrich Schiller

    Hardcover (Heritage Press, Jan. 1, 1952)
    Near Fine. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Heritage Press edition bound in tan decoarted cloth. Nice clean copy, lacking the slipcase
  • The Virginian: A Horseman of the Plains

    Owen Wister

    Hardcover (Heritage Press, March 15, 1951)
    Literature