2014 Q1 West and Southwest Catalogue

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NEW TITLE CATALOGUE THE west & Southwest U.s. THE

description

History Press 2014 Quarter 1 Catalogue for the West and Southwest United States

Transcript of 2014 Q1 West and Southwest Catalogue

Page 1: 2014 Q1 West and Southwest Catalogue

NEW TITLE CATALOGUE

T H E w e s t & S o u t h w e s t U . s .

T H E

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new titlecatalogue

t h e w e s t &s o u t h w e s t u . s .

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The History Press brings a new way of thinking to history publishing—preserving and enriching community by empowering history enthusiasts to write local stories, for local audiences, as only a local can.

all titles trade paper unless otherwise noted

table of contents

new titlecatalogue

wyoming ..................... 4colorado ...................... 5new mexico ................. 6 arizona ........................ 7 idaho ........................... 8oregon ......................... 9 california ............10-12 hawaii ........................13backlist ...............14-22

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Wyoming might be known as the least populous state, but this land of mountains and prairies is home to enough history to provide an entertaining footnote for each day of the year. On September 6, 1870, Wyoming was the first state to give women the right to vote, and on March 1, 1872, Yellowstone became the world’s first national park. JCPenney opened its doors in Kemmerer on April 14, 1902, while May 1, 1883, marks Buffalo Bill Cody’s very first Wild West Show. Join Pat Holscher on a day-by-day look at some of the Equality State’s most fascinating factoids.

on this day in wyoming history

Patrick T. Holscher

978.1.62619.223.2 * 5 x 7 * 544 pp * 80 images * $14.99

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Far from the rest of civilization, but with plenty of money and booze close at hand, Steamboat Springs and the surrounding towns of Oak Creek, Yampa, Hayden and Craig were filled with shady characters with even shadier pasts. Many of the saloonkeepers in these areas opened multiple enterprises, allowing the various “soiled doves” of the region to move from town to town and bar to bar every few months to keep business fresh or to escape entanglements that had gone sour. Historian Laurel Watson unearths the seamy history of Yampa Valley’s early red-light districts and the people who called them home.

the yampa Valley sin CirCuit: historiC red-light distriCts of

routt and moffat Counties

Laurel Watson

978.1.62619.167.9 * 6 x 9 * 128 pp * 42 images * $19.99

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The people of Taos have always displayed a feisty—if not downright insurgent—spirit. Every uprising that toppled a New Mexican government started here, beginning with the Pueblo revolt against the Spanish colonists and including the assassinations of a Mexican-era tax governor, who lost his head, and the first American governor, who lost his scalp before his life. Living on the edge of the northern frontier of New Spain, Taoseños became accomplished smugglers of slaves, firearms and other black market goods. As a convenient terminus of the Old Sante Fe Trail, Taos drew loitering rabble-rousers who were overly fond of the dangerous hooch called Taos Lightning. Join author Ellen Dornan as she delves into the wicked history of Taos, New Mexico.

wiCked taos

Ellen Dornan

978.1.62619.307.9 * 6 x 9 * 128 pp * 54 images * $19.99

New Mexico Territory attracted outlaws and desperados as its remote locations guaranteed non-detection while providing opportunists the perfect setting in which to seize wealth. Many wicked women on the run from their pasts headed there seeking new starts. Colorful characters such as Bronco Sue, Sadie Orchard and Lizzie McGrath were noted mavens of mayhem, while many other women were notorious gamblers, bawdy madams or confidence tricksters. Some paid the ultimate price for crimes of passion, while others avoided punishment by slyly using their beguiling allure to influence authorities. Follow the raucous tales of these wild women in a collection that proves that crime in early New Mexico wasn’t only a boys’ game.

