Bookstealer Books

Google
Other Categories
Antiques and Collectibles
  General Antiques and Collectibles
  Advertising
  Americana
  Art
  Autographs
  Baskets
  Beanie Babies
  Books
  Bottles
  Buttons
  Care and Restoration
  Clocks and Watches
  Coins and Medals
  Diecast
  Dolls
  Firearms and Weapons
  Furniture
  Glass and Glassware
  Hummels
  Jewelry
  Kitchenware
  Magazines and Newspapers
  Marbles
  Military
  Music Boxes
  Non-Sports Cards
  Paper Ephemera
  Performing Arts
  Pez
  Political
  Popular Culture
  Porcelain and China
  Postcards
  Posters
  Pottery and Ceramics
  Precious Metals
  Radios and Televisions
  Records
  Reference
  Rugs
  Sports Cards
  Sports Memorabilia
  Stamps
  Teddy Bears
  Textiles and Costume
  Toy Animals
  Toys
  Transportation

Search Now:

Antiques and Collectibles - Americana books

Posted in Antiques and Collectibles (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by William Frangipane. By Outskirts Press. The regular list price is $39.95. Sells new for $37.55. There are some available for $35.00.
Read more...

Purchase Information

4 comments about United States Stamps - A History: Volume I - Colonial Days to the Columbians.

  1. When will the next book of this stamp book series come out? The first one is terrific!!!!


  2. I love this book because it is a very organized look at United States stamps. It follows stamps one by one from the first postmaster provisonal issues to the first commemorative. Please hurry and write volume two1


  3. I am a collector of United States stamps. I was confused by all the different terms and types of stamps. I have all the standard stamp catalogs including that of Scott's but I wanted more information in just one source. I took a chance and bought this book, hoping to learn more about stamps. It really was just I was looking for. It is full of useful information. The tables are wonderful but even better are the text and pictures. The author makes the stamps come alive by his style of writing and even his humor. You can read the book cover to cover to understand the story and evolution of stamps from the very beginning. Or you can use it as a reference book to look something up on a particular stamp. I now understand all those confusing varieties of what appear to be the same stamp. I only wish the pictures were color. That is about the only drawback. I can't wait for the next volume in the series so I can learn more about the stamps I collect.


  4. I loved this book. It changed the way i think about stamps. In fact my grades went up becuase of it and it made be able to read more mature and complicated books.


Read more...


Posted in Antiques and Collectibles (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Frank B. Arian and Martin S. Jacobs. By Motorbooks International. The regular list price is $14.95. Sells new for $2.99. There are some available for $1.02.
Read more...

Purchase Information

4 comments about Remember Pearl Harbor (collectibles).

  1. Not much to rave about regarding this book. It tackles a very narrow subcollecting area of homefront collecting and consequently there are not a lot of items to show. The good news is its inexpensive and does show some really uncommon if not rare pieces albeit mostly in B&W. The insert paper priceguide is a joke and I'd scrap that. The collectors who contributed the photos were asked to price their own items hence the prices are inaccurate secondary to bias. If youre gonna buy it, buy it for pics of some pretty hard to find items and a trip down memory lane. Not much else to say otherwise.


  2. The Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor compelled American into World War II and also resulted in a flood of items acknowledging this critical and pivotal event. Over the ensuing decades, a collector's market has sprung up based on the wealth of variety of materials from the period. These range from posters and placards to postcards and pins, from banners and stationary, to cigar wrappings and ladies underwear. Highly recommended for both nostalgic reminiscing and collector references, Remember Pearl Harbor Collectibles is an impressive, 88-page compendium surveying these special collectibles through a wealth of both black-and-white as well as full-color photographs.


  3. This is a great new 88 page book loaded with photos of every type of Pearl Harbor memorabilia. It features more than 300 large, sharp, black and white and over 80 full color photos. After the brief introduction, each page is full of memories. Major catetories include newspapers, decals and patches, postcards, gum cards and matchbooks, post cards, pennants, banners, letters, postal covers, 3-D items, jewelry, movies, books, magazines, plaques and plates, and more. Items are described as appropriate. A separate price guide identifies each item by page number and description, along with the current value. WW II collectible fans will enjoy seeing the featured items and the memories that go along with them. Add it to your collection.


