Best of
Historical

1973

Moonraker's Bride


Madeleine Brent - 1973
    The way she tackles this task leads to her being thrown into the grim prison of Chengfu, where she meets Nicholas Sabine - a man about to die.He asks her a cryptic riddle, the mystery of which echoes through all that befalls her in the months that follow...She is brought to England and tries to make a new life with the Gresham family, but she is constantly in disgrace and is soon involved in the bitter feud between the Greshams and a neighbouring family.There is danger, romance and heartache for Lucy as strange events build to a point where she begins to doubt her own senses.How could she see a man, long dead, walking in the misty darkness of the valley? And who carried her, unconscious, into the labyrinth of Chiselhurst Caves and left her to die?It is not until she returns to China that Lucy finds, amid high adventure, the answer to all that has baffled her.

The Cheerleader


Ruth Doan MacDougall - 1973
    p/pThe reprint of this classic coming-of-age novel features a foreword by English professor Ann V. Norton, who writes, "As Snowy grows in mind and heart, she realizes she must develop her own self. That this realization happens in a small town in the 1950s to a cheerleader, symbol of a girl's simultaneous success and subordination, makes it all the more powerful. The Cheerleader transcends its setting to portray a young person's timeless yearning for a full and satisfying life."Snowy, a sequel to The Cheerleader, has recently been rereleased by Frigate Books. Fans have designed a website devoted to Ruth Doan MacDougall's work.

Red Adam's Lady


Grace Ingram - 1973
    She is not wealthy. She prizes her virginity. And her liege, whom she despises, is intent on rape. Red Adam is the lord of Brentborough castle—young, impetuous, scandalous, a twelfth-century hell raiser. On one of his nights of drunken revelry he abducts Julitta. Though she fends him off, keeping her virginity, he has sullied her honor. Then, to the astonishment of all, he marries her. Red Adam’s Lady is a boisterous, bawdy tale of wild adventure, set against the constant dangers of medieval England. It is a story of civil war and border raids, scheming aristorcrats and brawling villagers, daring escapes across the moors and thundering descents down steep cliffs to the ocean. Its vivid details give the reader a fascinating and realistic view of life in a medieval castle and village. And the love story in it is an unusual one, since Julitta won’t let Adam get closer than the length of her stiletto. Long out of print though highly acclaimed, Red Adam’s Lady is a true classic of historical fiction along the lines of Anya Seton’s Katherine and Sharon Kay Penman’s Here Be Dragons.

Beulah Land


Lonnie Coleman - 1973
    BEULAH LAND....where the old South as it really was is brought to intense life, in all its outward splendor and secret shame.

Uncle Valentine and Other Stories


Willa Cather - 1973
    For the most part ironic in tone, these stories are, as Bernice Slote observes, bound by the geometrics of urban life—streets and offices, workers and firms, the business world of New York and Pittsburgh, the cities which by 1929 Willa Cather had known well for over thirty years." In her introduction, Slote discusses their biographical elements, connections with earlier and later work, and the intricate patterns that lie below the lucid, shimmering surface of Willa Cather's prose.

The Bedside Book of Bastards


Dorothy M. Johnson - 1973
    As the authors say in their preface: "History records the names and misdeeds of some perfectly awful people. The list, alas, is all too long. We present some of the worst of them, some famous and some obscure."

Francis Marion: The Swamp Fox


Hugh F. Rankin - 1973
    

California: A Study of American Character : From the Conquest in 1846 to the Second Vigilance Committee in San Francisco (California Legacy Book)


Josiah Royce - 1973
    American West. History. Introduction by Ronald A. Wells. "This book is meant to help the reader toward an understanding of two things: namely, the modern American state of California, and our national character as displayed in that land"--Josiah Royce, 1886. California has recently been blessed with a number of careful and colorful works by authors who do not hesitate at-and perhaps even enjoy-shattering the state's historic icons in order to present an honest view of the state's formative events and their causes. Josiah Royce's CALIFORNIA, published in 1886, is the prototype for this approach. With keen attention to detail, Royce produced a passionate narrative-at times ironic, at times outraged, at times in awe of pioneer courage-that sought to ground our history in truth and to reveal the moral consequences of the American conquest of Mexican California.