wiCked women of new mexiCo

Donna Blake Birchell

978.1.62619.128.0 * 6 x 9 * 128 pp * 31 images * $16.99

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The scenic natural vistas of Arizona’s deserts and mountains have made it a favorite backdrop of movies and television shows. Westerns such as silent-era pictures derived from Zane Grey fiction through the John Ford–John Wayne classics Stagecoach and The Searchers benefited from the beautiful and rugged landscapes. TV classics such as Gunsmoke and Little House on the Prairie helped define Arizona’s allure for Hollywood. Oscar winners Jerry Maguire and Little Miss Sunshine took advantage of the infrastructure that accumulated to lure filmmakers to Tucson, Yuma, Phoenix, Prescott, Sedona and all corners of the Grand Canyon State. Join author Lili DeBarbieri as she looks at the movies and shows shot in the state, as well as other aspects of Arizona film culture.

loCation filming in arizona: the sCreen legaCy of the grand Canyon state

Lili DeBarbieri

978.1.62619.063.4 * 6 x 9 * 176 pp * 76 images * $19.99

With elevations above nine thousand feet, dense vegetation and unique rock formations, the Chiricahua Mountains are a unique wildlife refuge and natural botanic reserve. Inhabited by Apaches and then homesteaders, the U.S. Cavalry, miners, outlaws and tourists, this range has retained its allure through time. Apache legend Geronimo surrendered in 1886 to General Nelson Miles in Skeleton Canyon, on the east side of the Chiricahuas in the neighboring Peloncillo Mountains. Chiricahua National Monument was created in 1924, and the Civilian Conservation Corps arrived in the 1930s to build trails, rock structures and fire lookouts. Join author William Ascarza as he tours the natural and human histories of this magnificent Arizona mountain range.

ChiriCahua mountains: history and nature

William Ascarza

978.1.60949.800.9 * 6 x 9 * 144 pp * 71 images * $19.99

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Idaho’s clear, flowing rivers are world famous for fly fishing, but finding that elusive perfect spot to land a trophy in the vast wilderness requires a lot of time and knowledge. Fortunately, writer, angler and conservationist Chris Hunt has traveled to some of the state’s most idyllic areas to find the best fishing the Gem State has to offer. Adventurous anglers can follow his directions off the beaten path to enjoy excellent scenery and even better fishing. Brimming with expert tips and seasonal strategies for each location, this handy guide will find its place in a dry pocket for every successful excursion.

fly fishing idaho’s seCret waters

Chris Hunt, Foreword by Kirk Deeter

978.1.62619.216.4 * 6 x 9 * 128 pp, full Color * 44 images * $19.99

There’s more to Lewiston’s history than first meets the eye, and local author and historian Steven D. Branting has the stories to prove it. Branting offers a revealing look into the aspects of Lewiston’s past that other, more conventional, histories may have overlooked. From the humorous to the harrowing and everything in between, this collection unveils the lesser-known events that have subtly influenced Lewiston throughout the city’s history. Whether it’s the tale of young May Pierstorff, sent by her parents to Lewiston through the mail to visit relatives in 1914, or Ken Mansfield, the Lewiston high school graduate who helped the Beatles establish their own record label, this diverse collection of tales sheds new light on Lewiston.

hidden history of lewiston, idaho

Steven D. Branting

978.1.62619.354.3 * 6 x 9 * 144 pp * 63 images * $19.99

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When nine-hundred-foot ice age floods carved the Columbia River Gorge through the Cascade Mountains to the sea, little space was left for man to form a highway of his own. It took an artist-poet-engineer extraordinaire to conquer this reluctant piece of real estate and produce the nation’s first scenic highway. Meet Sam Hill, the mover and shaker, and Samuel Lancaster, the polio survivor, who turned modern engineering on its ear to create a “poem in stone.” Today, Oregon’s historic Columbia River Highway is hidden among the trees, where it meanders past spectacular waterfalls and dramatic views. Ride along with Peg Willis as she explores the beginnings of this miracle highway and the men who created it.

