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Transcript of Washington State University Press Spring 2016 Catalog
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7/24/2019 Washington State University Press Spring 2016 Catalog
1/16
SPRING2016
NEW TITLES:
Unusual Punishment
All for the Greed ofGold
The Fur Trade Gamble
BACK IN PRINT:
The Snake River-Palouse andthe Invasion of theInland Northwest
Isaac I. Stevens
RECENT RELEASES:
Wagons to theWillamette
Remote Wonders
Developing thePacific Northwest
Instilling Spirit
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NEWTITLES
Also of Interest
Unusual PunishmentInside the Walla Walla Prison, 19701985
Christopher Murray
MARCH
Illustrations maps notes index
6" x 9" 256 pages
Paperback $22.95
ISBN 978-0-87422-339-2
2 SPRING 2015 WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSIT Y PRESS
The Funhouse MirrorReflections on Prison
Robert Ellis Gordon
ISBN 978-0-87422-198-5
Paperback $16.95
Washington State Book
Award, 2000
Unusual Punishmentdetails the astonishing events and person-
alities surrounding the collapse of a decades old prison culture
and describes how leaders painfully constructed a moderncontrol system.
The Washington State Penitentiary in Walla Walla was once a
place where the warden exercised absolute authority. One
word, and a convict could be held for weeks, naked, in an
empty dark cell, or sent to the terrifying mental health ward
where coercion included torture. Any employee could be fired
at will. Guards and prisoners called it super custody.
Change began in the early 1970s with well-meaning but nave
reform. Inmates abused new freedoms. Chaos descended.
Convicts had the only keys to certain prison areas. Bikers roared
prison-made choppers around the Big Yard. Marijuana was
everywhere, and hundreds shot heroin. Prisoners took lives
with shanks and even bombs. Frustrated and afraid, correctional
officers quit or looked the other way.
A new superintendent curtailed the most dysfunctional inmate
privileges, and in a dramatic midnight move, sent incarcerated
leaders to distant prisons. In the fragile stability that followed,a guard was murdered, a long lockdown began, a cell block
rioted, and more than two hundred men spent a long, hot summer outside in the Big Yard. Numerous officers
rebelled, demanding a brutal crackdown and return to super custody. When forty-two refused to take their
posts, the superintendent fired them all.
The courts intervened, politics changed, and in 1981, a charismatic correctional leadercharming in
public and tyrannical in privatetook command of a newly created department of corrections. With skill
and determination, he imposed his will and transformed Washington corrections. Order returned to the
penitentiary.
Author Christopher Murraygraduated from Stanford University and the University of Washington. His award-
winning consulting firm provided planning, research, and policy analysis to correctional agencies nationwide.
A terrific, if unsettling, even chilling, read.James B. Jacobs, Warren E. Burger Professor of Law at NYU and
author of Stateville: The Penitentiary in Mass Society
This is the most comprehensive analysis I have ever seen of the evolution of a state prison system.Joan Petersilia,
Adelbert H. Sweet Professor of Law at Stanford Law School
.
On the cover:Painting of Five Fingers Rapids foundin the papers of William J. Woodin.
Artist unknown.All for the Greed of Gold (May)
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Faith of FoolsA Journal of the Klondike
Gold Rush
William Shape
ISBN 978-0-87422-160-2
Paperback $24.95
Slick as a MittenEzra Meekers Klondike
Enterprise
Dennis Larsen
ISBN 978-0-87422-302-6
Paperback $24.95
NEWTITLES
Also of Interest
MAY
Illustrations maps notes
bibliography index
6" x 9" 326 pages
Paperback $27.95
ISBN 978-0-87422-335-4
3WSUPRESS.WSU.EDU ORDER BY PHONE 800-354-7360
All for the Greed of GoldWill Woodins Klondike Adventure
Edited by Catherine Holder Spude
When the steamship Cleveland left Seattles docks on March
1, 1898, William Jay Woodin was on board, traveling with his
father and several others. They were chasing the nineteenth
centurys last great gold rush, but instead of mining, they
planned to earn their fortune by providing supplies.