  4. I recommend this book to all those that truly want to remember Pearl Harbor. Martin Jacobs and Frank Arian have collaborated to bring you the most fascinating array of "Remember Pearl Harbor" collectibles. From jewelry, flags, telegrams, posters, letters, figurines, newspapers, magazines, and much more. The book features over 300 detailed color and black and white photos with an item description and includes price values for all the collectibles.The book also features original photos of the actual bombing of Pearl Harbor and a summary of the actual events from December 7, 1941. I highly recommend this book for any World War II collector.


Read more...


Posted in Antiques and Collectibles (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Travis Jeppesen. By Akashic Books. The regular list price is $13.95. Sells new for $7.39. There are some available for $0.01.
Read more...

Purchase Information

5 comments about Victims (Little House on the Bowery).

  1. Unlike most of the customer reviewers, I don't have strong feelings for or against Dennis Cooper -- I read _Try_, and I liked it, but haven't read anything else by him. With that preface, I have to say I agree with most of the other reviewers -- this painfully bad book is a waste of pretentious hot air, which Jeppesen seems to have no shortage of. He's tried to inflate a shoddy narrative structure and horrendous prose with "philosophy" and "ideas", but it just comes across as another one of those painfully cute (in a condescending way), kiddie attempts at being grownup, like when your neice butchers Fur Elise at her third grade recital. Sadly, most of us outgrow this phase before the end of our teens; Jeppesen apparently has been able to live out this extended adolescence thanks to an indulgent publisher. His interview on the publisher's website is a gem ... Here's a teaser:
    "Without intending to, I ended up writing this book against the reader, to a large extent, at least to the reader who comes to this book with any preconceived notions of what a novel is supposed to be. This is why it is immensely gratifying for me, on a purely egotistical level, when readers have a negative reaction to this book; it merely confirms everything I suspected! I'd much rather people hate this book than like it. If people like it, that means it fails. Then again, failure is a lot more interesting than success . . . "

    Then, ummm ... I guess it's a smashing success, Jeppesen! Congrats!



  2. From Dennis Cooper's "Little House on the Bowery" series comes this first novel from Travis Jeppesen. Loosely chronicling the last days of a religious cult called the Overcomers, the novel is composed of fragments of the stories of Tanya, who joins the cult as a pregnant teenager, and of Herbert, her son who leaves the cult before its end. Various other characters appear, including two of Herbert's friends and the man who fathered Herbert, as well as the cult leader Martin Jones. Jeppesen's stark style is quirky and noteworthy, but the story threads unravel as the novel progresses, and by the end, the surreal quality of the fragmentary episodes overtakes the book and dilutes whatever meaning readers are supposed to take from it. Despite my problems with this book, Travis Jeppesen is definitely an author with a future.


  3. I don't see the Dennis Cooper comparison either on this book.
    I feel Dennis Cooper is much more controversial.
    Maybe in the syle of writing they might seem similar but not really.

    This book was a bit of a chore to finish but I was curious about where it was all going.
    I have to say I was disappointed at the end for it was too bland but it kept my interest flowing enough to reach it.

    And I'm sure that that "has been rocker" had nothing to do with publishing this particular book. I mean yes it's his company BUT he gave Dennis Cooper the opportunity to publish HIS choices not the company's. It's part of the deal that Cooper signed on with Akashic.



  4. So what do you get when you buy a book published by a has-been rock performer, edited by an absurdly overrated cult novelist, and written by a young American trendoid with more pretensions than talent who lives in what is ponderously described as an "undisclosed Eastern European country"? A mindless, empty novel that manages to say absolutely nothing about its obstensible subject, cults, and that you forget the moment you finish it (if you can manage that). Spare me.