Building the ColumBia riVer highway: they said it Couldn’t Be done

Peg Willis

978.1.62619.271.3 * 6 x 9 * 192 pp * 75 images * $19.99

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The variably named and numbered Pacific Coast Highway spans 1,700 miles from Canada to Mexico; 75 of those miles create a dramatic drive through Los Angeles County, showcasing the iconic cities of Malibu, Santa Monica, South Bay, San Pedro and Long Beach. “PCH” has become a symbol for Southern California coastal life, encompassing pleasure piers and amusement parks, surfing, yachting and other water sports. No longer just a road, PCH is a ribbon of destinations and the byway through the California dream. Ride with author Carina Monica Montoya via vintage images from the California Department of Transportation and new photos by John Moss through this remarkable road’s history and the picturesque coastal communities it serves.

paCifiC Coast highway in los angeles County

Carina Monica Montoya

978.1.62619.020.7 * 6 x 9 * 112 pp + 16 pp Color * 52 images * $19.99

As early as 1839, Sacramento, California, was home to one of the most enduring symbols of the American West: the saloon. From the portability of the Stinking Tent to the Gold Rush favorite El Dorado Gambling Saloon and the venerable Sutter’s Fort, Sacramento saloons offered not simply a nip of whiskey and a round of monte but also operated as polling place, museum, political hothouse, vigilante court and site of some of the nineteenth century’s worst violence. From librarian James Scott and the Special Collections of the Sacramento Public Library comes a fascinating history of Sacramento saloons featuring the advent of all types of gaming, the rise of local alcohol production and the color and guile of some of the region’s most compelling personalities.

saCramento’s gold rush saloons: el dorado in a shot glass

Special Collections of the Sacramento Public Library

978.1.62619.170.9 * 6 x 9 * 160 pp * 56 images * $19.99

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Women played prominent roles during Stockton’s growth from gold rush tent city to California leader in transportation, agriculture and manufacturing. Heiresses reigned in the city’s nineteenth-century mansions. In the twentieth century, women fought for suffrage and helped start local colleges, run steamship lines, build food empires and break the school district’s color barrier. Writers like Sylvia Sun Minnick and Maxine Hong Kingston chronicled the town. Dolores Huerta co-founded the United Farm Workers, and Dawn Mabalon rescued the history of the Filipino population. Join Mary Jo Gohlke as she eloquently captures the stories of twenty-two triumphant and successful women who led a little river city into state prominence.

remarkaBle women of stoCkton

Mary Jo Gohlke

978.1.62619.415.1 * 6 x 9 * 144 pp * 22 images * $19.99

Wintersburg Village’s unique history is representative of the Japanese pioneer experience on the West Coast. Japan’s post-Meiji period ended the feudal system, creating in the late 1800s social changes that prompted Japanese immigration to America. Many who settled in the Wintersburg countryside were of samurai ancestry, bringing an enterprising spirit to Orange County’s businesses and farms. The village’s history encompasses early aviation, archaeological discoveries, the county’s oldest Japanese church, goldfish farming and overcoming discrimination to achieve civil liberties. Join historian Mary F. Adams Urashima as she resurrects a vanishing chapter of Orange County.

historiC wintersBurg in huntington BeaCh

Mary F. Adams Urashima

978.1.62619.311.6 * 6 x 9 * 208 pp * 90 images * $19.99

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In the 1870s, a quicksilver mining boom took hold of Sonoma County, California. Claims were staked, and a rowdy camp took shape in Pine Flat as farmers traded plows for picks and miners answered the siren call of cinnabar. In this compelling account, historian Joe Pelanconi relates the development of the twenty-mile Cinnabar Mining District. Pelanconi shares intriguing stories like those of the Donner Party survivor, Chinese laborers who worked the mines in danger of mercury poisoning and the two brothers who were leading citizens of the district and purported victims of murder. Delve into Sonoma County’s heritage and a lost era when eccentrics and dreamers sought shining flasks of riches in the Mayacamas Mountains above today’s wine country.

