Trade Paperback. Condition: Very Good. Very good. No dust jacket as issued. Crisp, stiffr copy; minimal wear to forecorners, edges, one dogged page. Trade paperback (US). Glued binding. 96 p. Audience: General/trade. ;
Published by New York: Crown Publishers Inc, 1978, 1979
ISBN 10: 0517270307 ISBN 13: 9780517270301
Language: English
Seller: Lighthouse Books and Gifts, Lincoln, NE, U.S.A.
Very Good/Good. 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. ISBN:0-517-270307. This large, heavy hardcover book with a decorative dustjacket is all about the history of the automobile from inception to the 70s and this copy is in excellent condition with very little wear. The dustjacket has minor wear at the top and bottom edges and features a picture of an old Rolls Royce on the front face. The black decorative cloth hardcovers have the same picture on the front and have only minor wear at the corners and around the edges. The spine is tight. The pages are white with little wear and no marks. Ten chapters chronicle the rise of the automobile from the 1760s (yes, that is correct!) to the 1970s. The pictures are terrific and help illustrate the narrative which is excellent. If you love old cars and all about them this is the book! 320 pages. CHEAP SHIPPING MEDIA MAIL! Note: because of the weight and size of this book the seller requires a seperate agreement for priority or overseas shipping. Please contact seller for more information.
Published by Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 1997
ISBN 10: 0847683923 ISBN 13: 9780847683925
Language: English
Seller: GuthrieBooks, Spring Branch, TX, U.S.A.
Paperback. Condition: Good. Trade Paperback. Good. Clean, tight. Creases to cover.
Published by Multimedia, UK, 1985
Seller: Larimar Animal Books, Morristown, NJ, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Good. How the horse evolved; Horses in the wild; Principal breeds; Buying a horse; Horse equipment; Training the horse; Rider; Care; Medical; The working & sporting horse; The Olympians; The Spanish Riding School of Vienna. C: 1985, Multimedia, UK. Color photos. 9-1/8" x 11-5/8", 192 pgs. Gd hardcover w/Gd DJ. Personal book mark. Spine shows in front, but book is tight. Oversize book, media mail U.S. shipping only.
Published by Edinburgh University Press, 2011
ISBN 10: 0748641963 ISBN 13: 9780748641963
Language: English
Seller: Redux Books, Grand Rapids, MI, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: As New. APPEARS UNREAD. Hardcover with dust jacket. Dust Jacket shows minimal shelving wear, otherwise an UNBLEMISHED copy.; 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed! Ships same or next business day!
Published by Paul Hamlyn, London, 1963
Seller: Neil Shillington: Bookdealer/Booksearch, Hobe sound, FL, U.S.A.
Hardback. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Good+. 316 pages.
US$ 12.95
Convert currencyQuantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Very Good+. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good+. Blacksheep; (illustrator). First Edition. (x) 358 pp. Burgundy boards lettered in gilt on the spine. Lightly rubbed on the corners of the dustjacket; price intact; no interior markings. Cover art by Blacksheep. All titles in a single volume: Introduction: A Rose by Any Other Name by Peter Crowther; A Writer's Life by Eric Brown; The Human Front by Ken MacLeod; Diamond Dogs by Alastair Reynolds; and Park Polar by Adam Roberts. Size: 8vo. Book.
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1993
Language: English
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the December 1993 (Vol. LX No. 8) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Jennifer Belisle, Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: [Jean-Bertrand] ARISTIDE: A Longing For Righteousness by Jane Sammon; "And He Fell Among Thieves" by Katharine Temple ("At almost every turn, you cannot escape the reality that health has long become a commodity - with the patient as consumer, and care the means of production"); Thomas Merton - Ashes To Ashes My Dream by Daniel Berrigan, S.J.; A Sense of Gratitude by Jim Grote; No Limits On The Promise Of God by Bill Ramsey; Thou Shall Not Kill by Richard McSorley, S.J. (on the death penalty); God's Law Concerning Honest Money by Kevin Craig; memorial tribute of Jim Peck by Ken Boyd; Murmurings Of God's Glory by Lauren Griffin. Small mailing label to upper edge of front cover.
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1993
Language: English
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the August 1993 (Vol. LX No. 5) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Jennifer Belisle, Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: The Life of Muriel Lester by Jo Roberts; lengthy report War At The Crossroads: Background On The Balkans by Bill Weinberg and Dorie Wilsnack (with topics The Balkans As Theater Of Imperial Rivalry; The Emergence Of Nationalism; From The First Yugoslavia To World War II; The [Josip Broz] Tito Era; Yugoslavia Self-Destructs; War In Croatia, Tension In Bosnia; War In Bosnia; Dangers Of A Wider War; Never Again?); Teach Anew That Interest Is Immoral by Estelle and Mario Carota ("Interest directly harms the poor when they, without any safety net or personal resources, are forced to turn to the local loan sharks for loans to cover emergencies"); On Dirt Roads With The Peace House by Karl Meyer; memorial tribute for Bede Griffiths by James Stout; Live The Revolution Now! by Michael True (on Ammon Hennacy).
