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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQS);faqs.180
BERKELEY/OAKLAND:
SF and Fantasy: Dark Carnival (Shattuck/Adeline, across the street
from the Ashby BART). (The address is 2978
Adeline, but some people think it's on
Shattuck.) Wonderful selection.
Other Change of Hobbit (2433 Channing Way). In a
mini-mall between Durant and Channing Way
off Telegraph; underneath building on west side
of Telegraph--the same mall as Revolution Books
and Dave's Smoke Shop. Another great SF/F
bookstore. New and used books.
New and Used: Ben Franklin Books in the North Berkeley Center
(Shattuck and Cedar). Nothing spectacular but
one occasionally finds something interesting
there. New books.
Berkeley Book Consortium (1700 Shattuck at Virginia).
I've found several books at BBC that I had given
up hope of ever running across. Used books.
Big Bad Book Sale (2349 Shattuck Ave). New books
greatly reduced, with very little order to the
chaos.
Black Oak Books (1491 Shattuck Ave).
Though one person says, "IMHO, Black Oak Books
is all shuck and jive. Lots of new Politically
Correct stuff up front, but slim pickins for
used goods in the back." (Other dissenting
votes have also been received.) New and used
books.
Barnes & Noble (on Shattuck). "The Berkeley store is quite
large without the crowding which often occurs
between rows of bookcases. They even put out some
benches around a fountain in the center of the
store. The magazine selection is huge. I found
"Car Design and Technology," a British magazine.
It was the latest issue (flown in, according to the
sticker), and still only cost a few dollars."
Cody's (2454 Telegraph at Haste). "One of the two stores
in the Bay area I hold up as the definition of the
term 'bookstore.' (The other is Kepler's in Menlo
Park.)" A very large selection of just about
everything, (foreign language books on Dwight just
west of Telegraph). There is even a book about
Cody's: CODY'S BOOKS: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF A
BERKELEY BOOKSTORE, 1956-1977, by Pat and Fred Cody
(scheduled for Oct 1992 and described in an article in
the August 3, 1992 issue of "Publishers Weekly").
Half-Price Books (2525 Telegraph between Dwight and Parker).
"This bookstore is abominably organized. The only
time I ever go in is when I'm waiting for a table at
the Ethiopian restaurant next door."
Holmes (274 14th St, Oakland). Excellent selection,
EXCELLENT prices. You might have trouble getting
there, because the freeway collapsed. (Others claim
this isn't a problem, and there is pretty good parking.)
It's also on the border of a major crack-dealing
district, so you should only go there in the middle
of the day, not at night. (As someone else points out,
it also closes at 5, so the former seems redundant.)
Lots of Californiana upstairs. New and used books.
Liberty Tree (134 98th St in Oakland). Not just
libertarian but also general civil liberties and`
history books.
Mr. Mopps' Children's Bookshop (1405 Martin Luther King
Jr. Way)
Moe's (2476 Telegraph between Haste and Dwight). Four
floors of mostly used books.
Mama Bear's (6536 telegraph, Oakland). Feminist
bookstore/coffeehouse. Limited selection. There's
a better feminist bookstore in San Francisco
called Old Wives' Tales.
O'Neil Book Co. (1150 Sixth Street, one block north of
Gilman, 510-527-9855). Great selection of
remaindered books. "I was told about this by one of
the proprietors of The Other Change Of Hobbit, who
thinks most highly of it."
Pegasus Books (1855 Solano).
Pendragon Books (5560 College Avenue, Oakland).
Pegasus and Pendragon are owned by the same
management. Both of them stock primarily used
books, remaindered books and recent releases.
Revolution Bookstore (2425 Channing Way). In a
mini-mall between Durant and Channing Way
off Telegraph; underneath building on west side
of Telegraph--the same mall as Other Change of
Hobbit and Dave's Smoke Shop.
Serendipity (University Ave one block east of San Pablo).
A warehouse full of first editions and rare books.
Used books. "One of the Bay Area's finest, but they
know books and there are few bargains there. Also
worth a visit just to admire some very fine
woodworking in their bookcases and cabinets."
Shambhala (2482 Telegraph next to Moe's). Excellent source
for books on Eastern religion and other forms of
mysticism. New books.
Shakespeare and Company (2499 Telegraph).
University Press Bookstore (across from the intermural
athletic center, 2430 Bancroft).
