The Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy's Dossier on Hillary Rodham Clinton
Washington, DC: Regnery Publishing, Inc., 2006. First edition. First printing [stated]. Hardcover. Glued binding. Paper over boards. [6], 307, [3] p. Illustrations. Notes. More
Washington, DC: Regnery Publishing, Inc., 2006. First edition. First printing [stated]. Hardcover. Glued binding. Paper over boards. [6], 307, [3] p. Illustrations. Notes. More
Czech Republic: Atelier IM Publishing, 2003. First Printing [Stated]. Hardcover. Format is approximately 6.75 inches by 8.25 inches. 365, [3] pages. Endpaper map. Illustrations (some in color). Bibliography. Appendices. DJ has some marks/dings, with some impact on front cover. Cermak, Josef Rudolf Cenek was born on November 15, 1924 in Skury, Czech Republic. Education: JUC, Charles U., Prague, Czechoslovakia, 1945-1948. Bachelor of Laws, U. Toronto (Ontario, Canada), 1958. Called to Ontario bar, 1960, created Queen's counsel, 1975. Lawyer Josef Cermak is one of the most recognized figures in Toronto, Canada's Czech community: a man involved in Czech-Canadian issues even at 80 an important supporter of Central and East European Studies at Toronto's U of T. Joe is also the author of the well-known "It All Started with Prince Rupert" - a popular history of Czechs and Slovaks in Canada. More
New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2007. First edition. First printing [stated]. Hardcover. Glued binding. Paper over boards. xvi, [2], 391, [3] p. Illustrations. Chronology. Notes. Index. More
London: George Allen & Unwin Ltd., 1954. First U.K.? Edition. 23 cm, 306, footnotes, tables, figures, bibliography, index. More
New York: Viking, 1995. First American Edition. 266, illus. More
New York: Viking, 1995. First American Edition. First Printing. 266, illus. Inscribed by the author. More
New York: Viking, 1995. First American Edition. Fourth Printing. 266, illus., pencil erasure inside front flyleaf. Inscribed by the author. More
New York: Grand Central Publishing, 2021. First Edition [Stated], First Printing [Stated]. Hardcover. The format is approximately 5.75 inches by 8.5 inches. [8], 359, [1] pages. Frontispiece. Illustrations. Decorative dust jacket. DJ has some wear and soiling. Signed by the author along with a chop stamp on the title page. Kat Chow is an Asian-American author and journalist who was a founding member of the National Public Radio show and podcast Code Switch. She has also been a regular panelist on the NPR podcast Pop Culture Happy Hour. In 2021, her book Seeing Ghosts: A Memoir was released, which discussed her family's immigration to the United States via Hong Kong and Cuba, life at age 13, and losing her mother to cancer in 2004. Chow earned her B.A. in journalism from the University of Washington, with a minor in diversity from the Department of American Ethnic Studies in 2012. In 2019, she was presented with the University of Washington Honors Alumna award. She was the recipient of the Asian American Journalists Association 2015 National Journalism Award for reporting Asian American Pacific Islander Issues on Radio/Audio in her piece on "How The 'Kung Fu Fighting' Melody Came To Represent Asia." More
New York: Harper Magazine Press, 1976. First Edition. First Printing. 332, DJ somewhat worn and soiled, some edge soiling. More
Philadelphia, Pa. The Jewish Publication Society of America, 1972. First Edition [stated], presumed first printing. Hardcover. xiii, [1], 652, [2] pages. Occasional footnotes. Notes. Index. Creasing and small chips to dust jacket. Includes Preface, Introduction by Salo W. Baron, Notes, and Index. Topics covered include Organization Was in the Air; Patricians at Work; In Defense of he Immigrant; The Abrogatin Campaign; Wartime Alliances; "The Greatest Charter of Liberities"; America Loses Confidence; The Nazi Fury; Bigotry and Defense, American style; The Years of the Holocaust; To Guard the Menmant; The State of Israel...Is Here to Stay; Between Left and Right; "You Know the Heart of a Stranger"; Integration and Identity; Separation of Church and State; The Teachings of Religion; To Light a Candle; Behind the Iron Curtain; Communities in Transition; Missionary Diplomacy; and Prologue to the Next Sixty. A prolific author and noted educator and academic, Naomi W. Cohen has achieved prominence as a historian of the United States and Jewish Americans. Naomi Cohen earned a Ph.D. in 1955 from Columbia University. She became a full professor at Hunter College of the City University of New York in 1973. Cohen’s research focused on twentieth-century American history and American Jewish history. Her publications include: Not Free to Desist: The American Jewish Committee, 1906–1966, American Jews and the Zionist Idea, and The Americanization of Zionism, 1897-1948. Salo Wittmayer Baron (May 26, 1895 – November 25, 1989) was a Polish-born American historian, described as "the greatest Jewish historian of the 20th century". Baron taught at Columbia University from 1930 until 1963. More