Enhanced with family photographs and skillfully edited,
Wills writingsincluding diaries, a short story, and a
delightfully candid 1910 memoirrecord events, emotions,
and reflections, as well as his youthful wonder at the beauty
surrounding him. Unlike many stampeders, Wills party chose
to take both the White Pass Trail and the Tutshi Trail, and hisstory offers a rare glimpse into ordeals suffered along this less
common route.
Wills experiences also epitomize a mostly untold story of how
working-class men endured a grueling Yukon journey. He was
part of an emerging middle class who, with minimal formal
education, left farm life to seek urban employment. Whether
packing tons of goods on their backs or building boats at the
Windy Arm camp, Will brings to light the cooperation andcamaraderie necessary for survival.
Editor Catherine Holder Spudeis a historian and archaeologist. Her book about the legend of Soapy Smith
was a finalist for a Western Writers of America Spur Award. She has written popular history for magazines and
newspapers as well as numerous journal articles.
Will Woodins story is new, interesting, and well written. What the editor has given us is truly a gift.Charlene L.
Porsild, Ph.D., President /CEO, Montana History Foundation
A detailed and entertaining description of the other route to the Yukon gold fields.Dennis Larsen, author of
Slick as a Mitten
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NEWTITLES
4 SPRING 2016 WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSIT Y PRESS
The Mapmakers EyeDavid Thompson on the Columbia Plateau
Jack Nisbet
ISBN 978-0-87422-285-2
Paperback $29.95
Also of Interest
The Fur Trade GambleNorth West Company on the Pacific Slope,
18001820
Lloyd Keith and John C. Jackson
Before Hudsons Bay Company domination, two companies
attempted large-scale corporate trapping and vied to
command Northwest fur trade. On one side were the North
West Companys Montreal entrepreneurs, and on the other,
American John Jacob Astor and his Pacific Fur Company.
They were businessmen first and explorers second, and their
era is a story of grand risk in both lives and capitala global
mercantile initiative in which controlling the mouth of the
Columbia River and developing the China market were major
prizes. Traversing the world in search of profit, these fur
moguls gambled on the price of beaver pelts, purchases of
ships and trade goods, international commerce laws, and the
effects of war.
In the process, partners and clerks quarreled, surveyed
transportation routes, built trading posts, and worked to forge
relationships with both French Canadian and Native American
trappers. The loss of valuable natural resources as well as the
intermixing of cultures significantly impacted relationshipswith the regions native peoples. Ultimately, their expansion
attempts were economically unsuccessful. The Astorians sold their holdings to the North West Company,
which later accepted a humiliating 1821 merger.
Drawing from a reservoir of previously unexploited business and personal correspondence, including the
letters of clerk Finnan McDonald and a revealing personal memorandum by Fort George partner James Keith,
the authors examine Columbia drainage operations and offer a unique business perspective. Both have
written extensively on related subjects. The late Lloyd Keiths major work is North to Athabaska: Documents
of the North West Company, 18001821. The late John C. Jacksons many publications include Shadow of theTetons: David E. Jackson and the Claiming of the American West, and Children of the Fur Trade: Forgotten Metis of
the Pacific Northwest.
FEBRUARY
Illustrations maps notes
bibliography index
6 x 9 300 pages
Hardbound $42.00
ISBN 978-0-87422-336-1
Paperback $24.95
ISBN 978-0-87422-340-8
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BA
CKINPRINT
5WSUPRESS.WSU.EDU ORDER BY PHONE 800-354-7360
JUNE
Illustrations maps
bibliography index
6" x 9" 240 pages
Paperback $24.95
ISBN 978-0-87422-337-8
The Snake River-Palouse and theInvasion of the Inland NorthwestClifford E. Trafzer and Richard D. Scheuerman
Originally released in 1986 as Renegade Tribe, this revised edition offers
a new introduction by the authors and a new foreword by Chief Tilcoaxdescendent Wilson Wewah. The award-winning title sensitively retells the
compelling saga of western expansion and Indianwhite conflict from a
Native American perspective. The Snake River-Palouse resisted immigrant
encroachment and fought a losing battle to retain their way of life. The
Whitman Massacre, as well as a refusal to enter into U.S. government
treaties, left them with a hostile reputation among the newcomers. With
settlers increasingly demanding their removal and no reservation of their
own, these Inland Northwest Indians faced extermination by the end of
the nineteenth century. Examining written and oral evidence left by both
indigenous and white cultures, this book presents the Snake River-Palouse
as important actors in events and demonstrates how their initiative and
decisions influenced the course of history.
