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EBONY is the flagship magazine of Johnson Publishing. Founded in 1945 by John H. Johnson, it still maintains the highest global circulation of any African American-focused magazine.
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Imogene Brown, wanting to settle down and marry, travels by train from Massachusetts to Texas to attend a matchmaking dance. At the dance, she meets several kind, handsome, eligible men, but no one really sparks a chord within her until she meets Adam. Adam Kelso loves his life. He trains horses on his large ranch. The only thing missing from his life is someone to love. When he hears about the matchmaking dance, he immediately decides to attend. Imogene and Adam marry the very night they meet at the dance and start to plan their lives together. There’s only one problem, and her name is Dorothy Blanchard. Will Imogene be able to trust that Adam is telling the truth, or will their marriage end?
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"A good story, well told, of a sliver of life in Richmond, a small, elite-driven capital city in the young nation's most influential state." —Publishers Weekly George Wythe clung to the mahogany banister as he inched down the staircase of his comfortable Richmond, Virginia, home. Doubled over in agony, he stumbled to the kitchen in search of help. There he found his maid, Lydia Broadnax, and his young protegé, Michael Brown, who were also writhing in distress. Hours later, when help arrived, Wythe was quick to tell anyone who would listen, "I am murdered." Over the next two weeks, as Wythe suffered a long and painful death, insults would be added to his mortal injury. I Am Murdered tells ...
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On a Sunday afternoon in 1959, in a small town on Long Island, 11 year old Ken Spooner watched along with most everyone as his personal playhouse, the Knapp Mansion, burned to the ground. Over 40 years passed before he would write a short story memoir of that day, triggering a very long journey through the first decade of the 21st century, to discover just who the Knapps were (no one seemed to know) and to find out who the arsonist was (that was the easy part). Through a folksy interwoven narrative, the reader discovers, as he did in realtime, the unwritten history of one of the Highest-Society, Lowest-Profile families America's gilded age has ever produced. Travel inside the many Knapp mansions, where 5 US Presidents and many icons of the 19th & 20th centuries were guests. This is Spooner's third book.
Vols. for 1869- include Annual report of the Geological Survey of Indiana.