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0373814666.Gmass_market. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. unknown
2010Q-0373875886Love Inspired Larger Print 2010-02-23. Mass Market Paperback. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Love Inspired Larger Print paperback
1419956280.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
0531107337.Glibrary. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. unknown
2008Q-0375847103Random House Books for Young Readers 2008-11-25. Paperback. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Random House Books for Young Readers paperback
0001837680.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
2005Q-0373810970Steeple Hill 2005-02-22. Mass Market Paperback. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Steeple Hill paperback
2003Q-0373785097Steeple Hill 2003-12-01. Paperback. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Steeple Hill paperback
2005DADAX0373810970Harlequin 2005-02-22. mass_market. New. 4.19x1.06x6.63. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Harlequin unknown
Q-0880105283Bell Pond Brooks. Paperback. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Bell Pond Brooks paperback
0137002823New. Brand new and still unused unknown
0137002823.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
02150611" x 8.5". 187 pp. plus 2 page index. History of the Alberta community. Illustrated with b&w photos and maps. Bright clean copy. Black spine with illustrated front cover. Covers have some light soiling. paperback
19571854Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Company 1957. First Edition. Cloth. Fine/near fine. A signed first edition of Wings For Life by pioneering aviator Ruth Rowland Nichols. Octavo 317pp. Blue cloth spine title in gilt on spine with decorative illustrations. Stated "first edition" on copyright page. In publishers near fine dust jacket $3.95 on front flap wear at edges but otherwise bright illustrations and vibrant colors. Inscribed by the author: "To Kamala Vars With highest admiration of her piloting. Best wishes. Ruth Nichols Oct. 26th 1958." Ruth Rowland Nichols was an American aviation pioneer beating Charles Lindbergh's cross country air speed record in 1930 and the record for the longest distance flown by a woman in 1931. She attempted to become the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic but she crashed in New Brunswick. Along with Amelia Earhart the media was captivated with her story nicknaming her the "Flying Debutante" a reference to her upbringing in New York social society. She died in 1960. J.B. Lippincott Company unknown books
19571441957. NICHOLS Ruth. WINGS FOR LIFE. The Life Story Of the First Lady Of The Air. Making her first flight in 1919 Nichols went on to more than 140 different aircraft including jets. A scarce book about a female aviation pioneer. Signed presentation from Nichols on the front endpaper: "For/ Bess with love. From Ruth." Near fine; pretty nice little edgewear with a bit of minor chipping head of spine d/j. $750.00. <br/><br/> unknown books
195713776EPhiladelphia: Lippincott 1957. First Edition. Signed presentation copy from Ruth Nichols inscribed by the author: “To Maurice Charles With my good wishes as a mutual friend of a real Spartan pilot - Lorraine Emerson - and in memory of Fred Ames. Sincerely Ruth Nichols.†Illustrated with black & white photos including one of Ruth and Amelia Earhart taken at the Santa Monica airport after the 1933 Bendix Transcontinental Trophy Race. Foreword by Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd U.S.N. Near fine or better copy with just a faint trace of edge wear in a near fine dust jacket with a touch of rubbing and a couple of very small tears. The autobiography of famous aviatrix Ruth Nichols who began her career flying with Rogers Airlines in 1922 and went on to establish three new international records for women in 1931 altitude speed and distance. In 1932 she flew from Los Angeles to New York in thirteen hours and twenty-one minutes - one hour less than the previous transcontinental record set by Charles Lindbergh. In 1955 she became the first woman in the United States to pilot a twin-engine Executive aircraft. In addition to her amazing career in aviation Ruth Nichols was a tireless promoter of aviation to the public especially to children and was the first woman to receive the title of ‘World Pilot’ when serving as special correspondent for the U.S. Committee for U.N.I.C.E.F. Lippincott unknown books