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1993
Language: English
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the June-July 1993 (Vol. LX No. 4) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: memorial tribute CESAR CHAVEZ 1927-1993 by Marion Moses; news Guatemalan Refugees Return; GATT: An Ethical Void by Eileen Egan (on the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade); letter from Robert L. Jackson, inmate at the Mississippi State Prison, to the Catholic Worker (headlined "Nothing Left But God"); Power & Nonviolence by Cesar Chavez (two excerpts from the June 1968 and June 1969 issues of The Catholic Worker); CW: Our Diverse But Common Lives (travels by Jo Roberts and Paul Wells); There Are No Safe Corridors For The People Of Sudan by Marj Humphrey; Reunited With Our Ancestors by Pol Castel (on Judaism); Living In The New Germany by Kristin Schonfelder. Small mailing label to upper edge area of front cover.
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1993
Language: English
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the March-April 1993 (Vol. LX No. 2) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: IWW Organizes Small Shops by Lenny Flank, Jr. (on the Industrial Workers of the World "Wobblies"); U.S. Political Prisoners - A Wall of Silence by Bonnie Kerness; Crimes Laid Bare by Carmen Trotta (on Noam Chomsky's book "Deterring Democracy" - "In it, he suggests seeing an informal capitalist plutocracy at work behind a democratic facade as the only tenable way to understand American history"); two memorials of Cindy McCall (by Annie Boagni and Brian Hynes); short poem "Easy Essay" by Peter Maurin; In the Shell of the Old by David Mastrodonato (on U.S. labor history); Unnatural Growth Hormone by Tim Atwater (on Bovine growth hormone, or BGH); Cuba - "We Manage" Despite the Blockade by Noemi Escandell. Small mailing label to upper edge area of front cover.
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1993
Language: English
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the May 1993 (Vol. LX No. 3) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: We Have To Leap Into Faith by Dorothy Day (excerpts from earlier writings in The Catholic Worker); Peter Maurin: I Am A Radical by Meg Hyre; Do Not Conform Yourselves To This Age by Jane Sammon (on the teachings of Peter Maurin); The Green Revolution: What We've Learned by Joan and Chris Montesano; Baking And Breaking Bread by Claire and Scott Schaeffer-Duffy (on the "Bread Not Bombs Bakery" at the Saint Francis and Saint Therese Catholic Worker in Worcester, Massachusetts); The Aims And Means Of The Catholic Worker Movement; Active & Messy Personalism by Fr. Frank Cordaro (which begins, "I remember well my first encounter with the Catholic Worker movement"); AIDS and Hospitality by Tom Heuser; God In Many Disguises by Michael Kirwan; memorial tribute to Dottie Whaley by Jeannette Noel; memorial tribute to Katie Campbell by Jo Roberts; Herald Of A Renewed Church by Eileen Egan ("For Dorothy Day, the central task in the life of the followers of Jesus was the right relationship between human beings - that of meeting the needs of other human beings"). Narrow chip to lower edge of each page (to blank margins only); small mailing label to upper edge area of front cover.
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1993
Language: English
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the October-November 1993 (Vol. LX No. 7) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Jennifer Belisle, Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Resistance Leads to Arrest After Squatters' Eviction by Felton Davis (which begins, "On August 17, 1993, New York City authorities evicted the residents of one of the oldest squatters' camps in Manhattan, known as 'The Hill' or 'Tepee Village'"); Enthusiasm, Enthusiasm, Enthusiasm! by Stanley Vishnewski ("It amuses me to think that I once rejected the idea of living in a formal religious community because I didn't think that I could live up to the vows of poverty, chastity and obedience"); God Wants Our Freely Bestowed Love by Dorothy Day (from an appeal letter in the November 1955 issue of CW); Technicolored Dreams Of a New Society by Harvey Egan (on the founding in 1935 of the Saint Joseph's House of Hospitality near the Bowery); A Saintly Tax Resister by Katharine Temple (on St. Hugh of Lincoln); Peace Brigades In North America by Christophe Pochon (on Peace Brigades International); Tribute To The Noble Pipe Organ by Kevin Daly; More Guatemalans Prepare To Return Home by Linda Mastrodonato; near-full-page article Free Mordechai Vanunu! by Carmen Trotta (which begins, "For the past seven years, Mordechai Vanunu has been left to rot in solitary confinement in Israel's Ashkelon prison, a prisoner of conscience of whom many here in the States are unaware, and others appear shamefully close to forgetting"). Small remnant of mailing label to front cover.