QuiCksilVer mining in sonoma County: pine flat prospeCt feVer

Joe Pelanconi

978.1.62619.472.4 * 6 x 9 * 144 pp * 50 images * $19.99

After the Rancho San Rafael was divided, Benjamin Dreyfus was awarded the hilly area north of downtown Los Angeles known as Eagle Rock Valley. By 1911, this farming community had rapidly grown into a city. The Los Angeles Railway made downtown LA a trolley ride away, and continued growth led to Eagle Rock’s consolidation with the city in 1923. Today, Eagle Rock is one of LA’s most distinctive neighborhoods, and a pride instilled by early settlers remains here. These inspirational settlers include soldier and ranchero Jose Maria Verdugo, diarist and historian Elena Frackelton Murdock and farmer and amateur hydrologist Mayor Cromwell Galpin. Join editors Eric H. Warren and Frank F. Parrello as they profile the personalities who built Eagle Rock.

pioneers of eagle roCk

Edited by Eric H. Warren and Frank F. Parrello

978.1.60949.827.6 * 6 x 9 * 144pp * 65 images * $19.99

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Alexander Cartwright, who invented the game of baseball in New York in the 1840s, soon took his bag of tricks to Hawai’i—where adoption of the pastime predates most other American locales. Pineapple plantation teams played rival sugar refinery clubs with Chinese, Korean and Japanese teams. Barnstorming big-leaguers landed during the winter, and Pearl Harbor brought the biggest names in the sport to paradise: Babe Ruth, Joe DiMaggio, Lou Gehrig, John McGraw and many more. Barry Bonds and Tony Gwynn played for the Hawai’i Islanders before heading up to “the Show.” Homegrown talents are on display here along with the legends, as author Jim Vitti shows that Hawai’i’s baseball history is as rich and diverse as anywhere on the mainland.

BaseBall in hawai’iJim Vitti

978.1.62619.313.0 * 6 x 9 * 144 pp * 60 images * $19.99

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978-1-60949-288-5 The Clara Nevada: Gold, Greed, Murder and Alaska’s Inside Passage Levi $19.99

ArizonA

978-1-60949-800-9 Chiricahua Mountains: History and Nature Ascarza $19.99

978-1-60949-460-5A Guide to Southern Arizona’s Historic Farms and Ranches: Rustic Southwest Retreats DeBarbieri $19.99

978-1-62619-063-4Location Filming in Arizona: The Screen Legacy of the Grand Canyon State DeBarbieri $19.99

CAliforniA

978-1-60949-630-2 The Aviation History of Greater Riverside Bitetti & Bitetti $19.99

978-1-62619-345-1 Balboa Park and the 1915 Exposition Amero $24.99

978-1-60949-996-9 Baseball in Long Beach Keisser $19.99

978-1-60949-661-6 Beach Mexican: Assimilation & Identity in Redondo Beach Areyan $19.99

978-1-62619-004-7Between the Bylines: The Life, Love and Loss of Los Angeles’s Most Colorful Sports Journalist Krikorian $21.99

978-1-60949-950-1 A Brief History of Eastvale Meissner & Johnson $21.99

978-1-60949-861-0 A Brief History of Los Alamitos & Rossmoor Strawther $19.99

978-1-60949-701-9 A Brief History of Norco Bash & Bash $19.99

978-1-60949-287-8 A Brief History of Orange, California: The Plaza City Brigandi $19.99

978-1-60949-795-8 California Apricots: The Lost Orchards of Silicon Valley Chapman $19.99

978-1-60949-884-9 California Vines, Wines & Pioneers Monahan $19.99

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978-1-60949-562-6 Crescenta Valley Pioneers and Their Legacies Sadler $19.99

978-1-60949-584-8 Crestline Chronicles Tetley $19.99

978-1-60949-777-4 Culver City Chronicles Cerra $19.99

978-1-60949-310-3 Del Mar: Where the Turf Meets the Surf Wesch $19.99

978-1-60949-882-5 Duarte Chronicles Heller $19.99

978-1-60949-875-7 Fanny Bixby Spencer: Long Beach’s Inspirational Firebrand Harris $19.99

978-1-60949-545-9 Football in Long Beach Guardabascio $19.99

978-1-62619-267-6 Fremont Older and the 1916 San Francisco Bombing Ralston $19.99

978-1-60949-449-0 The Great Crescenta Valley Flood: New Year’s Day 1934 Cobery $19.99