New York: The New Press, 2003. Second Printing [stated]. Hardcover. xiii, [3], 315, [3] pages. Notes. Index. Format is approximately 5.75 inches by 8.5 inches. Ink underlining and marginal comments noted. David D. Cole is the National Legal Director of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Before joining the ACLU in July 2016, Cole was the Hon. George J. Mitchell Professor at Georgetown University from March 2014 through December 2016. He has published in various legal fields including constitutional law, national security, criminal justice, civil rights, and law and literature. Cole has litigated several significant First Amendment cases in the Supreme Court of the United States, as well a number of influential cases concerning civil rights and national security. He is also a legal correspondent to several media outlets and publications. Cole has written eight books which have received numerous awards, including the Palmer Civil Liberties Prize for best book on national security, the American Book Award, and Boston Book Review's Best Non-Fiction Book. More
New York: Council on Foreign Relations, 2000. 26 cm, 192, wraps, illus., maps. More
New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, c1987. First Edition. First Printing. 22 cm, 289, map, time line, ink notation and pencil erasure on front endpaper, some soiling. More
Fort Worth, Texas Christian University, 1998. Presumed First Edition, First printing. Hardcover. xvi, 312 pages. Notes. Bibliography. Index. Inscribed by author on half-title. Previous owner's mailing label on fep. This is number seventeen of the Chisholm Trail Series. DJ has slight wear and soiling. Gerry Cristol was born in 1935 in Haverhill, Massachusetts. She attended grammar school in Massachusetts and was the only Jewish child in school there at the time. After high school, she attended Goucher College and met her husband, Charlie, who was originally from San Antonio. After marrying, they moved together to Dallas. W hen her children were young, Gerry went to SMU and obtained a Master’s in History. She became the archivist at Temple Emanu-El, authored the book entitled A Light in the Prairie, and also became the President of the Dallas Jewish Historical Society. More
New York: Broadside Books (An Imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers), 2015. First Edition [Stated], First Printing [Stated]. Hardcover. xxvii, [3], 368, [2] pages. Footnotes. Illustrations (some in color). Notes. Index. Signed by the author on the title page. Rafael Edward Cruz (born December 22, 1970) is an American politician, attorney, and political commentator serving as the junior United States senator from Texas since 2013. A member of the Republican Party, Cruz was the Solicitor General of Texas from 2003 to 2008. After graduating from Princeton University and Harvard Law School, Cruz pursued a career in politics, later working as a policy advisor in the George W. Bush administration. In 2003, Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott appointed Cruz to serve as Solicitor General, a position he held from 2003 to 2008. In 2012, Cruz was elected to the U.S. Senate, becoming the first Hispanic-American to serve as a U.S. senator from Texas. In the Senate, he played a leading role in the 2013 United States federal government shutdown, seeking to force Congress and President Barack Obama to defund the Affordable Care Act. He was reelected in 2018. On March 23, 2015, Cruz announced he was running for president. Despite having only been a senator for two years, he emerged as a serious contender in the Republican primaries. After Trump won the nomination, Cruz initially declined to endorse him, but he became a staunch supporter of Trump during his presidency. After the January 2021 Capitol attack, Cruz received widespread political and popular backlash for objecting to the certification of Joe Biden's victory in the 2020 presidential election and giving credence to the claim that the election was fraudulent. More
Washington, DC: Regnery Publishing, Inc., 2002. First edition. First printing [stated]. Hardcover. Sewn binding. Cloth over boards. xiv, 218, [8] p. Notes. Index. More