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1993
Language: English
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the September 1993 (Vol. LX No. 6) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Jennifer Belisle, Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Can Nature Be A Commodity? by Brewster Kneen ("Property is created by enclosure"); Lessons In Terror At The School Of The Americas by Roy Bourgeois and Vicky Imerman ("For decades, nations in Latin America with the worst human rights records have consistently been primary clients of the US Army School of the Americas"); Usury - Cents Of Conquest by Kevin Craig; Horsepower, Machines And Human Beings by Christopher Ringwald; memorial tribute for Ann Manganaro, S.J. by John Kavanaugh, S.J.; memorial tribute for Sister Evangeline Mercier by Nina Polcyn Moore; A School To Teach The Life Of Faith by Liam Ford ("I write to suggest an alternative to the Catholic high school program now available in the New York metropolitan area. To mark our Catholic Christian community's solidarity with the people of El Salvador, and to further our work for justice here, I propose the founding of a co-ed, alternative school named 'El Colegio de los Martires' - 'Martyrs High School'"); poem For The Good Of The World by Peter Maurin. Small remnant of mailing label to front cover.
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1993
Language: English
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the January-February 1993 (Vol. LX No. 1) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: The Good News For Our Neighborhood (Father George Kuhn interviewed; "Father George Kuhn, a diocesan priest and pastor of St. Brigid's Church on the Lower East Side of New York, has been arrested over the year for civil disobedience, with special focus on homelessness, five times in his own parish"); Biotechnology And The Nature Of Life by Tim Atwater; Maryhouse by Alberta Piccolino; Vested Interests In Somalia by Florence Stratton ("Once again there is a massive deployment of United States troops to a 'Third World' country"); Peace & Quiet by Daniel O'Hagan (on genetic engineering); The Biological Basis Of Nonviolence by Karl Meyer; poem "I Am Your Spy" by Mordechai Vanunu; Lost Strike? No Such Thing by David Mastrodonato (on the Industrial Workers of the World); "American-Salaam-Iraqi" by Sister Eileen Storey ("This past summer I visited Iraq"); Gratuitous Suffering by Carmen Trotta (on Iraq). Small mailing label to upper edge area of front cover.
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1992
Language: English
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the August 1992 (Vol. LIX No. 5) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: The Anger Of God by Felton Davis (on the war against Iraq); Forgetfulness Of Experience by Katharine Temple ("Unfortunately, recent events show that our collective ability to learn from history remains fickle"); Maryhouse by Kristin Schoenfelder; Soloveitchik: 'The Lonely Man Of Faith' by Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik (excerpts from his book); A History Of Exploitation by Marion Moses (excerpts from the chapter 'Farm Workers and Pesticides' written by Marion Moses for the book 'Confronting Environmental Racism'); Adventures In Nonviolence by Karl Meyer; To Bury The Dead Is A Work Of Mercy by Jennifer Belisle. Small mailing label to upper edge area of front cover.
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1992
Language: English
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the December 1992 (Vol. LIX No. 8) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Civil War In Sudan by Meg Hyre; !Viva La Guadalupana! by Sabra McKenzie (on Juan Diego); IWW [Industrial Workers of the World]: No Top-Down Union by David Mastrodonato; War Toys Rn't Us by Kate Donnelly; "I Know The Beauty of Our Lord By It" by David E. De Cosse (on Gerard Manley Hopkins); Guatemala: Refugees Return by Steven Dudley; 'The Other America' Is Still With Us by Jennifer Belisle (on Michael Harrington's book of the same name); The Grape Boycott Continues by Joe Hamilton (on the United Farm Workers). Small mailing label to upper edge area of front cover.
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1992
Language: English
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the March-April 1992 (Vol. LIX No. 2) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Meg Hyre, Kate Quigley, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Guatemala: They Will Not Kill Our Roots by Jo Roberts and Annie Boagni; The Peace House On The Road by Karl Meyer; Maryhouse by Brian Hynes; Modern War And The Christian Conscience (featuring an article by Katharine Temple and the text of the 'Civilta Cattolica' Editorial); poem "News Report, September 1991 - U.S. BURIED IRAQI SOLDIERS ALIVE IN GULF WAR" by Denise Levertov; A US Political Prisoner by Paul Magno (on Mumia Abu-Jamal); East Timor - Another Occupied Country by Michael Rothberg. Light remnant of mailing label to front cover; narrow clear tape along right edge of rear cover; a few pieces of narrow clear tape found on page six.