Clifford E. Trafzeris the Distinguished Professor of History and the Rupert Costo Chair in American Indian
Affairs at the University of California-Riverside, and Richard D. Scheuerman is Associate Professor of
Curriculum and Instruction at Seattle Pacific University.
Isaac I. StevensYoung Man in a HurryKent D. Richards
Originally released in 1993, this revised edition has a new preface. Washington
Territorys first governor remains as controversial today as he was to his frontier
contemporaries during the Pacific Northwests most turbulent erathe mid-
1850s. Indian wars, martial law, and bitter political disputes, as well as the
establishment of a new, sound governmental system, characterized Isaac I.
Stevenss years as governor (1853-1857). Richardss definitive biography isone of the essential works on the history of early Washington, as well as of
northern Idaho and western Montana, which in the 1850s were included in
Washington Territory.
Kent D. Richardsis an emeritus professor of history at Central Washington
University.
APRIL
Illustrations maps notes
bibliography index
6" x 9" 464 pages
Paperback $29.95
ISBN 978-0-87422-338-5
New Distributed Title!
Chance for GloryThe Innovation and Triumph of the Washington State 1916 Rose Bowl Team
Darin Watkins
ISBN 978-1-943164-40-0 Limited edition hardbound $25.00
ISBN 978-1-943164-48-6 Paperback $22.95 (Available in December)
Chance for Glorychronicles the untold story of the magical 1915 season, when the
innovative strategies of Native Amerian coach William Lone Star Dietz transformed
undersized players into giants on the football field and led Washington State to victoryin the first Rose Bowl.
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Remote WondersAn Explorers Guide to Southeast Oregon
Melvin R. Adams
Designed with road tours in mind, Remote Wondersis an ideal guide to
Oregons Outback. At first glance the landscape looks desolatea barren
realm of basalt rims, high cold deserts, dry lakes, and vast expanses ofgrass and sage. In fact, it is a place where petite flowers bloom on rock
shelves, tiny organisms thrive in hot springs, and the pika builds miniature
haystacks. There is also human history, evidenced by petroglyphs and
remnants of ranches, mills, and mines. This magnificent corner is a rich
wonderland of mountains, forests, creatures, and more.
Born and raised in this wild steppe country, the authors affection for the
region shines through. Individual chapters highlight notable natural and
historical features. The book includes essays, numerous photos, and a
pull-out map keyed to selected sites. Supplemental information offers
advice regarding side trips, when to travel, what to bring, and potential
hazards. Ultimately, Melvin R. Adams hopes his book will entice readers
to visit and delight in remote southeast Oregon.
RECENTRELEASES
Illustrations maps notes
bibliography index6" x 9" 270 pages
Paperback $29.95
ISBN 978-0-87422-333-0
Illustrations maps
bibliography index
6" x 9" 186 pagesPaperback $19.95
ISBN 978-0-87422-332-3
6 SPRING 2016 WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSIT Y PRESS
Wagons to the WillametteCaptain Levi Scott and the Southern Route to Oregon,
18441847
Levi Scott and James Layton Collins
Edited by Stafford J. Hazelett
After an arduous overland journey, Levi Scott and his son John arrived
in Oregon City in November 1844. Scott joined Jesse Applegates 1846
expedition seeking a better, safer way through the Cascades to the
Willamette Valley. Their new southern route wound through the Umpqua
Valley, three mountain ranges, and the Black Rock Desert before meeting
the established California Trail.
Applegate recruited emigrants and while others went ahead to prepare
the road, Scott led the initial wagon train west. He details a harrowing
trip. Retracing the trail in 1847 and 1849, he again faced narrow escapesand deadly encounters with Native Americans.
Edited and extensively annotated, Scotts unpublished autobiography
has become Wagons to the Willamette. An exceptional contribution to
Oregon Trail history, it is the only first-hand account written by someone
who not only searched for the southern route but also accompanied its
first wagon train.
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Instilling SpiritStudents and Citizenship at Washington State, 1892-1942
William L. Stimson
Many students at Pullmans newly opened Agricultural College,
Experimental Station and School of Science of the State of Washington
were simply grateful for the opportunity to earn a college degree, butthey received another benefit. Despite an international trend toward
sequestering professors, the countrys small institutions provided
personal attention.
