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Books published by publisher Macmillan and Co, Ltd.

  • Alice's Adventures In Wonderland

    Lewis; John Tenniel (illustrator) Carroll

    Hardcover (MacMillan and Co., July 5, 1874)
    Shipped from UK, please allow 10 to 21 business days for arrival. Forty-second thousand. With Forty-Two Illustrations by John Tenniel including tissue guarded frontispiece. 192pp + publisher's advertisements. Light foxing to initial leaves and tissue guard + between pages 61 and 73, few grubby marks throughout. Discreet ink inscription to front free endpaper, with neat pencil inscription to verso. Small bookshop sticker to front endpaper. Cracked to hinge in several places, with last few pages almost loose but still holding. Binding shaken. Beautifully bound in bright gilt ruled, lettered and illustrated burgundy cloth, featuring triple gilt framed vignette of Alice and the pig to upper board and Cheshire Cat to lower, gently rubbed to edges and corners and a little grubby, spine scuffed and rubbed but gold gilt still shining through. All edges gilt. The red coloured cloth was chosen by Alice Liddell, for and to whom the Alice story was first composed and told to allay boredom during a summer boating trip down the stretch of Thames which runs through Oxford.
  • The Greengage Summer

    Rumer Godden

    Paperback (Macmillan Pub Ltd, Dec. 1, 1995)
    On and off, all that hot French August, we made ourselves ill from eating the greengages... The faded elegance of Les Oeillets, with its bullet-scarred staircase and serene garden bounded by high walls; Eliot, the charming Englishman who became the children's guardian while their mother lay ill in hospital; sophisticated Mademoiselle Zizi, hotel patronne, and Eliot's devoted lover; 16 year old Joss, the oldest Grey girl, suddenly, achingly beautiful. And the Marne river flowing silent and slow beyond them all... They would merge together in a gold-green summer of discovery, until the fruit rotted on the trees and cold seeped into their bones... The Greengage Summer is Rumer Godden's tense, evocative portrait of love and deceit in the Champagne country of the Marne-which became a memorable film starring Kenneth More and Susannah York. In the preface, Rumer Godden explains how it came to be written.
  • Between Parent and Child

    Dr. Haim G. Ginott

    Hardcover (Macmillan & Co Ltd, March 15, 1961)
    Over the past thirty-five years, Between Parent and Child has helped millions of parents around the world strengthen their relationships with their children. Written by renowned psychologist Dr. Haim Ginott, this revolutionary book offered a straightforward prescription for empathetic yet disciplined child rearing and introduced new communication techniques that would change the way parents spoke with, and listened to, their children. Dr. Ginott's innovative approach to parenting has influenced an entire generation of experts in the field, and now his methods can work for you, too.
  • For Whom the Bell Tolls

    Ernest Hemingway

    Mass Market Paperback (MacMillan & Co Ltd, March 28, 1987)
    For Whom the Bell Tolls
  • The Church Mice at Bay

    Graham Oakley

    Paperback (Macmillan Pub Ltd, Oct. 1, 1995)
    This is a picture book for young children and is one of a series about the church mice.
  • All the Silver Pennies Combining Silver Pennies and More Silver Pennies

    decorations by Ursula Arndt Thompson Blance Jennings (editor), Ursula Arndt

    Hardcover (MacMillan Co., March 15, 1967)
    A wide range of poetry by various authors, for all ages. 9.5x6.5", xvi+224 pp, b&w drawings by Ursula Arndt.
  • Puck of Pook's Hill

    Rudyard Kipling

    Hardcover (Macmillan and Co Ltd, Aug. 16, 1911)
    Puck of Pook's Hill:
  • The Art of the Southwest Indians

    Shirley Glubok

    Hardcover (Macmillan and Co., March 15, 1971)
    pp.48. Signed and inscribed by the author on verso of FEP
  • Elephant Walk: A Novel

    Robert Standish

    Hardcover (Macmillan Co, Jan. 1, 1949)
    Rare overview of colonial life with passionate love story. Made into a movie with Elizabeth Taylor and Dana Andrews. A major factor was the tea plantation manor was built in the Elephants migration path.
  • Camerons on the Hills

    Jane Duncan, Victor Ambruz

    Hardcover (Macmillan & Co. Ltd., March 15, 1964)
    None
  • The Magician's Nephew

    C. S. Lewis, Pauline Baynes

    Hardcover (Macmillan Co., March 15, 1955)
    Hardcover. Missing Jacket. First Edition 1955. Macmillan Publishing CO., Inc. Illustrated by Pauline Bynes. 167 pages. Pages clean, lightly toned in flaps.Minor bumped on corners, a prayer sticker in flap Otherwise Book is tight and square. Very good clean copy inside. (Please see the pictures) M-36
    T
  • The Sacred Tree: the tree in religion and myth

    J. H. Philpot

    (London MACMILLAN AND CO, Nov. 5, 2014)
    The reader is requested to bear in mind that this volume lays no claim to scholarship, independent research, or originality of view. Its aim has been to select and collate, from sources not always easily accessible to the general reader, certain facts and conclusions bearing upon a subject of acknowledged interest. In so dealing with one of the many modes of primitive religion, it is perhaps inevitable that the writer should seem to exaggerate its importance, and in isolating a given series of data to undervalue the significance of the parallel facts from which they are severed. It is undeniable that the worship of the spirit-inhabited tree has usually, if not always, been linked with, and in many cases overshadowed by other cults; that sun, moon, and stars, sacred springs and stones, holy mountains, and animals of the most diverse kind, have all been approached with singular impartiality by primitive man, as enshrining or symbolising a divine principle. But no other form of pagan ritual has been so widely distributed, has left behind it such persistent traces, or appeals so closely to modern sympathies as the worship of the tree; of none is the study better calculated to throw light on the dark ways of primitive thought, or to arouse general interest in a branch of research which is as vigorous and fruitful as it is new. For these reasons, in spite of obvious disadvantages, its separate treatment has seemed to the writer to be completely justifiable.