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Description: A lapel pin showing the Trylon and Perisphere, linked by a chain to the number "39".
Description: Blue and orange souvenir pennant showing the Trylon and Perisphere.
"THE CATALOGUE OF AMERICAN COLLECTIBLES covers the range of the most common collectibles from advertising and packaging, through toys and dolls, music, china, glass, plastic and everyday domestic items to commemorative items from all areas of life, including entertainment, politics, and sport. Beautifully illustrated with color photography, each of these areas is fully explored, with illustrations of the most likely finds, and the occasional rarity that the lucky buyer may stumble upon." THis book has 176 pages and is profusely illustrated.
Packed with descriptions and current values for items readily available at flea markets or garage sales, this book contains listings for 25,000 collectables representing virtually every collectable category on today's market: old books, ornaments, toys, cookie jars, and movie memorabilia. 750 photos.
Provides descriptions and price listings for such American antiques as pottery, games, comic books, cookie cutters, children's toys, and beer bottles.
Vols. 24-52 include the proceedings of the A.N.A. convention. 1911-39.
Like millions of other young Americans in the 1930s, Charles Furey grew up surrounded by the images and memories of World War I, not knowing that he was part of a generation bred for another war. Pearl Harbor changed all that. In 1942 he enlisted in the Navy and, for the next three years, fought in a war that transformed him, the nation, and the world. From that time Furey has fashioned this superbly written memoir that follows him from his stateside training, his service as an air crewman on a patrol bomber, his long recovery from a fiery plane crash, all the way to his poignant homecoming. Along with harrowing accounts of air actions over the South Pacific and grim descriptions of wounded men in hospitals, Going Back includes many vividly portrayed characters and offers remarkable insight. Readers will long remember such men as Lieutenant Morrison, the man whose small gesture forged an intense camaraderie among his crew, and Murphy, the Marine whose humor helped dull the pain of Furey's wounds. Nor will they soon forget the author's reflections on the fate that history held for him, his friends, and all those who came of age with him, or his stunning evocation of a period of great national change. Going Back provides a colorful and honest recollection of the war years and addresses such timeless themes as loyalty, humor, family, and profound loss.