Pictorial History of Black Americans


Langston Hughes - 1973
    The first edition appeared in 1956, on the eve of the civil rights revolution. A highly original attempt to portray a crucial but long-neglected part of the American past, it soon became a standard work on black history. Its rich variety of more than 1,300 illustrations — paintings, drawings, cartoons, prints, posters, broadsides, daguerreotypes, photographs, sheet music covers, title pages, and stills from television and films — brings home to readers young and old the look and feel of the dynamic past.This sixth edition captures the changes on the national scene that have influenced African American life during the Reagan-Bush years and the first stages of the Clinton administration. The new text and photographs illuminate social, economic, political, and cultural trends. The authors discuss government and politics, civil rights, arts and letters, sports, labor and employment, schools, the church, and the mass media, highlighting the role of black leaders who have come to the fore in recent years.Langston Hughes made innumerable contributions to American and world literature and culture. His poems, plays, novels, short stories, and librettos earned him many honors, beginning in the 1920s when he became a central figure in the Harlem Renaissance. By the time of his death in 1967, his work had deeply influenced writers not only at home, but in Africa, the Caribbean, and elsewhere. One of the most original of black poets, he became known as the poet laureate of his people.Milton Meltzer, historian and biographer, is theauthor of more than eighty books for adults and young people. His work includes Black Magic: A Pictorial History of the African American in the Performing Arts (with Langston Hughes); Slavery: A World History; Frederick Douglass: In His Own Words; The Black Americans: In Their Own Words; and biographies of Langston Hughes and Mary McLeod Bethune. Among the many honors for his books are five nominations for the National Book Award.

Ike: Abilene to Berlin: The Life of Dwight D. Eisenhower from His Childhood in Abilene, Kansas, Through His Command of the Allied Forces in Europe


Stephen E. Ambrose - 1973
    Eisenhower from his childhood in Abilene, Kansas, through his command of the Allied forces in Europe in World War II,

Window on Mount Zion


Pauline Rose - 1973
    She found a house with a plot of land on desolate Mount Zion and made it bloom, all under the sights of the Jordanian guns. Vine of David presents Window on Mount Zion, a new edition of Pauline Rose's inspiring story of restoring a home on Mount Zion, planting a garden, and surviving the Six-Day War.

The Mannings


Fred Mustard Stewart - 1973
    In Elkins, Ohio, a kid named Mark Manning hungered for a piece of the great American pie he sensed was in the making. Within a decade Mark Manning was a millionaire. Before mid-century he was one of the richest and most powerful men in the world, a titan in the steel and rubber industries.

Humanism: for inquiring minds


Barbara Smoker - 1973
    However, balance is impossible in the absence of the one positive moral alternative to all religions. That alternative is secular scientific humanism - the subject of this book, written mostly from the perspective of European history. The first edition of this book, intended mainly for teenagers, was published in 1973 as a textbook for secondary schools. This current edition (the seventh), again updated and expanded, makes a useful resource for Religious Education teachers in years 9 to 13, to present alongside information on the major world religions. Since humanism is equal to any of them today in numerical importance and esteem, its inclusion in the syllabus helps to make RE objective, fair and balanced.

The Trap


Ludovic Bruckstein - 1973
    Bruckstein presents the effects of the Holocaust not only on the Jewish community, but also the wider Christian society. His novellas tell cautionary tales of how gradual changes that individually seem inconsequential can lead to catastrophic alterations in the very fabric of society which, by the time they are acknowledged, are irreversible. These stories serve as a warning that passivity and political apathy can sometimes be just as harmful as actions.

Studies In The Quantity Theory Of Money


Milton Friedman - 1973
    Milton Friedman restates the quantity theory of money and discusses the significance of its revival after a period of eclipse by the Keynesian view. Four empirical studies by Phillip Cogan, John J. Klein, Eugene M. Lerner, and Richard T. Selden are provided in support of the theory. The four studies...of inflation during and after the world wars and in the U.S. over the past century...show a striking regularity in economic response to monetary change. They will be of particular interest to monetary theorists, to empirical investigators in this area, and to economic historians and theorists generally.CONTENTS: The Quantity Theory of Money...A Restatement (Friedman) * The Monetary Dynamics of Hyperinflation (Cagan) * German Money and Prices, 1932-44 (Klein) * Inflation in the Confederacy, 1861-65 (Lerner) * Monetary Velocity in the United States (Selden)

The Fellow-Travellers: Intellectual Friends of Communism


David Caute - 1973
    This revised edition contains new chapters on the effects of the development of the Communist regimes in China, Cuba, and North Vietnam.

100 Years of Erotica: A Photographic Portfolio of Mainstream American Subculture from 1845-1945


Paul Aratow - 1973
    This fascinating book collects the best of those images -- from elaborate studio tableaux to amateur snapshots, from high romanticism to raunchy naturalism -- offering a unique catalog of our forebears' erotic sensibilities.

The Tavern At The Ferry


Edwin Tunis - 1973
    He chronicles events leading up to Washington's crossing of the Delaware and the ensuing Battle of Trenton, a turning point in the War of Independence.

Voices Of A Black Nation: Political Journalism In The Harlem Renaissance


Theodore G. Vincent - 1973
    An insight into the major political and ideological currents of the twenties and thirties through a collection of writings from the Black movement press of that time