CAMPBELL MARLOWE AMELIA EARHART JANET WHITNEY
... CAMPBELL MARLOWE AMELIA EARHART JANET WHITNEY R. E. FULTON in Spain ...
... CAMPBELL MARLOWE AMELIA EARHART JANET WHITNEY R. E. FULTON in Spain ...
... By Ka@&HL, FITZMAURICE and vON HUENEFELD. Illustrated. 10s. 6d. net 20 Hrs. 40 Mins.: Our Flight in the Friendship By AMELIA EARHART. Illustrated. 10s. 6d. net Flying with Lindbergh By DoNaLp KEYHOE. An intimate study. Illustrated. 10s. 6d. net The World ...
... system of advertising in which each book is taken as a problem as far as possible unrelated to other books. Perhaps the Amelia Earhart could be marketed by means additional to the inevitable ones : at least, Harrap thought so, and here, No. 1, is a small ...
... autobiography of a waiter, of which over 12,000 copies have been sold at the original price. (Harrap) Last Flight, by Amelia Earhart. ss. The famous airwoman’s own day-to-day story of the trip that was to end in her death, compiled from her diaries and ...
... taken by Andrée in 1897 and discovered at his camp, besides many maps, plans, and diagrams. The Atlantic airwoman, Miss Amelia Earhart, is shortly to marry Mr. George P. Putnam, the explorer and member of the publishing firm. * * * Mr. Edgar Jepson, the ...
... It concerned Amelia Earhart’s Last Flight, which Harrap’s published last Friday. Mr. Grey returned his review copy of Last Flight with a letter explaining why he did not propose to review the book in the Aeroplane. ““ Mrs. Amelia Earhart Putnam *, wrote ...
... received :—A. & C. Black, Ltd., £2 2s. : Horace Marshall & Son, L.td. £5 Ss. * % Amelia Earhart's Posthumous Book ALMOST as though she had a premonition of her fate, Amelia Earhart sent back her diaries and notes at each landing-place on her journey by air ...
... will leave Mr. Gollancz's comparative typographical abstinence. Her own story compiled from her diaries and log-books AMELIA EARHART'S Last Flight “A tnumph of lterary suspense—so that we, though knowing the fate to come, cannot but hold our breath while ...
... 123 of this issue), Mr. G. G. Grey, editor of the Aeroplane, observed that he * did, in fact, read quite a good deal of Amelia Earhart’s book, in the way that the average reviewer reads a book, namely, by turning up odd pages at random and reading any ...