978-1-62619-358-1 Growing Up in Long Beach Grobaty $19.99

978-1-62619-012-2 Historic Aircraft Wrecks of San Bernardino County Macha $19.99

978-1-62619-311-6 Historic Wintersburg in Huntington Beach Urashima $19.99

978-1-60949-702-6The Hollywood Scandal Almanac: 12 Months of Sinister, Salacious and Senseless History! Roberts $14.99

978-1-62619-144-0 Kern County Sports Chronicles: Colorful Athletes of the Central Valley Martin $19.99

978-1-60949-622-7 Life on Route 66: Personal Accounts along the Mother Road to California Heller & Heller $19.99

978-1-60949-740-8 Location Filming in Long Beach Grobaty $19.99

978-1-60949-548-0 Long Beach Chronicles: From Pioneers to the 1933 Earthquake Grobaty $19.99

978-1-60949-712-5 Los Angeles Dodgers Pitchers: Seven Decades of Diamond Dominance Lechman $19.99

978-1-60949-546-6Los Angeles’s Bunker Hill: Pulp Fiction’s Mean Streets and Film Noir’s Ground Zero! Dawson $19.99

978-1-60949-973-0 Lost Restaurants of Sacramento and Their Recipes Burns & Burns $19.99

978-1-60949-387-5 Lost Ski Areas of Southern California Wicken $19.99

978-1-60949-908-2 Manhattan Beach Chronicles Dennis $19.99

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978-1-60949-593-0 Miracle Mile in Los Angeles: History and Architecture Wallach $19.99

978-1-60949-997-6 Murder & Mayhem in the Crescenta Valley Keyes & Lawler $19.99

978-1-60949-544-2 Murder and Mayhem in the Napa Valley Shulman $19.99

978-1-60949-926-6 Napa Valley Chronicles Coodley $19.99

978-1-60949-803-0 Notre Dame vs. USC: The Rivalry Lechman $19.99

978-1-62619-276-8 On These Promising Shores of the Pacific: A History of St. Mary’s College Isetti $19.99

978-1-62619-133-4 Orange County Chronicles Brigandi $19.99

978-1-62619-020-7 Pacific Coast Highway in Los Angeles County Montoya $19.99

978-1-62619-074-0 Pioneer Ranch Life in Orange: A Victorian Woman in Southern California Clark $21.99

978-1-60949-827-6 Pioneers of Eagle Rock Warren & Parrello $19.99

978-1-60949-831-3Pioneers of Riverside County: The Spanish, Mexican and Early American Periods Lech $19.99

978-1-62619-089-4 Prohibition in the Napa Valley: Castles Under Siege Weber $19.99

978-1-60949-877-1 The Puritan Ice Companies: The Ice Empire of California’s Central Coast Petry $19.99

978-1-62619-472-4 Quicksilver Mining in Sonoma County: Pine Flat Prospect Fever Pelanconi $19.99

978-1-60949-618-0 Redlands Remembered: Stories from the Jewel of the Inland Empire McCall $19.99

978-1-62619-415-1 Remarkable Women of Stockton Gohlke $19.99

978-1-60949-579-4 Sacramento Chronicles: A Golden Past Stapp $19.99

978-1-60949-939-6Sacramento Renaissance: Art, Music & Activism in California’s Capital City Burg $19.99

978-1-62619-170-9 Sacramento’s Gold Rush Saloons: El Dorado in a Shot Glass

Special Collections of the Sacramento Public Library $19.99

978-1-62619-186-0 Sacramento’s Historic Japantown: Legacy of a Lost Neighborhood Wildie $19.99

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978-1-60949-425-4 Sacramento’s K Street: Where Our City Was Born Burg $19.99

978-1-60949-976-1 San Diego Yesterday Crawford $16.99

978-1-60949-617-3Santa Ana Mountains History, Habitat & Hikes: On the Slopes of Old Saddleback and Beyond Mitchell $21.99

978-1-60949-571-8The Santa Barbara B-24 Disasters: A Chain of Tragedies across Air, Land and Sea Burtness $19.99