Walden Pond (3316 Grand Avenue between Lake Park and
Mandana), in Oakland. Distinct from
Waldenbooks, a used and new bookstore.
They have a particularly good selection of
international writers (in translation) and
radical literature and magazines.
Magazines: Dave's Smoke Shop (2444 Durant). In the indoor shopping
passage between Durant and Channing Way just west
of Telegraph; same mini-mall as Other Change of
Hobbit and Revolution Books). The periodical
selection in there used to be amazing. They even had
Pravda (untranslated). Howeverm they have recently
changed ownership and the selection has become somewhat
smaller. Whether this is a permanent change is
anyone's guess.
De Lauers (Oakland, about 3 blocks away from Holmes Bookstore)
"This place is open 24 hours a day, and has the widest
selection of newspapers and magazines that I've EVER
seen in one place."
OTHER:
Corte Madera: Book Passage. Written up in the 9/21/92 issue of PUBLISHERS
WEEKLY. Over 9000 sq. ft. of books, including a
3200-sq.ft. section devoted to mystery and science
fiction and a rare and used book department. The
store also carries titles in French, Spanish, and
German, and has a cafe in the back. (Corte Madera
is in Marin County, across the Golden Gate Bridge.)
Menlo Park: East West Books (1170 El Camino). "A complete New Age
book shop, with sections on herbalism,
metaphysics, aromatherapy, shamanism, inner
healing.... Also cards, incense, crystals,
gongs, and other Aquarian doodads. This is the
sort of thing that people who like this sort of
thing will like."
Kepler's (821 El Camino Real) (new). One of the two stores
in the Bay area I hold up as the definition of
the term 'bookstore." Special emphasis on
alternative and progressive titles. Has regular
in-person programs, often featuring important
authors.
Wessex (558 Santa Cruz half-block off El Camino) (used).
A truly delightful place. They have a large
selection of used books in wonderful condition
and at good prices. They seem to have a little
bit of everything although the Science Fiction
and Mystery sections are somewhat limited.
They don't keep late hours, but are open Sunday
afternoons. The best used bookstore on the
peninsula. Their other claim to fame:
Classical, Jazz and Blues used records.
Wonderful place!
Palo Alto: Bell's (536 Emerson) (used). In terms of selection good.
Great for book collectors. "Unfortunately much
of their stock is out of reach on high shelves,
which can be frustrating. They also shelve their
fiction books in three layers, so you have to create
little temporary piles on the floor as you mine for
books. Great place!" People used to complain that
they often changed the price on the book when you
bring it up to the register (so that for a book
marked $3 they might say, "Sorry, that's $7.50 now"),
but someone recently reported that they had stopped
doing this because it pissed off too many customers.
Closed Sundays.
Bob and Bob (151 Forest Ave). Judaica. Closed Saturdays.
The Book Buyers (504 Emerson). A good general used book
store.
Books, Inc. (Stanford Shopping Center). Has a good
paperback selection. All books are new and there
are about a dozen tables of marked-down books.
The staff is okay, not as friendly as at Phileas
Fogg's (see below).
Chimaera (University near High--yes, new address!).
Excellent mostly used bookstore specializing in
well-selected literary and humanities titles.
Also good selection of used records, cassettes,
and CDs, especially for classical, jazz, and
progressive rock.
Future Fantasy (3705 El Camino). SF/F/H/Mystery
Know Knew Books (on California) (used). A good spot for
used paperbacks, SF and general. A good
selection of hard cover fiction and non-fiction
as well.
Megabooks (444 University Avenue near Waverly). Good
general used bookstore which often has real
bargains on recent cook books.
Phileas Fogg (Stanford Shopping Center). Good travel
bookstore, helpful staff.
Printers Inc. (310 California) (new). Smaller than
Kepler's, but more personal, with a cafe in the
bookstore (a recent trend in bookstores). Though
they have recently expanded, the bookshop itself
is as friendly and personal as ever. The cafe is
also larger but (as one poster says) "I'm afraid,
much less cosy and intimate than before. One
positive result of the expansion is that the cafe
section no longer closes during readings by authors
and poets." Good selection of foreign papers.
The same poster writes, "My favourite weekly ritual
is to cycle from work to Printer's Inc., pick up my
reserved copy of the [Toronto] "Globe and Mail,"
and peruse it over a cup of dark French roast
coffee with the buzz of conversation in the
background. A very pleasant and civilized way to
spend an otherwise dull Tuesday evening."
