6 résultats
200737979Columbia:: University of South Carolina Press. Fine in Fine dust jacket. 2007. Hardcover. 1570036608 . First printing. Fine in a fine dust jacket. . University of South Carolina Press, hardcover books
2003169116Grand Rapids MI: Discussion Bulletin Committee IUCE 2003. Four issues of the bimonthly bulletin 31 pages each all 7x8.5 inches address labels on back panel of each issue remains of tape used for closing each issue for mailing at right edge. Otherwise generally very good. Issues present are 61 from 1993 117-119 2003. Libertarian socialist perspective with extensive correspondence perspectives on socialism and anarchism reviews of literature much critical discussion of the DeLeonists in particular. Discussion Bulletin Committee, IUCE unknown books
200228075Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. Near Fine in Fine dust jacket. 2002. Hardcover. 0803235682 . First edition. Remainder mark on bottom edge else fine in a fine dust jacket. . University of Nebraska Press hardcover books
200220629London: Reaktion Books. As New in As New dust jacket. 2002. Hardcover. 1861891199 . Illustrated. First edition. As new in like dust jacket. . Reaktion Books hardcover books
200538801Princeton:: Princeton University Press. Near Fine in Fine dust jacket. 2005. Hardcover. 0691120579 . First printing. "Examination Copy" stamped on top edge else fine in a fine dust jacket. . Princeton University Press, hardcover books
20042089166Chaucer Press 2004. First Edition. Large Hardcover. Near Fine/Near Fine. 2004 Large Hardcover. 192 pp. The Nile stretching for a distance of 4163 miles is the longest river in the world. The ancient Greeks were obsessed by the provenance of so much water feeding a river that flowed out of the desert. Aeschylus in 500 BC talked of Egypt being nurtured by the snows. For centuries the only sporadic reports from the heart of equatorial Africa came from Arab seafarers land travellers and slavers. In the mid-1850s in Britain the great thirst for adventure and discovery combined with the challenge posed by the ancient riddle of the secret sources of the Nile and acted like a magnet on men such as Sir Richard Burton Captain Hanning Speke Samuel Baker Dr David Livingstone and Henry Morton Stanley. This gripping account illustrated with many prize-winning photographs traces the tribulations and achievements of the men who walked in the footsteps of Herodotus and carried away the prize: the discovery of the sources of the Nile. Chaucer Press hardcover books