978-1-60949-713-2 Squaw Valley & Alpine Meadows: Tales from Two Valleys Ancinas $19.99

978-1-60949-533-6 Stories of Old Glendora Price $19.99

978-1-60949-840-5 Surfing Newport Beach: The Glory Days of Corona del Mar Burnett & Burnett $19.99

978-1-60949-626-5 Tales of the Russian River: Stumptown Stories Schubert $19.99

978-1-60949-773-6 True Stories of Riverside and the Inland Empire Durian $19.99

978-1-60949-461-2 Tustin As It Once Was Lovret $19.99

978-1-60949-960-0 University Park, Los Angeles: A Brief History Epting $19.99

978-1-60949-441-4 The Way We Were in San Diego Crawford $16.99

978-1-60949-444-5 Weinstock’s: Sacramento’s Finest Department Store Kassis $19.99

978-1-60949-741-5The West Branch Mill of the Sierra Lumber Company: Early Logging in Northeastern California Mark $19.99

978-1-60949-623-4 Westside Chronicles: Historic Stories of West Los Angeles Loomis $19.99

978-1-60949-520-6 Wicked Jurupa Valley: Murder & Misdeeds in Rural Southern California Johnson $19.99

978-1-60949-663-0 Wild Catalina Island: Natural Secrets and Ecological Triumphs Hein & de la Rosa $21.99

978-1-60949-509-1 Wild Tulare County: Outlaws, Rogues and Rebels Ommen $19.99

978-1-60949-644-9Willow Creek History: Tales of Cow Camps, Shake Makers & Basket Weavers Freedman $19.99

978-1-60949-675-3 Women Trailblazers of California: Pioneers to the Present Harris & Cohen $19.99

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978-1-59629-974-0 Boulder: A Sense of Time & Place Revisited Pettem $19.99

978-1-60949-955-6 A Brief History of Fairplay Bjorklund $19.99

978-1-60949-233-5 A Brief History of South Denver & University Park Fisher $19.99

978-1-60949-660-9 Colorado Forts: Historic Outposts on the Wild Frontier Gallagher $19.99

978-1-60949-301-1 Colorado’s Historic Hotels Clark $19.99

978-1-60949-248-9 Colorado’s Iceman & the Story of the Frozen Dead Guy Shaffer $14.99

978-1-60949-532-9The Denver Folk Music Tradition: An Unplugged History, from Harry Tuft to Swallow Hill and Beyond Malkoski $19.99

978-1-60949-697-5 Eagle County Characters: Historic Tales of a Colorado Mountain Valley Heicher $19.99

978-1-60949-134-5 Forgotten Cuchareños of the Lower Valley Sanchez $19.99

978-1-59629-943-6 Forgotten Heroes and Villains of Sand Creek Turner $19.99

978-1-60949-886-3 Forgotten Tales of Colorado Waters $12.99

978-1-60949-736-1 Ghosts of Boulder Leggett & Leggett $19.99

978-1-60949-467-4 Ghosts of Colorado Springs and Pikes Peak Waters $19.99

978-1-60949-519-0 Ghosts of Fort Collins Juszak $19.99

978-1-60949-293-9 The Haunted Heart of Denver Pharris $19.99

978-1-60949-312-7 A Haunted History of Denver’s Croke-Patterson Mansion Leggett & Leggett $19.99

978-1-60949-347-9 Haunted Manitou Springs Waters $19.99

978-1-60949-350-9 Hidden History of Denver Wallace $19.99

978-1-60949-738-5 Historic Haunts Around Denver Pharris $19.99

978-1-62619-161-7 Historic Tales from Park County: Parked in the Past Van Dusen $19.99

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978-1-62619-286-7The History of City Market: The Brothers Four and the Colorado Back Slope Empire

Prinster & Ruland-Thorne $19.99

978-1-60949-711-8A History of Leadville Theater: Opera Houses, Variety Acts and Burlesque Shows Scanlon $21.99