Renaissance Books (Hamilton near Emerson). Another used
bookstore, specially good for its huge
collection of very cheap popular fiction --
mysteries, gothic, science fiction, etc.
(Used to be Recycle Books.)
Sports Central: The Ultimate Sports Bookstore (157 Stanford
Shopping Center, 415-327-7707). 7000 titles, as well
as audio and video tapes, and a few accessories, but
no memorabilia or used books. Thursday night lecture
series. (Written up in PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, 10/5/92).
Stacey's (new). Technical books.
Stanford Univ. Bookstore (on the Stanford Campus).
The largest bookstore in the Bay Area. It's the
most likely place to find a new book. Their
inventory is available on the network for people
who have the right accounts. There's also a branch
on University Avenue in Palo Alto which specializes
in technical books.
Szwede Slavic Books (2233 El Camino, (415) 327-5590).
Good selection of Polish books, among others.
Los Altos: Heintzelman's Bookstore (205 State Street) (new). Packed
to the roof with a large selection of books. The
owners were friendly, helpful, and well-read.
Mountain View: Printers Inc. (301 Castro Street) (new).
More cramped and cluttered than the Palo Alto store.
San Antonio Hobby Shop (San Antonio Shopping Center,
(415-941-1278))
Amazing selection of new books on aircraft, trains
and ships (warships, mostly). They have many
hard-to-find and imported titles.
Tower Books (El Camino and San Antonio)
Los Gatos: Curious Book Shoppe (the corner of N. Santa Cruz
and Main St) (used).
Campbell: Poor Pat's (1800 South Bascom Ave). Used.
San Jose: Books, Inc. (new)
Recycle Books (Santa Clara Street). They have a pretty
decent general selection. Science fiction books are
a strong point, but philosophy books are a weak spot.
Santa Cruz: (There are a number of bookstores in Santa Cruz. All three
of the bookstores that previously resided on the
Pacific Garden Mall were damaged to a greater or
smaller extent during the '89 earthquake. Logos
has reopened in a permanent location; the other
two have not, at least as far as I have heard.)
? (across from Caffe Pergolesi on Center Street). A used
bookshop, great for philosophy, religion, some rare
stuff too, but small.
Book-Cafe (41st Ave in Capitola). New books only. Good
selection of magazines. Probably has the bests
selection of audio books and literary magazines in
Santa Cruz. Also has a small coffee-shop inside.
Book Loft (next to the Rio Theatre on Soquel Drive).
Used books only.
Bookshop Santa Cruz (in the old St. George Hotel on the
Pacific Garden Mall). A Santa Cruz tradition.
Moved to this location from their tents 10/92.
Gateways (a block from Logos/Plaza in the old Great Outdoors
Outlet). A venerable Santa Cruz institution, with
twice the space of its old location and a small cafe.
It is primarily known for new-age, metaphysics,
self-help, etc.
Logos (has re-opened in a new building at its *old* location
on the Pacific Garden Mall). Two full floors of
books, used records, and used CDs. Can be thought
of as Santa Cruz's answer to Moe's in Berkeley.
"It is this bibliophile's opinion that Logos has
*the* best used book selection (in Santa Cruz, the
center of the Universe). You can get the same book
(used) here you can get in Capitola for 1/2 price
(new)."
Plaza Books (damaged in the '89 quake, but not destroyed.
On Cedar half a block from Walnut--also described as
right next door to Logos). New books only. Plaza
Books has the best tee-shirts, post-card books, and
greeting cards, by far beating out any of the more
"touristy" places.
Cupertino: A Clean Well-Lighted Place For Books (The Oaks Shopping
Center, across Steven's Creek Boulevard from de Anza
College and the Flint Centre). Recently moved within
the shopping center. The new shop, though much
bigger, is not visible from the street.
A Wrinkle in Time (19970 Homestead Road, 408-255-9406).
New and used SF, comics, videos, games, and
collectibles.
San Leandro: Roskie and Wallace Bookstore (14595 E 14th). "This is a
rather unique used book store. The prices are quite
cheap by Bay Area standards, the collection is huge,
though not as organized as some stores. In fact, it's
kind of like a cross between a bookstore and a rummage
sale. It's not usually a place to go looking for
something specific, but it's a browser's heaven -
you're guaranteed to find something unique, something
you'd never even think of, let alone find in another
bookstore." Open Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat 10 AM to 4 PM.
