A trunk dripping blood, discovered at a railway station in Stockton in 1906, launched one of the most famous murder investigations in California history—still debated by crime historians. In 1913,
Grey House Publishing has undertaken publication of the second edition of this two-volume reference (formerly published by ABC-CLIO), significantly reorganizing the presentation, adding a substantial
Grossman, an expert in technology law and a regular columnist for the Miami Herald, supplies an accessible and sometimes humorous overview of technology law for business people, law students, and lawy
Grossman, an expert in technology law and a regular columnist for the Miami Herald , supplies an accessible and sometimes humorous overview of technology law for business people, law students, and la
Each chapter in this two-volume reference reprints the text of a constitutional amendment, congressional transcripts of the debate, historical background documents, newspaper articles from different r
From Jack Abramoff, the lobbyist and businessman recently convicted of defrauding American Indian tribes and corrupting public officials, to John Peter Zenger, the newspaper publisher whose 1735 trial
The Sighted Singer makes available a revised and significantlyexpanded version of Against Our Vanishing and includes Grossman's recent treatise " Summa Lyrica: A Primer of the Commonplaces in Speculat
The stunning conclusion to the New York Times bestselling Magicians trilogy Quentin Coldwater has been cast out of Fillory, the secret magical land of his childhood dreams. With nothing left to lose
Haboring secret preoccupations with a magical land he read about in a childhood fantasy series, Quentin Coldwater is unexpectedly admitted into an exclusive college of magic and rigorously educated in
In a sequel to the best-selling novel The Magicians, after Quentin and his old friend Julia, leave Fillory on a magical sailing ship, they end up back in Quentin's home in Chesterton, Massachusetts, a
What could possibly impel a relatively privileged twenty-four-year-old American-serving in the U.S. Army in Germany in 1952-to swim across the Danube River to what was then referred to as the Soviet Z