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1992
Language: English
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the June-July 1992 (Vol. LIX No. 4) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: The Alliance Of The Forest People by Alberta Piccolino (on Antonio Macedo [Antônio Luiz Batista de Macêdo]); "A Different Kind Of War" by Jeff Marishane (first published in 'Challenge' - on Low Intensity Conflict [LIC] or Low Intensity Warfare [LIW]); Power in James Bay by Jo Roberts (now under threat "from a multi-billion dollar project that will dam the five rivers leading into the Bay, in a series of huge hydro-electric dams"); St. Joseph House by Sabra McKenzie; Frantz Fanon, 'The Wretched Of The Earth' by Florence Stratton; Will Accords Bring Peace To El Salvador? by Joe Hamilton; The Mystery Of Suffering by Mary Anczarski; Fr. George Zabelka by Fr. [Emmanuel] Charlie McCarthy (on "the Catholic Chaplain who served the Atomic Bomb Crews in the summer of 1945"); Through God's Grace Alone: Klaus and Heidi Barth of the Hutterian Brethren interviewed by Eileen Egan. Small mailing label to upper edge area of front cover.
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1990
Language: English
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the September 1990 (Vol. LVII No. 6) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Meg Hyre, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Discerning This Fateful Hour by Jeff Dietrich; "Am I My Brother's Keeper?" by Carmen Trotta (which begins, "As of June 1, 1990, new station regulations, strictly enforced, have made it a crime to sleep or lie down in Penn R.R. Station"); St. Joseph House by Beatrice Reubelt; Jacques Ellul - the Word of God in a World of Technique (a discussion with Jeff Dietrich and Katharine - Kassie - Temple); letters to the Catholic Worker; Cut Loose From the Rhythms of the Cosmos by Lee Hoinacki ("What I want to say is this: That because of scientific photographs, it is 'impossible' to come to know creation - the universe as created by God"). Light remnant of mailing label to front cover.
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1992
Language: English
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the January-February 1992 (Vol. LIX No. 1) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Meg Hyre, Kate Quigley, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Eviction And Arrest For Tax Resisters (on Randy Kehler and Betsy Corner); Remember The Evil We Wish To Deny: One Year After The Persian Gulf War by Eileen Egan; Wolves And Villagers by Jennifer Belisle (on St. Francis of Assisi); Usury, Freedom From Debt And Jubilee by Barry Peters; short letter The Tears Of Haiti from Community workers in Haiti; The US Army School Of The Americas; memorial tribute Lucky Clarke by Michael Boover; poem "Ambassadors Of God" by Peter Maurin; Older People In The Big Apple's Bite by Jane Sammon; short A Cure For The Recession by Peter Maurin (a Radio talk, reprinted from the March 1943 issue of Catholic Worker). Light remnant of mailing label to front cover; short closed edge tear to front cover.
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1990
Language: English
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the May 1990 (Vol. LVII No. 3) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Meg Hyre, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: "Warehoused Apartments" by Carmen Trotta ("On February 19, twenty members of the New York Catholic Worker took to the streets, along with 400-500 other residents of the Lower East Side, to protest the withholding of empty, habitable apartments by private landlords - a phenomenon known as 'warehousing'"); Revolution, The Old Man and the Land by Michael Kane ("These are excerpts of a longer memoir concerning the life and changing times of Michael Kane's father, who still lives on the family farm in upstate New York"); Love Shows Itself in Tenderness by Dorothy Day (excerpts from Dorothy Day's "On Pilgrimage" columns in the Catholic Worker); Peaceful Tax Resistance in Beit Sahour [West Bank] by Terry Rogers; Peter Maurin - Social Realism and Utopian Idealism by Katharine Temple; The Aims and Means of the Catholic Worker Movement; Why Do You Think It's Called Capitalism? by Lee Hoinacki; short The Life of Marian Anderson by Alberta Piccolino. Light remnant of mailing label to front cover.