Concord: Barnes & Noble (near where Willow Pass intersects I-680).
Formerly Bookstar, it has a noteworthy selection of
new books.
Pacifica: Florey's. Forey's stocks a good supply of books, and
Mrs. Florey is very accomodating.
As for truly NORTHERN California, there *was* an excellent used book store
on the main drag in Ferndale, which has been closed indefinitely because of
damage from the 4/25/92 quakes. [Someone keep me informed if/when it
reopens.] Their branches in Eureka (which has an excellent music selection)
and in Arcata are still open. Eureka has another good store, located on the
square with the ugly modern fountain in the historic part of town. Arcata
also has the Tincan Mailman (on G or H street, a couple of short blocks
north of the town square), a used book store with a large selection, cosy
but not cramped.
Someone else notes in Sacramento (definitely out of the "northern"
California range, but what the heck) is The Book Mine (916-441-4609). He's
not sure what their specialty is, but he was referred to them for a train
book he was looking for.
Evelyn C. Leeper | +1 908 957 2070 | ecl@mtgzy.att.com
Xref: bloom-picayune.mit.edu rec.arts.books:52401 news.answers:4206
Path: bloom-picayune.mit.edu!enterpoop.mit.edu!senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!usenet
From: tittle@ics.uci.edu (Cindy Tittle Moore)
Newsgroups: rec.arts.books,news.answers
Subject: Book Catalogues and Book Clubs List (rec.arts.books)
Supersedes: <books/catalogues_719643622@athena.mit.edu>
Followup-To: poster
Date: 25 Nov 1992 06:00:36 GMT
Organization: University of California at Irvine: ICS Dept.
Lines: 392
Sender: tittle
Approved: news-answers-request@mit.edu
Expires: 13 Jan 1993 06:00:23 GMT
Message-ID: <books/catalogues_722671223@athena.mit.edu>
Reply-To: tittle@ics.uci.edu
NNTP-Posting-Host: pit-manager.mit.edu
Summary: This is a periodically posted informational post about book
catalogues.
X-Last-Updated: 1992/10/29
Archive-name: books/catalogues
Version: 1.1
Last-modified: 20 October 1992
Periodicity: 35 days
Copies of this list may be obtained by anonymous ftp to
pit-manager.mit.edu (18.172.1.27) under
/pub/usenet/news.answers/books/catalogues. Or, send email to
mail-server@pit-manager.mit.edu with the subject line "send
usenet/news.answers/books/catalogues", leaving the body of the message
empty.
I welcome all contributions, and would especially like to see this
list become international in scope. Please include addresses,
information (do they accept overseas orders? local or any currency?
etc) and comments with your suggested additions. Extremely
specialized topics are fine. I prefer catalogues that inventory at
least 90% books, please don't send me catalogues that contain the
occasional book. Thank you!
I make no guarantees as to the correctness of each entry. If you spot
anything that needs correcting, let me know and I will update.
My thanks to the following people who have helped out with this list:
Terry Allen, William J. Burtle, Jon Ciliberto, Nichael Cramer, Boon
Chye Lee, Vonda N. McIntyre, Nielsen, R. M. Price, Linda Siemsen, and
Anders Thulin.
BOOK CATALOGUES
---------------
* Barnes & Noble [US]
126 Fifth Avenue Tel: 201-767-7079
New York, NY 10011
Current books. Variety of topics, variety of quality. Some great
savings. Commentary on each book.
* Basement Full of Books [US]
Vonda N. McIntyre periodically posts a list of authors who will
mail out their books upon request, including with inscriptions,
etc. The list is currently available in one of two ways:
anonymous ftp to pit-manager.mit.edu in the file
/pub/usenet/news.answers/books/basement-full
Or, send email to mail-server@pit-manager.mit.edu with
send usenet/news.answers/books/basement-full
in the subject line, leaving the body of the message empty.
* Berkelouw's [Australia, US]
Messrs. Berkelouw
Antiquarian Bookdealers Tel: 048-77-1370
"Bendooley", Hume Highway Fax: 048-77-1102
Berrima, NSW 2577 Australia.
830 N. Highland Avenue Tel: 213-466-3321
Los Angeles, CA 90038 USA
Write for catalogues. Lots of Australiana & other topics.