1957045916Lippincott. Very Good in Very Good- dust jacket. 1957. First Edition. Hardcover. Hardcover; Hardcover in dust jacket. SIGNED and inscribed by the a uthor Ruth Nichols on first free endpaper. Tan marbleized cloth boards with blue cloth spine. Boards lightly soiled at edges. Title in gold on spine. Fore edge and endpaper foxing. Text pages are clean. Blue photo illustrated dust jacket shows some soil and rubbing. Light chipping to corners. Looks good in new protective mylar. Always carefully wrapped and shipped in cardboard boxes to protect your purchase.; B/w Illus; 8VO . Lippincott hardcover
19572348300Philadelphia and New York: J.B. Lippincott Company 1957. First Edition. Hard Cover. Near Fine/Very Good. 8x5x1. First edition. Near fine in very good jacket. Faint discoloration to spine cloth along edges jacket tedges rubbed with 1/4 inch chip and 1/2 inch closed tear along top edge. Binding tight pages clean bright and unmarked. 1957 Hard Cover. 317 pp. Includes foreword by Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd U.S.N. Illustrated with black-and-white photographic plates. A list of Rowland's flight achievements follows the text. Ruth Rowland Nichols February 23 1901 - September 25 1960 was an American aviation pioneer. She is the only woman yet to hold simultaneous world records for speed altitude and distance for a female pilot. While a student at Wellesley College Nichols secretly took flying lessons. Shortly after graduation she received her pilot's license and became the first woman in the world to obtain a hydroplane license. She first achieved public fame in January 1928 as co-pilot for Harry Rogers who had been her flying instructor on the first non-stop flight from New York to Miami Florida. Due to her socialite upbringing and aristocratic family background Nichols became known in the press as the "Flying Debutante" a name she hated. Nichols was then hired as a sales manager for Fairchild Aviation Corporation. In 1929 she was a founding member with Amelia Earhart and others of the Ninety-Nines an organization of licensed women pilots. In August 1929 she and Earhart were among 20 competitors in the Women's Air Derby also known as the "Powder Puff Derby" the first official women-only air race in the United States. They departed from Santa Monica California on 18 August for Cleveland Ohio. Nichols crashed while Earhart finished third in the heavy class. During the 1930s while working for Fairchild and other aviation companies Nichols made several record-setting flights most of them in a Lockheed Electra the New Cincinnati on open loan from millionaire radio industrialist Powel Crosley Jr. In December 1930 she beat Charles Lindbergh's record time for a cross-country flight completing the trip in 13 hours 21 minutes. In March 1931 she set the women's world altitude record of 28743 feet 8760.9 m. In April 1931 in Detroit she set the women's world speed record of 210.7 miles per hour 339.1 km/h. In June 1931 she attempted to become the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean but crashed in New Brunswick and was severely injured breaking at least two vertebrae in her back. Following her recovery in October 1931 she set the women's distance record with a flight from Oakland California to Louisville Kentucky 1977 miles 3182 km. On 14 February 1932 Nichols set a new world altitude record of 19928 feet for diesel-powered aircraft at Floyd Bennett Field NY while flying in a Lockheed Vega. On 3 November an attempt at breaking Earhart's transcontinental record failed when Nichol's aircraft skidded off the runway at Floyd Bennett Field while taxiing went into a ground loop and was badly damaged as the port wing dug in although the pilot escaped injury. On 29 December Nichols became the first woman pilot of a commercial passenger airline flying for New York and New England Airways. In 1935 Nichols joined the British-based Women's Engineering Society at the time the only organisation in the world for women engineers and pilots. On 21 October 1935 Nichols was critically injured in a crash during a private flight in Troy New York. The flight was to be an airborne wedding for two couples over New York City but the plane a Curtiss Condor registration NC725K crashed shortly after takeoff killing the pilot. Nichols received a broken left wrist ankle and nose contusions burns and "possible internal injuries" according to newspaper accounts of the crash. She was unable to fly for nearly a year after. When she returned to flying Nichols went to work for the Emergency Peace Campaign a Quaker organization that sought to promote peaceful resolution to international conflicts then brewing. In 1939 she headed Relief Wings a civilian air service that performed emergency