978-1-60949-743-9 Hollywood of the Rockies: Colorado, the West & America’s Film Pioneers Spencer $19.99

978-1-60949-843-6Homesteading Haxtun and the High Plains: Northeastern Colorado History Gray $19.99

978-1-60949-128-4 Ladies of the Brown: A Women’s History of Denver’s Most Elegant Hotel Faulkner $19.99

978-1-60949-177-2 Mountain Brew: A Guide to Colorado’s Breweries Sealover $21.99

978-1-60949-358-5 Niwot, Colorado: Birth of a Railroad Town Dyni $19.99

978-1-59629-954-2 Notorious Jefferson County: Frontier Murder & Mayhem Turner $19.99

978-1-60949-260-1Notorious San Juans: Wicked Tales from Ouray, San Juan & La Plata Counties Turner $19.99

978-1-60949-086-7 Notorious Telluride: Wicked Tales from San Miguel County Turner $19.99

978-1-59629-975-7 Only in Boulder: The County’s Colorful Characters Pettem $19.99

978-1-60949-915-0 Riding Denver’s Rails: A Mile High Streetcar History Pharris $19.99

978-1-60949-880-1The Springs of Steamboat: Healing Waters, Mysterious Caves and Sparkling Soda McKinley $19.99

978-1-60949-153-6 Wicked Denver: Mile-High Misdeeds and Malfeasance O’Hare & Dick $19.99

978-1-60949-570-1 Wicked Western Slope: Mayhem, Mischief & Murder in Colorado Brockett $19.99

978-1-60949-195-6A Wild West History of Frontier Colorado: Pioneers, Gunslingers & Cattle Kings on the Eastern Plains Gallagher $19.99

978-1-62619-167-9The Yampa Valley Sin Circuit: Historic Red-Light Districts of Routt and Moffat Counties Watson $19.99

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978-1-62619-313-0 Baseball in Hawai’i Vitti $19.99

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978-1-62619-216-4 Fly Fishing Idaho’s Secret Waters Hunt $19.99

978-1-60949-601-2 Ghosts of Idaho’s Magic Valley: Hauntings and Lore Weeks $19.99

978-1-60949-965-5 Ghosts of Pocatello: Haunted History from the Gate City Brian $19.99

978-1-62619-354-3 Hidden History of Lewiston, Idaho Branting $19.99

978-1-60949-912-9 Historic Firsts of Lewiston, Idaho: Unintended Greatness Branting $12.99

MontAnA

978-1-60949-594-7 Lost Butte, Montana Gibson $19.99

978-1-60949-409-4 The Missoula Mercantile: The Store that Ran an Empire Smith $19.99

978-1-62619-021-4 Montana Beer: A Guide to Breweries in Big Sky Country Newhouse $19.99

978-1-62619-175-4 Montana Territory and the Civil War: A Frontier Forged on the Battlefield Robison $19.99

978-1-62619-016-0 Stories from Montana’s Enduring Frontier: Exploring an Untamed Legacy Clayton $19.99

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978-1-60949-764-4 Haunted Carson City Jones $19.99

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978-1-60949-451-3 Capitan, New Mexico: From the Coalora Coal Mines to Smokey Bear Cozzens $19.99

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978-1-60949-692-0 Cowboy Reunions of Las Vegas, New Mexico Romero $19.99

978-1-60949-572-5 Enchanted Legends and Lore of New Mexico: Witches, Ghosts & Spirits Aragon $16.99

978-1-60949-485-8 Forgotten Tales of New Mexico Dornan $12.99

978-1-60949-662-3 Ghosts of Old Town Albuquerque Polston $16.99

978-1-60949-760-6 Hidden History of Spanish New Mexico Aragon $16.99

978-1-60949-137-6 New Mexico and the Civil War Pittman $19.99

978-1-60949-643-2 New Mexico Wine: An Enchanting History Birchell $19.99

978-1-60949-131-4 The Nogal Mesa: A History of Kivas and Ranchers in Lincoln County Cozzens $19.99