  5. So what do you get when you buy a book published by a has-been rock performer, edited by an absurdly overrated cult novelist, and written by young American trendoid with more pretensions than talent who lives in what is ponderously described as an "undisclosed Eastern European country"? A mindless, empty novel that manages to say absolutely nothing about its obstensible subject, cults, and that you forget the moment you finish it (if you can manage that). Spare me.


Read more...


Posted in Antiques and Collectibles (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Ronald C. Modra and M. B. Roberts. By Willow Creek Press. The regular list price is $15.95. Sells new for $4.45. There are some available for $0.01.
Read more...

Purchase Information

3 comments about Garish Gardens Outlandish Lawns.

  1. Pink flamingos, elves & gnomes, ceramic geese & plastic ducks, oh my! Americans, from coast to coast, have a penchant for decorating their yards with gizmos & gadgets that please & tease. Modra & Roberts started across the nation & recorded many of Amwerica's more eccentric gardens. This is a charming little book, impish, ironic & crass. What kind of people place metal cut-out characters at various points on their lawns so they appear to be having a conversation? Who lives in a house by a lake where the front & back yards are carpeted with animal statues, old mailboxes & year-round Christmas decorations? Who is the Pink Flamingo King? END


  2. I expected a lot more from this book than I got. I myself have seen much weirder lawns than are included in this book. It sometimes appears to be more of a comment on class-driven levels of taste than on personal weirdness and eccentricity, and I didn't like that. Interesting to browse, but not worth the price, in my opinion. For this type of book, "Weird Rooms" is much better.


  3. I EXPECTED IT TO BE FUNNY BUT THE STORIES WERE A REAL SUPRISE. THE TEXAS TORNADO, THE MAN WITH THE BEDS WERE MY FAVORITE. THIS BOOK WOULD BE A GREAT PRESENT FOR ANYONE STARTING THEIR OWN GARDEN.


Read more...


Posted in Antiques and Collectibles (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Richard Friz. By House of Collectibles. The regular list price is $17.95. Sells new for $3.00. There are some available for $2.91.
Read more...

Purchase Information

No comments about The Official Price Guide to Civil War Collectibles: Second Edition (Official Price Guide to Civil War Collectibles).




Posted in Antiques and Collectibles (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Michael Polak. By House of Collectibles. The regular list price is $16.95. Sells new for $4.99. There are some available for $0.24.
Read more...

Purchase Information

No comments about The Official Price Guide to American Patriotic Memorabilia (Official).




Posted in Antiques and Collectibles (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by William Hughes Willshire. By Adamant Media Corporation. Sells new for $23.99.
Read more...

Purchase Information

No comments about A Descriptive Catalogue of Playing and Other Cards in the British Museum: Accompanied by a Concise General History of the Subject and Remarks on Cards ... and of a Politico-Historical Character.




Posted in Antiques and Collectibles (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Preston Miller and Carolyn Corey. By Schiffer Publishing. The regular list price is $29.95. Sells new for $20.93. There are some available for $35.53.
Read more...

Purchase Information

No comments about The New Four Winds Guide to American Indian Artifacts (Schiffer Book for Collectors).




Posted in Antiques and Collectibles (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Marion Short and Roy Short. By Schiffer Publishing. The regular list price is $29.95. Sells new for $22.76. There are some available for $22.75.
Read more...

Purchase Information

No comments about More Gold in Your Piano Bench: Collectible Sheet Music--Inventions, Wars, & Disasters.




Posted in Antiques and Collectibles (Thursday, July 24, 2008)

Written by Michael J. Kelly. By Collector Books. The regular list price is $24.95. Sells new for $3.87. There are some available for $3.61.
Read more...

Purchase Information

No comments about Mcdonald's Drinkware: Identification & Value Guide (Identification & Values (Collector Books)).




Page 43 of 72
11  18  19  20  21  22  23  24  25  26  27  28  29  30  31  32  33  34  35  36  37  38  39  40  41  42  43  44  45  46  47  48  49  50  51  52  53  54  55  56  57  58  59  60  61  62  63  64  65  66  67  

Copyright © 2008
*Amazon.com prices and availability subject to change.
Last updated: Thu Jul 24 05:48:34 EDT 2008