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1991
Language: English
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the May 1991 (Vol. LVIII No. 3) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Meg Hyre, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Water By The Hill by Felton Davis (on Picatinny Arsenal); David Dellinger: Optimism Of The Will ("taken from an interview with Dave by Harry James Cargas, Professor of Literature and Language at Webster University, St. Louis, Missouri"); A Lesson In Prayer by Anthony Aratari (which begins, "Remembering Dorothy Day when she was in the thick of the work she had cut out for herself in those years following the end of World War II, I experienced her at close range, unaware that I was absorbing the religious formation of her strong personality"); From The Book Of Notes by Ric Rhetor (reflections, including, "When will it dawn on us that WAR is the war crime?"); Holding All These Things In Your Heart by Sally Hanlon ("Where do I see the passion of Christ in the world today?"); Peter Maurin On Economics: Money, Work & Distribution by Katharine Temple; The Aims And Means Of The Catholic Worker Movement; Love In The First Place by Stephen Cleghorn ("This is a remembrance of one spiritual child of Dorothy Day, one woman who heard Dorothy's call to action and responded. Her name was Claire Marie Carmody. It was God's blessing upon me to know her as my wife for 17 years. On July 26, 1990, at the age of 43, she died of cancer"); "Rerum Novarum" and The Wealth of Nations by John Cort. Mailing label to upper right corner of front cover.
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1991
Language: English
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the September 1991 (Vol. LVIII No. 6) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Jo Roberts as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Meg Hyre, Kate Quigley, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Hospitality Is Mutual Trust & Respect by Michael Kirwan; I Recognize God In You by Martin Rodgers (which begins, "I am a twenty four year old African-American Catholic man. In the Catholic tradition, we are all brothers and sisters in Christ. In the African-American tradition, we are all brothers and sisters in shared experiences and shared history"); "Pacifist" And Proud: An Open Letter to Ron Musto by Gordon Zahn; The Quality Of The Day by Felton Davis (which begins, "This is an article about the closing of Tompkins Square Park; but, first it is necessary to make some general observations"); two poems by Denise Levertov ("Suspended" and "Witnessing From Afar The New Escalation Of Savage Power"); The Children Of Iraq by Bill Griffin; Letter From Suquamish [Washington] from Linda Greenwald of the Suquamish Catholic Worker on behalf of the Double Rainbow Project; Intellectuals And Real Life In The City by Jane Sammon; poem "Easy Essay" by Peter Maurin. Mailing label to upper right corner of front cover.
Published by The Catholic Worker, New York, NY, 1989
Language: English
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Newspaper. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. Offered is the August 1989 (Vol. LVI No. 5) issue of "The Catholic Worker: Organ of the Catholic Worker Movement " founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, with Meg Hyre as Managing Editor, and Editors Frank Donovan, Jo Roberts, Jane Sammon, and Katharine Temple. A mid-folded newspaper, when unfolded measures 11-3/8" by 14-7/8" and contains eight pages including front and rear covers. With illustrations throughout, articles and other highlights of this issue include: Behind the Prison Wall by Leonard A. Taylor ("I can vividly remember my first impression of Folsom Prison"); "You are Homeless" Pounding in Your Ears by Ruth Young; AIDS: To Serve the Sick by Bill Griffin; Kenya Letters ("Marj Humphrey, our co-worker in Christ, and formerly with us at the New York Catholic Worker, has been working as a Physician Assistant in two areas of Kenya since 1988, with Maryknoll's Lay Mission Program"); bGH in Milk by Jack Miller (on Bovine Growth Hormone); D.C. Judge Moved by Testimony by Jim Kelly ("Catholic Workers and others in Washington, D.C. were found not guilty this past January of obstructing traffic within the Capitol grounds. The seven activists were arrested October 19th of last year after simulating an eviction as part of a housing demonstration"). Light remnant of mailing label to front cover.
Published by Hansom Books Ltd, 1972
Seller: Shore Books, London, United Kingdom
Magazine / Periodical
US$ 2.08
Convert currencyQuantity: 1 available
Add to basketSoft cover. Condition: Very Good. 74 pages.
Published by Hansom Books Ltd, 1971
Seller: Shore Books, London, United Kingdom
Magazine / Periodical
US$ 2.08
Convert currencyQuantity: 1 available
Add to basketSoft cover. Condition: Very Good. 86 pages.
Published by Hansom Books Ltd, 1971
Seller: Shore Books, London, United Kingdom
Magazine / Periodical
US$ 2.08
Convert currencyQuantity: 1 available
Add to basketSoft cover. Condition: Very Good. 86 pages. Illustrated.
Published by Hansom Books Ltd, 1970
Seller: Shore Books, London, United Kingdom
Magazine / Periodical
US$ 2.08
Convert currencyQuantity: 1 available
Add to basketSoft cover. Condition: Very Good. 86 pages. Illustrated.
Published by Hansom Books, London, 1971
Seller: Willis Monie-Books, ABAA, Cooperstown, NY, U.S.A.
Softcover. Condition: Very Good. Foxing of the page edges. Label on the back cover. ; Complete Text for the play: The Patrick Pearse Motel by Hugh Leonard ; 86 pages.