* Boydell & Brewer [UK/US]
PO Box 9 PO Box 41026
Woodbridge, Suffolk IP12 3DF Rochester, NY 14604
0394 411320 716-271-8778 (telefax)
0394 411477 (fax)
Several catalogues available. They list publications from D.S.
Brewer, Noydell Press, Unibersity of Rochester Press and
Colleagues Press and are divided into new books, current titles,
and backlist. Prices are listed in both UK pounds sterling and US
dollars. Excellent quality books, expensive prices. Scholarly
titles, lots of good Medieval studies and explorations of Legends
(including Camelot and other popular myths), manuscript reprints,
etc.
* Common Reader, A [US]
141 Tompkins Avenue
Pleasantville, NY 10570
1-800-832-7323
A wonderful selection of obscure, hard-to-find and plain good
books. An excellent variety of topics, a range of prices (tends
toward moderate-to-expensive). Credit cards accepted. Ships UPS.
Money-back guarantee within 30 days. A monthly catalogue, free.
* Christian Bible Distributors [US]
P.O. Box 6000 Tel: 508-977-4500
Peabody MA 01961-6000
As the name implies, CBD has a huge selection of christian books,
tapes, CDs, and other materials. They also are an excellent
source for scholarly/technical works on relgion, theology,
biblical languages, etc. Most material is well below publisher's
list price. (For those who live nearby, CBD has a bi-monthly
"warehouse" sale. A real zoo, but *lot's* of remaindered and
damaged books as well as the complete main inventory offered at
prices below their regular catalogue discount.) Excellent service
department. Accepts phone orders. Free catalogue. If interested
in the scholarly/technical material, ask for their separate
"Academic Catalogue."
* Curry, L.W., Inc [US]
Elizabethtown, NY 12932 Tel: 518-873-6477
They publish a regular catalogue and it contains a wealth of
bibliographic facts. Prices are on the high side (in fact, Currey
is frequently taken as the reference value for a given book. Most
booksellers are at or below Currey).
* Daedalus Books [US]
PO Box 9132
Hyattsville, MD 20781-0932
1-800-395-2665 (US/Canada, 9am-6pm EST M-F)
301-779-4224 (outside US/Canada)
1-800-866-5578 or 301-779-1260 (fax)
An eclectic set of remaindered books. Good quality books, low
prices. Topics and books vary. Extensive and opinionated blurbs
written for each book. Prices are guaranteed for about 3-4
months. Bookstores may get discounts, there are separate
addresses and phone numbers for such orders (write for details).
* Dover Publications, Inc. [US]
31 East 2nd Street
Mineola, NY 11501
Write for catalogue: Dover Complete Catalog of Fiction, Literature
And Language Learning. Mostly paperbacks. Very low prices. Some
of the books are cheaply constructed. Nice selection, lots of
reprints of books. No phone numbers, no credit cards. Money-back
guarantee. Optional mailing (UPS, US post, foreign orders). Two
Dover Bookstores: 180 Varick St., 9th floor, New York, NY 10014
(9am-4:30pm M-F) and 11 East Second St., Mineola, NY 11501
(9am-3pm M-F).
* Godine, David R., Publisher [US]
Horticultural Hall Tel: 800-344-4771
300 Massachusetts Avenue
Boston, Massachusetts 02115
Does direct mail.
* Hamilton, Edward R., Bookseller [US]
Falls Village, CT 06031-5000
Write for a catalogue. No phone number, no credit cards. Great
selection of books, low prices. Catalogue is a bit disorganized,
in newspaper format, encourages browsing. Unconditional guarantee
of your satisfaction.
* Hampstead House Books Ltd. [Canada/US]
82 Doncaster Avenue
Thornhill Ontario, L3T 1L3
416-881-0607 (US?, 24 hr)
416-881-6596 (US? fax, 24 hr)
Offers both US and Canadian catalogues. The US one offers a
number of books, some from Canada, some from Britain, and assorted
others. Payment in US dollars from the US catalogue. [Any info
about the Canadian catalogue?] If they don't have a book you
order, you get a credit voucher for book-price plus 10% against
future purchases or for book-price for immediate cashing. Accepts
credit cards.
* Harrassowitz, Otto
Internationale Buchhandlung
Asien-Abteilung
Postfach 29 29, Taunusstrasse 5
D-6200 Wiesbaden, Germany
Specialist catalogues on Asia, probably others. International
orders are OK, but credit cards are definitely not.
