Books

Our catalog of all books of all genres and formats.

  • Books,  Featured,  Legal History & Biography

    Meltsner’s Cruel and Unusual: Inside Story of the NAACP Inc. Fund Lawyers Who Fought to Abolish the Death Penalty

    Michael Meltsner's inside account, accessible to a wide audience and reading like a novel, of a small band of Fund lawyers and their 9-year struggle to end the death penalty. New edition features a 2011 Foreword by death-penalty author Evan Mandery of CUNY's John Jay College of Criminal Justice, as well as a new Preface by the author. In paperback and 9 ebook formats. The mission seemed as impossible then as going to the moon...

  • Books,  Featured,  Fiction

    James Fenimore Cooper spins tale of sailing, smuggling and romance in The Water-Witch

    This unabridged and complete presentation of THE WATER-WITCH is unlike any reproduction of a vintage printing available (as is apparent in Previewing other offerings). It is unlike both new formattings which use small print to pack the story into half the pages (or give half the book), and typical vintage republications, whose distracting stray marks and printer artifacts mar the reading experience. Instead, the Quid Pro edition is in the quality collection of Digitally Remastered Books™, a process that retains the nostalgia and font size of earlier printings while reducing stray marks, broken letters, and blotched print. James Fenimore Cooper (1789-1851) was one of the most popular and creative American…

  • Books,  University of Chicago Law Review

    University of Chicago Law Review‘s issue 3 of 2012 now out: internet censorship, spreading pollution, juries nullifying comparative fault

    A leading law review offers a quality ebook edition. This third issue of 2012 features articles from internationally recognized legal scholars, and extensive research in Comments authored by University of Chicago Law School students. Contents for the issue include: ARTICLES: “Orwell’s Armchair,” by Derek E. Bambauer “Jury Nullification in Modified Comparative Negligence Regimes,” by Eli K. Best & John J. Donohue III “Allocating Pollution,” by Arden Rowell COMMENTS: “A State-Centered Approach to Tax Discrimination under 11501(b)(4) of the 4-R Act” “A Felony, I Presume? 21 USC 841(b)’s Mitigating Provision and the Categorical Approach in Immigration Proceedings” “Home Is Where the Court Is: Determining Residence for Child Custody Matters under the…

  • Books,  Classics of the Social Sciences

    Neil Smelser’s Foundational Theory of Collective Behavior Adds Marx’s Extensive New Introduction

    This golden anniversary edition is a modern take on a sociological and social psychology classic. Features a reflective new Preface by the author--and an extensive, analytical Foreword by MIT's Gary Marx; he notes, "The book is elegant, original, carefully crafted and forcefully argued. In its totality, it is a fine example of an effort to define a field, identify major types and systematically connect central variables." Available now in hardcover, paperback, and 9 ebook formats.

  • Books,  Classics of the Social Sciences

    Timeless TVA and the Grass Roots by Philip Selznick now in modern edition, in print and eBooks

    One of the great works of sociology, digging into government, business and organizations in an intense and telling way. The book is foundational as to modern organizational theory and practice. New Foreword by Jonathan Simon. All formats have embedded page numbers from the previous editions, for full continuity of citation and ease of classroom adoptions. Digital formats include active Contents and linked subject Index.

  • Books,  Journeys and Memoirs Series

    Historian Jerold Auerbach Writes Against the Grain, His Essays and Columns Collected

    A new book by this recognized historian, writer and professor emeritus at Wellesley College, Against the Grain: A Historian’s Journey collects many accessible and heartfelt essays and book chapters from his greatest works over the years. Available in hardcover, paperback, and leading eBook formats. “I was exceedingly fortunate to teach (for forty years) in an elite undergraduate college, where I could mentor intelligent young women who were eager to learn. But Wellesley, still a bastion of Christian privilege a century after its founding, continued to experience (and demurely tolerate) dismaying episodes of anti-Semitism. How ironic that Wellesley and Israel, each in its own distinctive way, had converged to liberate me…

  • Books,  Classics of the Social Sciences

    Émile Durkheim’s classic Professional Ethics and Civic Morals is Digitally Remastered to eBook, Hardcover, and Paperback editions

    Émile Durkheim’s foundational lecture series on civic roles and duties and the concept of the State, and on ethics in professions and trade groups, is at last presented in a quality digital edition (and new paperback). The ebook features usable formatting, linked notes and Contents, embedded pagination from standard print editions, the original Index, and hyperaccurate rendition of the original text. Previous ebooks—at any price, to buy or rent—failed to produce it accurately or format it properly. His lectures were in fact entitled “Leçons de Sociologie Physique…” not “Lemons de Sociologie Physique…” and his name is not “Durkhcim.” Most of all, their failure to indent each new paragraph made the…

  • Books,  Fiction

    Barbara Wester pens imaginative novel The Illuminatrix for young adults and old adults

    “When you find the truth, you may find that you cannot control its power.” Would you tell the truth if it meant losing your job? Would you tell the truth if it meant challenging your government? Would you tell the truth if it meant a death sentence? What if you had to decide today? Sixteen-year-old Anne Quinn longs for adventure, but she is an apprentice Illuminatrix to the King of Deneresh for whom she keeps official records. Called “Faeries’ Child” by the Grandmother who trained her in the skills of writing and languages, Anne knows nothing of her parents and vows that one day she will uncover the truth of…

  • Books,  Featured,  History and Heroes

    Classic Bio of Ben Franklin by John Morse is a New Paperback, a Digitally Remastered Book

    John Torrey Morse’s beloved biography of Benjamin Franklin, originally published in 1889 in the American Statesmen Series, is presented as a quality new paperback. The Digitally Remastered™ edition removes underlines and distracting stray marks, repairs missing parts of words, and is presented with enhanced, clearer text as compared to most such republications today. It even includes page one, unlike most modern reprints. Benjamin Franklin (1706–1790) was America’s original Renaissance Man. Most noted as one of the country’s Founding Fathers, the first Postmaster General, and a statesman, he was also an accomplished writer, printer, scientist, inventor, and musician. He was quite simply “The First American.” Morse’s entertaining biography of the great…

  • Books,  Legal History & Biography,  QP Blog

    Philip Schrag’s Counsel for the Deceived Goes Inside NYC’s First Consumer Protection Agency: Schemes, Humor and Insight

    Protect the consumer. Stop the schemes and ripoffs. Make law work for the little guy. All easier said than done. Memoirs and case studies of fraud schemes and consumer protection from an insider who helped to found New York City’s first consumer watchdog agency, Counsel for the Deceived is a funny, candid account of fraud and institutional paralysis written by a then-newby lawyer, the city’s Consumer Advocate. Philip Schrag was appointed by former Miss America Bess Myerson to defend consumer rights. In six case histories, he documents the schemes of the “commercial underworld” and the inability of courts and government agencies to respond in time. This 4oth anniversary edition of…