978-1-60949-547-3 Saving the Cumbres & Toltec Scenic Railroad Wilson $16.99

978-1-62619-307-9 Wicked Taos Dornan $19.99

978-1-62619-128-0 Wicked Women of New Mexico Birchell $16.99

oregon

978-1-62619-271-3 Building the Columbia River Highway: They Said It Couldn’t Be Done Willis $19.99

978-1-60949-642-5 Cascadia Clash: Sounders versus Timbers Arnold $19.99

978-1-60949-765-1Douglas County Chronicles: History from the Land of One Hundred Valleys Guyer $19.99

978-1-60949-872-6 Haunted Independence, Oregon Morton $19.99

978-1-62619-198-3 Hidden History of Portland, Oregon Chandler $19.99

978-1-60949-616-6A History of Pacific Northwest Cuisine: Mastodons to Molecular Gastronomy

Hinton & Heiligenthal $19.99

978-1-62619-040-5 Inside Oregon State Hospital: A History of Tragedy and Triumph Goeres-Gardner $21.99

978-1-60949-925-9 Murder & Mayhem in Portland, Oregon Chandler $19.99

Page 22: 2014 Q1 West and Southwest Catalogue

22or

egon

, u

tah

, w

ash

ingt

on,

wyo

min

g

978-1-62619-157-0 Oregon Sports Stories: History, Highlights & Reflections Robinson $19.99

978-1-60949-804-7 Oregon State University Baseball: Building a Legacy Kirkpatrick $19.99

978-1-60949-881-8 Portland Beer: Crafting the Road to Beervana Dunlop $19.99

978-1-62619-346-8Tragedy at Southern Oregon Tunnel 13: DeAutremonts Hold Up the Southern Pacific Mangold $21.99

978-1-60949-971-6 Trailer Food Diaries Cookbook: Portland Edition, Volume 1 Harelik $19.99

978-1-60949-676-0Winemakers of the Willamette Valley: Pioneering Vintners from Oregon’s Wine Country

Perry, Vincent & Sclesinger $19.99

UtAH

978-1-62619-347-5 Hidden History of Utah Stone $19.99

wAsHington

978-1-60949-642-5 Cascadia Clash: Sounders versus Timbers Arnold $19.99

978-1-60949-470-4 Hidden History of Tacoma: Little-Known Tales from the City of Destiny Stover $19.99

978-1-60949-852-8Western Washington Reflections: Stories from the Puget Sound to Vancouver Beardsall & Clemens $19.99

wyoMing

978-1-62619-158-7 Haunted Cheyenne Pope $19.99

978-1-62619-223-2 On This Day in Wyoming History Holscher $14.99

Page 23: 2014 Q1 West and Southwest Catalogue

MIKI ATENCIOWestern Sales Rep

[email protected] 843.457.5971 x 220

KRISTEN MILFORDSales Support

[email protected] x 124

Page 24: 2014 Q1 West and Southwest Catalogue

We accept Visa, MasterCard, AmEx and Discover, checks and money orders. We can extend credit for all orders of more than 10 copies but request prepayment for orders of fewer than 10 copies. Terms are 30 days from invoice date. The discounts on this brochure are for the trade. Individuals requesting one copy will be charged list price.

An additional 2% discount is available for purchases made on a non-returnable or prepaid basis. All titles available via Ingram and Baker & Taylor.

SHIPPING & RETURN POLICYWe use UPS ground shipping from Charleston, South Carolina, and can use express services if requested. Orders will be shipped within 24 hours. We accept returns of books in saleable condition within 12 months of the invoice date with an authorization code. Please call 843-577-5971 to obtain an authorization code.

E-mail: [email protected]

Toll-free order line: 866-457-5971

In Charleston call: 843-577-5971

Fax: 843-577-6712

Charleston, South Carolina 29403

w w w . h i s t o ry p r e s s . n e t

Quantity of Books Discount

1–9 30%

10–24 40%

25–49 42%

50–199 44%

200–299 46%

300–399 48%

400+ 50%

24tr

ade

term

s &

pay

men

t opt

ions