* Laissez Faire Books [US]
942 Howard Street Tel:1-800-326-0996
San Francisco, CA 94103
LFB is a division of the Center for Independent Thought. It
contains a lot of Libertarian material, and an eclectic assortment
of individualist books. Tends toward the politically incorrect in
that it considers the US First Amendment as completely sacrosanct.
Interesting. Capable of annoying Social, Liberal, and Conservative
persuasions. Discounts of 10-20% Some obscure titles.
* Levine, Norman's Editions
Editions
Boiceville, NY 12412
A good source for mail-order used books. Great selection, but
they're a touch idiosyncratic to deal with. For $2 they'll send
you a couple catalogues (64pgs, they come out something like once
a month). Will keep sending catalogues for as long as you keep
ordering books. Also, while they _will_ take phone orders, they
clearly prefer mailed orders and will give them priority.
* Manderley [US]
P.O. Box 679
Boonville, CA 95415-0679
800-722-0726
Annotated catalogue of romance books.
* Mysteries by Mail [US]
P.O. Box 679
Boonville, CA 95415-0679
800-722-0726
Lists all kinds of mystery books. Annotated with their comments.
* Oxford University Press
Humanities and Social Sciences Marketing Department
200 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10016
Write for catalogues. They put out several topical ones and a
general one. Nice, obscure books. Good quality. Prices about
20% lower than publisher's prices. Extensive write up of each
book featured.
* Reader's Catalog
250 West 57th Street Order phone: (800) 733-BOOK
New York, NY 10107 Fax: (212) 307-1873
Newsletter four or five times a year. Nice fat catalogue (approx.
$30.00) International orders OK. Usual credit cards OK.
* Scholar's Bookshelf, The [US]
110 Melrich Road
Cranbury, NJ 08512
They have a variety of topical catalogues, for example "Military
History." They have sale prices.
* Solipsist Press [US]
P.O. Box 544
Sebastapol, CA 95473
Solipsist Press publishes regular lists of new, used, and
antiquarian books on Islamic art, architecture, and archaeology,
and on the Islamic world.
* Waterstone's Mail Order [UK]
4-5 Milsom Street Phone: (0225) 448 595
Bath, England Fax: (0225) 444 732
BA1 1DA, UK
Newsletter four times a year. Used to have a catalogue - I'm not
certain if they still do. International orders & credit cards OK
BOOK CLUBS
----------
A tip regarding the book clubs that require you to send back a "no"
notification for the current selection: you can save yourself some
postage and hassles by informing them that you travel a lot or have
an irregular schedule and to switch your status to a "send only on
a YES". Most clubs will do this.
BSBISY = "buy several books in several years".
Most clubs have some sort of bonus plan: free books or substantial
price reductions after the purchase of so many books.
* Book of the Month Club, Inc. [US]
Camp Hill, PA 17012-0001
1-800-233-1066 (8AM-8PM EST M-F)
BSBISY club. Good quality books. They also publish their own
anthologies and collections. Variety of books. Earn points with
each book purchased, any book available for a certain number of
points. Regular club prices are about 20% less than published
prices.
* First Edition Library, The [US]
88 Long Hill Cross Road
Shelton, CT 06484
1-800-367-4534
Reproduces books from first edition presses (including the
original slipcovers). Hardcover books. Books are selected from
modern American Literature. Monthly volumes are sent, you have 10
days to return or keep (and then pay for) them.
* Folio Society, The, Ltd. [UK, US, Canada]
202 Great Suffolk Street, Tel: 01-407 7411
London SE1 1PR Fax: 01-378 6684
Folio Books Ltd, (orders and queries)
198 Avenue of the Americas, Tel: (212) 219-0890
New York, NY 10013 Fax: (212) 219-0898
Folio Books Ltd, (orders only)
Pendragon House Ltd,
PO Box 488,
Port Credit,
Mississauga, Ontario L5G 4M2
Well-designed books printed with great regard for typography.
Publishes 10-15 books a year, only for members. Quarterly
magazine. Members must purchase at least four books, either from
previously published works, or from those published during the
year. No monthly send-outs - you get only what you order.
The selection of titles is eclectic. Established and minor
classics mix with more obscure titles
* History Book Club, Inc. [US]