From 1893 to 1916, third president Enoch A. Bryan held to that
philosophy, believing the best education came through experiences.
He deliberately hired active learning advocates who were willing to
be accessible, and campus spirit and involvementwhether in music,
sports, politics, or debatebecame an essential part of learning. As they
participated in mascot antics, the Greek system, upheavals in student
body politics, and the 1936 strike, the young scholars also deeply
influenced faculty and administrators.
Instilling Spirit traces Washington State Universitys early decades, offering
a unique perspective on the state college experience.
Developing the Pacific NorthwestThe Life and Work of Asahel Curtis
William H. Wilson
As a young man Asahel Curtis worked in his older brother Edwards
successful Seattle photography studio, but a conflict over Klondike
gold rush photographs led to their lifelong estrangement, and Asaheleventually opened his own business. Even though he earned his living
as a commercial photographer, his major focus was outside the camera
lens.
Asahel married and purchased a farm in the Yakima Valley. He became
a dedicated member of Washingtons good roads movement, striving
for economic development and increased tourism. He was a founder of
the Seattle Mountaineers Club and had an enduring passion for Mount
Rainier, fighting for the advancement of Mount Rainier National Park.
This first full-length biography of the photographer/booster/mountaineer
offers comparisons to work by his brother and other contemporaries. It
examines his family and business relationships, his involvement with
eastern Washington irrigation and cooperative marketing, and his beliefs
about resource development.
Illustrations map notes
bibliography index6" x 9" 334 pages
Paperback $29.95
ISBN 978-0-87422-331-6
RECENTRELEASES
7WSUPRESS.WSU.EDU ORDER BY PHONE 800-354-7360
Illustrations notes index
6" x 9" 198 pages
Paperback $22.95ISBN 978-0-87422-334-7
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8 SPRING 2016 WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSIT Y PRESS
B
ESTSELLERS
Barnyards and Birkenstocks
Why Farmers and Environmentalists Need Each Other
Don Stuart
Rural America faces two dangerous trendsthe loss of farms and damage to
ecosystemsand the author believes a major cause is political deadlock. He
proposes a radical solution: collaboration.
$28.95 / 322-4 / Pbk. / 288 pages (2014)
Coal Wars
Unions, Strikes, and Violence in Depression-Era Central WashingtonDavid Bullock
Conflicting labor alliances turn coal miners and their families against each
othera heated, violent battle that unleashes enduring bitterness. Coal Wars tells
the fateful story.
$24.95 / 325-5 / Pbk. / 208 pages (2014)
Encounters with the People
Written and Oral Accounts of Nez Perce Life to 1858
Compiled and edited by Dennis Baird, Diane Mallickan, and William R. Swagerty
Organized both chronologically and thematically, this gorgeous reference is an
edited, annotated compilation of unique primary sources related to Nez PercehistoryNative American oral histories, diary excerpts, military reports, maps,
and more.
$50.00 / 330-9 / Hdb. / 544 pages (2015)
In the Path of Destruction
Eyewitness Chronicles of Mount St. Helens
Richard Waitt
A geologist with intimate knowledge of Mount St. Helens, Richard Waitt
chronicles the eruption through unforgettable, riveting narrativesthe heart
of a masterful chronology that also delivers engrossing science, history, and
journalism.
$22.95 / 323-1 / Pbk. / 416 pages (2015)
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B
ESTSELLERS
9WSUPRESS.WSU.EDU ORDER BY PHONE 800-354-7360
John Mullan
The Tumultuous Life of a Western Road Builder
Keith C. Petersen
This West Point engineering graduate completed the Wests first highway. Much
of Mullans 625-mile triumph became part of Interstate 90. Now Idahos State
Historian takes a fresh look at the soldier/explorer.
$32.95 / 321-7 / Pbk. / 352 pages (2014)
Made in Hanford
The Bomb that Changed the WorldHill Williams
At an isolated location along the Columbia River in 1944, the worlds first
plutonium factory became operational, producing fuel for the atomic bomb
dropped on Nagasaki, Japan, during World War II. FormerSeattle Timesscience
writer Hill Williams traces the amazing, tragic storyfrom the dawn of nuclear
science to Cold War testing in the Marshall Islands.