Washington DC: New Academia Publishing, 2013. Presumed First Edition, First printing. Hardcover. xvii, [1], 495, [3] pages. Illustrations. Notes. Bibliography. Index. Related advertising postcard laid in. Inscribed on the half-title page by the author. Inscription reads To Stuart and Pam I hope you enjoy this expose! Sara. Sara Day has an M.A. with distinction in Art History from American University, and is a member of BIO (Biographers International). Ms. Day's work has resulted in eleven books, six exhibitions, and other projects. These include: Being sole initial researcher for Philadelphia’s massive bicentennial exhibition, A Rising People, in 1973 with unlimited access to the extraordinary collections of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, the Library Company of Philadelphia, and the American Philosophical Society; eleven years of full-time employment with the Library of Congress, beginning in the late 1980s, during which she curated or wrote the text for two major exhibitions, The American Journalist (1990), and 1492: An Ongoing Voyage (1992). Moving to the Library’s Publishing Office, she edited and co-authored books, exhibition catalogs, and resource guides, including works on American Indian and American women’s history and culture (Many Nations, 1996, and American Women, 2001) and edited James Hutson’s Religion and the Founding of the American Republic (1998); and as a freelance writer-researcher and independent scholar since the early 2000s, she was chief researcher, managing editor, and collaborator for historian Robert Remini’s The House: The History of the House of Representatives (2006) and researched and wrote Women for Change (2007) about American women reformers. More
London: Macmillan, 2006. First Printing [Stated]. Hardcover. [8], 838 Pages. Index. Signed by the author on the title page. Contents include Introduction, Second World War, British Politics, International Affairs, Royal Family, Social Issues, Race and Immigration, Africa, and Journalism. William Francis Deedes, Baron Deedes, KBE, MC, PC (1 June 1913 – 17 August 2007) was a British Conservative politician, army officer and journalist. He was the first person in Britain to have been both a member of the Cabinet and the editor of a major daily newspaper, The Daily Telegraph. Deedes fought with the British Army in the Second World War as an Officer in the 2nd Battalion, Queen's Westminsters, one of the Territorial Army (TA) units of the King's Royal Rifle Corps. He gained the Military Cross near Hengelo, the Netherlands in April 1945. He was also the only officer to serve in 12th King's Royal Rifle Corps (2nd Queen's Westminsters) for the duration of the war. Deedes came from a family with a tradition of public service. He was very proud of the fact that there had been a Deedes member of parliament in every century since 1600. Deedes was elected as the Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) for Ashford in 1950. First serving as a junior minister under Winston Churchill for three years, he later entered Harold Macmillan's Cabinet in 1962 as Minister without Portfolio. He left the Cabinet in 1964, as Minister of Information. He was editor of The Daily Telegraph from 1974 to 1986 and, after he was replaced by Max Hastings, continued his career as a journalist. He continued to comment on social and political issues through his newspaper columns until his death. More
San Jose, CA: Cambrian Publications, 2000. First Edition, limited to 300 signed & numbered copies This is copy 25. Hardcover. 313, [1] pages. This first edition is limited to 300 signed and numbered copies. Signed on limited edition page Paul Di Filippo (born October 29, 1954) is an American science fiction writer. He is a regular reviewer for print magazines Asimov's Science Fiction, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Science Fiction Eye, The New York Review of Science Fiction, Interzone, and Nova Express, as well as online at Science Fiction Weekly. He is a member of the Turkey City Writer's Workshop. Along with Michael Bishop, Di Filippo has published a series of novels under the pseudonym Philip Lawson. Antonio Urias writes that Di Filippo's writing has a "tradition of the bizarre and the weird". The popularity of Di Filippo’s short stories sometimes distracts from the impact of his mindbending, utterly unclassifiable novels: Ciphers, Joe’s Liver, Fuzzy Dice, A Mouthful of Tongues, and Spondulix. Paul’s offbeat sensibility, soulful characterizations, exquisite-yet-compact prose, and laugh-out-loud dialogue give his work a charmingly unique voice that is both compelling and addictive. He has been a finalist for the Hugo, Nebula, BSFA, Philip K. Dick, Wired Magazine, and World Fantasy awards. Does the antique story of age and cunning triumphing over youth and innocence reach its fore-destined conclusion one more sad time? Can a 75,000 word novel really be satisfactorily distilled into a few paragraphs, as a certain publication maintains? Only the perusal of Joe's Liver will answer these burning questions, as well as many you never would have thought it seemly to ask. More