relief flights and assisted the Civil Air Patrol during World War II. Nichols would eventually attain the rank of lieutenant colonel in the Civil Air Patrol. Following the war Nichols became involved in other humanitarian efforts using her celebrity to bring attention to causes and to raise funds. She organised a mission of support for UNICEF including piloting a round-the-world tour in 1949. In the 1950s she served as director of women's activities for Save the Children director of the women's division of the United Hospital Fund and field director for the National Nephrosis Foundation. In 1958 after lobbying the United States Air Force for permission she co-piloted a TF-102A Delta Dagger and reached 1000 miles per hour 1600 km/h and an altitude of 51000 feet 15 545 m setting new women's speed and altitude records at age fifty-seven. J.B. Lippincott Company hardcover
195780050Philadelphia and New York: J.B. Lippincott Company 1957. First Edition. Hardcover. Very good/Very good. Presentation copy inscribed by Ruth Nichols to Salt Lake City bookseller Sam Weller on the front flyleaf with a typed letter signed TLS from Weller to Nichols describing a flight they took to Reno laid in. Memoirs of the pioneering aviatrix who remains the only woman to hold simultaneous world records for speed altitude and distance. A graduate of Wellesley College Ruth Rowland Nichols 1901-60 first achieved public fame in January 1928 as co-pilot for Harry Rogers who had been her flying instructor on the first non-stop flight from New York to Miami. In 1929 she was a founding member with Amelia Earhart and others of the Ninety-Nines an organization of licensed women pilots and a year later she shattered Charles Lindbergh's record time for a cross-country flight completing the trip in 13 hours 21 minutes. Later she organized Relief Wings a civilian air service that performed emergency relief flights and assisted the Civil Air Patrol during World War II. Edited by Dorothy Roe Lewis. Octavo: 2 317 1 blank pp. with a frontispiece and 18 photographic illustrations. Original paper-covered boards over a blue cloth spine with gilt-stamped titling and borders. A few faint spots to the top edge. The dust jacket is moderately edgeworn with a triangular chip to the front panel and some light staining to the spine heel; otherwise very good. J.B. Lippincott Company hardcover
1982Q-0070634017McGraw-Hill 1982-09-01. Hardcover. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! McGraw-Hill hardcover
1978211968San Francisco: designed and printed by Lawton Kennedy for The Book Club of California 1978. Hardcover. 71p. introduction notes on sources credits errata sheet tipped-in at rear illustrations tables very good first edition thus limited to 600 copies bound in textured wine cloth boards gilt vignette and spine titles lightly-worn unclipped dark maroon dj with lavender vignette and spine titles. The dj is a little edgeworn with a short tear. Publication no. 159. designed and printed by Lawton Kennedy for The Book Club of California hardcover books
197860931San Franci: Book Club of California 1978. Hardcover. Very Good/Fair. Cloth 24 cm 69 pp illustrated. Limited to A good copy in a dust jacket with wear along the edges; foxing to outer edge pages. Book Club of California hardcover
19421329San Francisco: The Wine Advisory Board 1942. Singe sheet 31 1/2" x 41" professionally mounted on linen to 35" x 44 3/4. Near fine with some insignificant edge wear and old creases rendered nearly imperceptible by the professional backing. Pictorial map. One of the more famous of the colorful pictorial maps by brilliant artist of the genre Ruth Taylor White. In this gorgeous map commissioned by California's Wine Advisory Board she depicts the bountiful vineyards wine-drinking inhabitants and natural wonders of California in sharp contrast to the barrenness of neighboring Nevada and Arizona. The map is bordered with frieze containing quotes about wine at top and bottom margins. There is a pictorial inset listing the "Wine-making Towns of California." <br /> <br /> Seven wine-making regions are noted on this large map with appropriate caricatures for each: <br /> <br /> - Sonoma-Mendocino<br /> - Lodi-Sacramento<br /> - Napa Valley-Solano<br /> - Alameda-Contra Costa<br /> - Santa Clara-San Benito-Santa Cruz<br /> - Fresno-San Joaquin Valley<br /> - Southern California<br /> <br /> A beautiful example of this scarce and desirable pictorial map of California's wine regions. Lithographed by Schwabacher-Frey Co. of San Francisco.<br /> <br /> Ref. HORNSBY plate 122 p. 207. The Wine Advisory Board unknown
45148508like new. unknown