$22.95 / 307-1 / Pbk. / 208 pages (2011)
Native Trees of Western Washington
A Photographic Guide
Kevin W. Zobrist
Zobrist, a WSU Extension professor, confers a delightful, enlightening, and
lavishly illustrated examination of regional indigenous treesall from a forestry
specialists unique perspective.
$18.95 / 324-8 / Pbk. / 160 pages (2014)
The Restless NorthwestA Geological Story
Hill Williams
In an easy, conversational style, The Restless Northwestprovides a brief overview
of the remarkable geological processes that have shaped the Pacific Northwest.
$19.95 / 250-0 / Pbk. / 176 pages (2002)
Washington State
Book Award, 2003
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River Song
Naxiyamtma (Snake River-Palouse) Oral Traditions from Mary Jim, Andrew George,
Gordon Fisher, and Emily Peone
Collected and edited by Richard D. Scheuerman and Clifford E. Trafzer
Foreword by Carrie Jim Schuster
With color plates by John Clement
Although forced to scatter, Snake River-Palouse people continued their oral customs.
Four elders who had once lived in the traditional waygathering, hunting, and
fishingshare their stories.
$27.95 / 327-9 / Pbk. / 228 pages (2015)
B
ESTSELLERS
10 SPRING 2016 WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSIT Y PRESS
Surviving the Oregon Trail, 1852
As Told by Mary Ann and Willis Boatman and Augmented with Accounts byother Overland Travelers
Weldon Willis Rau
The 1852 overland migration was the largest on record, and also a year in which
cholera took a terrible toll in lives. Presented here are firsthand accounts of those
fateful times, including the words and thoughts of a young married couple, Mary
Ann and Willis Boatman.
$35.00 / 237-1 / Hdb. / 256 pages (2001)
$23.95 / 238-8 / Pbk. / 256 pages (2001)
Wild Place
A History of Priest Lake, Idaho
Kris Runberg Smith with Tom Weitz
Wild Placefocuses on little-known yet captivating stories of the colorful characters
who navigated demanding physical, political, and economic challenges whiletrying to tame Idahos Priest Lake.
$24.95 / 329-3 / Pbk. / 240 pages (2015)
Yellowstone Summers
Touring with the Wylie Camping Company in Americas First National ParkJane Galloway Demaray
From 1896 to 1905, Wylie Camping Company efforts to feed, shelter, and
guide thousands of Victorian vacationers through relaxed week-long tours of
Yellowstones natural wonders helped define and preserve tourism in the West.
$24.95 / 328-6 / Pbk. / 230 pages (2015)
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11WSUPRESS.WSU.EDU ORDER BY PHONE 800-354-7360
SELECTEDBACKLIST
Be Brave, Tah-hy!
The Journey of Chief
Josephs DaughterJack R. Williams
Illustrations by Jo Proferes
$29.95 / 313-2 / Pbk.Crooked River Country
Wranglers, Rogues, andBarons
David Braly
$24.95 / 293-7 / Pbk.
Finding Chief Kamiakin
The Life and Legacy of aNorthwest Patriot
Richard D. Scheuerman andMichael O. Finley
Photography by John Clement
$34.95 / 297-5 / Pbk.
Across the ColumbiaPlain
Railroad Expansion inthe Interior Northwest,1885-1893
Peter J. Lewty
$21.25 / 114-5 / Pbk.
Battle Ready
The National CoastDefense System and theFortification of PugetSound, 18941925
David M. Hansen
$32.95 / 320-0 / Pbk.
Catastrophe toTriumph
Bridges of the TacomaNarrows
Richard S. Hobbs
$24.95 /289-0 / Pbk.
The Crimson Spoon
Plating Regional Cuisineon the Palouse
Jamie Callison withLinda Burner Augustine
WSU College of Business$38.00 /978-0-615-86917-9
Hdb.
An Election for the Ages
Rossi vs. Gregoire, 2004
Trova Heffernan
Foreword by Secretary ofState Sam Reed
$19.95 / 304-0 / Pbk.
Forgotten Trails
Historical Sources of theColumbias Big Bend Country
Ron Anglin
Edited by Glen W. Lindeman
$19.95 / 116-9 / Pbk.