Baltimore, MD: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992. Second printing [stated]. Trade paperback. xvii, [3], 313, [3] pages. Illustrated front cover. Minor wear and soiling to cover. This is one of The Jewish People in America series, sponsored by the American Jewish Historical Society. Series Editor's Foreword. Illustrations. Notes. A Note on Sources. Index. Hasia R. Diner is an American historian. Diner is the Paul S. and Sylvia Steinberg Professor of American Jewish History; Professor of Hebrew and Judaic Studies, History; Director of the Goldstein-Goren Center for American Jewish History at New York University and Interim Director of Glucksman Ireland House NYU. Diner received a B.A. in 1968 from the University of Wisconsin. She went on to earn an M.A. in 1970 from the University of Chicago; and a Ph.D. in 1975 from the University of Illinois at Chicago. Her Ph.D. dissertation "In the Almost Promised Land: Jewish Leaders and Blacks, 1915-1935" was directed by Professor Leo Schelbert. In 2002 she published Her Works Praise Her: A History of Jewish Women in America from Colonial Times to the Present. In 2009 she published We Remember with Reverence and Love: American Jews and the Myth of Silence after the Holocaust, 1945-1962. According to Adam Kirsch, the book "drive(s) a stake, once and for all, through the heart of a historical falsehood that has proved remarkably durable. This is the notion that, as Diner’s subtitle has it, American Jews were initially 'silent' about the Holocaust—that the greatest catastrophe in Jewish history was somehow swept under the rug of American Jewry’s collective consciousness. More
New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2019. First Edition [stated], presumed first printing. Hardcover. xiii, [1], 346, [4] pages. Foreword by Sara Bloomfield. Illustrations. Family Trees, Note on Sources. Notes. Selected Bibliography. Index. Inscribed by the author on the title page. Inscription reads For Henry, with best wishes, Michael Dobbs. Michael Dobbs (born 27 July 1950) is a British-American non-fiction author and journalist. Dobbs was born in Belfast and became a U.S. citizen in 2010. Dobbs spent much of his career as a foreign correspondent covering the collapse of communism. He was the first Western reporter to visit the Gdansk shipyard in August 1980; he also covered the Tiananmen Square uprising in China in 1989, the abortive coup against Mikhail Gorbachev in August 1991, and the wars in the former Yugoslavia. He joined The Washington Post in 1980. In Washington, he worked for the Post as a United States Department of State reporter and as a foreign investigative reporter, covering the Dayton peace process. Dobbs is the author of the "Cold War trilogy", a series of books about the climactic moments of the Cold War. His Down with Big Brother: The Fall of The Soviet Empire was a runner-up for the 1997 PEN award for nonfiction. His hour-by-hour study of the Cuban Missile Crisis, One Minute to Midnight: Kennedy, Khrushchev, and Castro on the Brink of Nuclear War, was a finalist for the 2008 Los Angeles Times history prize and was named one of five non-fiction books of the year by The Washington Post. The final book in the trilogy, Six Months in 1945: From World War to Cold War, describes the division of Europe into American and Soviet spheres of influence after World War II. More
New York: Basic Books, 2007. First Printing [Stated]. Hardcover. xvi, 287, [1] pages. Illustrations. Index. Format is approximately 5.75 inches by 8.5 inches. Sticker residue on back of DJ. Aida D. Donald is a former editor-in-chief of Harvard University Press who has immersed herself in history. She has written this biography of Theodore Roosevelt with evident admiration for her subject, beginning each chapter with excerpts from Roosevelt's copious diaries and scattering charming photographs through the text of this attractive book. Aida D. Donald's book about the presidency of John F. Kennedy was published in 1966. More than four decades later, Donald returned with another book about a president. Lion in the White House: A Life of Theodore Roosevelt chronicles the life of this larger-than-life figure who led the Rough Riders volunteer cavalry regiment during the Spanish-American War, enjoyed enormous popularity during his time as serving as the U.S. president from 1901 to 1908, and won the Noble Peace Prize. More
New York: United Synagogue of America, 1979. Third Printing. 21 cm, 247, wraps, illus., sl revised, no errata slip present, corrections printed on p. 248, some text in Hebrew, covers slightly soiled. More
Reno, NV: University of Nevada Press, 1975. First? Edition. First? Printing. 22 cm, 519, illus., DJ worn, small piece missing to rear DJ. More
New York: Crown Publishers, c1994. First Edition. First Printing. 25 cm, 322, illus., usual library markings, "X" marked on top edge. More