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Books in THORNDIKE PRESS LARGE PRINT PERENNIAL BESTSELLERS SERIES series

  • The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter

    Carson McCullers

    Hardcover (G K Hall & Co, Oct. 1, 1999)
    A quiet, sensitive girl searches for beauty in a small, but damned Southern town
  • Ironweed

    William Kennedy

    Hardcover (G K Hall & Co, Dec. 1, 1996)
    In 1938, Francis Phelan, a murderer, is reduced to flop houses and hobo jungles and returns to a depressed Albany, where--as a gravedigger--he shuffles his ragtag way to survival
  • Billy Budd, Sailor

    Herman Melville

    Hardcover (G K Hall & Co, Sept. 1, 1997)
    General FictionLarge Print EditionIf Melville had never written Moby Dick, his place in literature would have been assured by his short fiction. Billy Budd, Sailor is his last work and his masterpiece a brilliant study of the tragic clash between social authority and individual freedom, human justice and abstract good. In Bartleby the Scivener, a Wall Street law clerk takes passive resistance to a comic and tragic extreme. Completing the beautiful collection are: Benito Cerino, The Encantatas, The Plaza, and finally, Melvilles chilling science fiction parable, The Bell Tower.
  • Travels With Charley: In Search of America

    John Steinbeck

    Hardcover (G K Hall & Co, Jan. 1, 2000)
    To hear the speech of the real America, to smell the grass and the tress, to see the colors and the light—these were John Steinbeck's goals as he set out, at the age of fifty-eight, to rediscover the country he had been writing about for so many years. With Charley, his French poodle, Steinbeck drives the interstates and the country roads, dines with truckers, encounters bears at Yellowstone and old friends in San Francisco. And he reflects on the American character, racial hostility, on a particular form of American loneliness he finds almost everywhere, and on the unexpected kindness of strangers that is also a very real part of our national identity.
  • Dust Tracks on a Road: The Restored Text Established by the Library of America

    Zora Neale Hurston

    Hardcover (G K Hall & Co, Dec. 1, 1997)
    Critically acclaimed novelist, folklorist, and anthropologist Zora Neale Hurston recalls her childhood and successful career
  • The Chosen

    Chaim Potok

    Hardcover (G K Hall & Co, June 1, 1998)
    A baseball injury precipitates a friendship between two boys from Hasidic and Zionist families
  • The Outermost House: A Year of Life on the Great Beach of Cape Cod

    Henry Beston

    Hardcover (G K Hall & Co, June 1, 1998)
    The author records his observations of nature during the twelve months he spent in a Cape Cod beach house
  • The Moon Is Down

    John Steinbeck

    Hardcover (G K Hall & Co, April 1, 2000)
    Today, nearly forty years after his death, Nobel Prize winner John Steinbeck remains one of America?s greatest writers and cultural figures. We have begun publishing his many works for the first time as blackspine Penguin Classics featuring eye-catching, newly commissioned art. This season we continue with the seven spectacular and influential books East of Eden, Cannery Row, In Dubious Battle, The Long Valley, The Moon Is Down, The Pastures of Heaven, and Tortilla Flat. Penguin Classics is proud to present these seminal works to a new generation of readers?and to the many who revisit them again and again."
  • Cannery Row

    John Steinbeck

    Hardcover (G K Hall & Co, Aug. 1, 2001)
    Unburdened by the material necessities of the more fortunate, the denizens of Cannery Row discover rewards unknown in more traditional society. Henry the painter sorts through junk lots for pieces of wood to incorporate into the boat he is building, while the girls from Dora Flood’s bordello venture out now and then to enjoy a bit of sunshine. Lee Chong stocks his grocery with almost anything a man could want, and Doc, a young marine biologist who ministers to sick puppies and unhappy souls, unexpectedly finds true love. Cannery Row is just a few blocks long, but the story it harbors is suffused with warmth, understanding, and a great fund of human values. First published in 1945, Cannery Row focuses on the acceptance of life as it is—both the exuberance of community and the loneliness of the individual. John Steinbeck draws on his memories of the real inhabitants of Monterey, California, and interweaves their stories in this world where only the fittest survive—creating what is at once one of his most humorous and poignant works. In Cannery Row, John Steinbeck returns to the setting of Tortilla Flat to create another evocative portrait of life as it is lived by those who unabashedly put the highest value on the intangibles—human warmth, camaraderie, and love.
  • Cat's Cradle

    Kurt Vonnegut

    Hardcover (G K Hall & Co, Dec. 1, 2000)
    Hardcover book.
    Z+
  • The Thin Man

    Dashiell Hammett

    Hardcover (G K Hall & Co, May 1, 2001)
    The Thin Man introduces Nick and Nora Charles, New Yorks coolest crime-solving couple. Nick retired from detecting after his wife inherited a tidy sum, but six years later a pretty blonde spies him at a speakeasy and asks for his help finding her father, an eccentric inventor who was once Nicks client. Nick can no more resist the case than a morning cocktail or a good fight, and soon he and Nora are caught in a complicated web of confused identities and cold-blooded murder.