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SELECTEDBACKLIST
Not As Briefed
From the Doolittle Raid toa German Stalag
Colonel C. Ross Greening
Compiled and edited byDorothy Greening andKaren Morgan Driscoll
$31.95 / 259-3 / Pbk.
Railroad Shutterbug
Jim FredricksonsNorthern Pacific
Jim Fredrickson
$45.00 / 195-4 / Hdb.$29.95 / 197-8 / Pbk.
12 SPRING 2016 WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSIT Y PRESS
Native River
The Columbia Remembered
William D. Layman
$29.95 / 257-9 / Pbk.
Nimrod
Courts, Claims, and Killingon the Oregon Frontier
Ronald B. Lansing
$19.95 / 280-7 / Pbk.
Grand Coulee
Harnessing a Dream
Paul C. Pitzer
$42.00 / 113-8 / Hdb.$24.95 / 110-7 / Pbk.
Lewis & Clark Trail Maps Vol. I
Missouri River between Camp RiverDubois and Fort Mandan
Martin Plamondon II
$30.00 / 232-6 / Hdb.$30.00 / 234-0 / Spiral
Harvest Heritage
Agricultural Origins and HeirloomCrops of the Pacific Northwest
Richard D. Scheuerman andAlexander C. McGregor
With color plates by John Clement
$32.95 / 316-3 / Pbk.
Horse Camping [Revised edition]
George Hatley
Photographs by Lewis Portnoy
Foreword by Juli S. Thorson
$24.95 / 303-3 / Pbk.
In the Shadow of theMountain
The Spirit of the CCC
Edwin G. Hill
$14.50 / 073-5 / Pbk.
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Snowbound
Ladd Hamilton
$19.95 / 154-1 / Pbk.
The Way We Ate
Pacific NorthwestCooking, 18431900
Jacqueline B. Williams
$18.95 / 136-7 / Pbk.
Red Light to Starboard
Recalling the ExxonValdezDisaster
Angela Day
$19.95 / 318-7 / Pbk.
This Bloody Deed
The Magruder Incident
Ladd Hamilton
$19.95 / 107-7 / Pbk.
Winnetou
Karl May
Translated and abridged byDavid Koblick
$16.95 / 179-4 / Pbk.
13WSUPRESS.WSU.EDU ORDER BY PHONE 800-354-7360
SELECTEDBACKLIST
Washington Territory
Robert E. Ficken
$35.00 / 249-4 / Hdb.$22.95 / 261-6 / Pbk.
Steam to Diesel
Jim FredricksonsRailroading Journal
Jim Fredrickson
$45.00 / 245-6 / Hdb.$29.95 / 246-3 / Pbk.
2015SpurAward,Western
WritersofA
merica
Spanning Washington
Historic Highway Bridgesof the Evergreen State
Craig Holstine andRichard Hobbs
$24.95 / 281-4 / Pbk.
Rugged Mercy
A Country Doctor inIdahos Sun Valley
Robert Wright
$26.95 / 314-9 / Pbk.
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14 SPRING 2016 WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSIT Y PRESS
ORDERINGIN
FORMATION
DISCOUNTS AND SALES POLICIES
Retail Discounts
Washington State University Press offers the
following discount schedule on books purchased
for resale:
12 books purchased ...................... 20% off
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Titles with prices followed by an (s) are available
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A 20-percent discount is offered on direct salesto schools or libraries. Please contact the order
fulfillment department for more information
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Books received by customers in damaged condition
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Please check your order promptly.
Short shipments and damaged books must be reported within thirty days of invoice date.
New titles will be shipped upon publication.
ORDERING INFORMATIONISBN Quantity Unit Quantity
978-0-87422 Ordered Title Price* x Price
New Titles
339-2 (Mar.) _____ Unusual Punishment (pbk.) $22.95 _______
335-4 (May) _____ All for the Greed of Gold (pbk.) $27.95 _______
336-1 (Feb.) _____ The Fur Trade Gamble (hdb.) $42.00 _______
340-8 (Feb.) _____ The Fur Trade Gamble (pbk.) $24.95 _______
337-8 (June) _____ The Snake River-Palouse and Invasion (pbk.) $24.95 _______
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