—The Sound of Freedom, Truth & Justice has a Familiar Ring wherever it is Rung — in South Africa, the U.S., and all of Christendom...!
Below is information on 3 semi-historical novels of South Africa, each completely different.
These hardy, rustic Boers (pronounced boo-ers, meaning "farmers"; the German name Bower being related to the Dutch Boer) were not unlike the American Amish and Mennonites, and hard-working, godly Southerners, according to the Puritan Work Ethic, who just wanted to be left alone, to grow their crops, raise their livestock and families, ply their trade, and live a moral life of wholesomeness and hard work to honor God and provide a needed service to their kinsmen—but others with alien mindsets or evil hearts always try to interfere, dominate, steal, oppress, destroy.
I spent many months on each of these (and each was a rewarding experience); they are all fantastic, transport you to another time, are insightful, entertaining, gripping novels, based largely on historical fact, interwoven with a romanticized story line. Each of these would be an incredible movie or miniseries... that is, if any movie producer could be found that cared about historical truth and a wholesome story line.
Please tell others, email around, post this page's link at your website.
- Bulala: A True Story of South Africa (2009) Cuan Elgin, [Robert Alan Balaicius, Editor, contributor] 392 pages (including 3 maps), paperback, 18.38 + P&H;
[1838 was the Day of the Covenant, the most special day in Afrikaner history.]
Bulala is Zulu for “kill the wizard!” (wizard being what they first called the whites). The gripping tale of the beginnings of a small, brave, Christian nation born of both ends of the spectrum: conflict, turmoil, and tragedy as well as love, dedication, and hard work—this exciting historical account of the history of South Africa (from earliest times to the end of the 2nd Anglo-Boer War) is woven as a rich tapestry into the form of a novel. Dutch, English, French Huguenot, German, Indian, Irish, Koi, Malay, Portuguese, Scots, Xhosa, Zulu, and other peoples struggle with and against each other in this factual account, which depicts the events as they happened, as well as the beliefs in the hearts and the thoughts in the minds of those people during those times—yet while this moving saga reveals how and why things were done as they were, it does so without condemning or condoning behavior. The reader is free to draw his own conclusions and do his own moralizing. Deeply researched, the Scottish-Irish-descended South African-born author travelled over 15,500 miles [25,000 km.] across South Africa to every historical site mentioned in the narrative, in his first-hand investigative research. You will learn, laugh, and cry—but more importantly, understand the actual events which transpired in this controversial, southern-most African nation, without the bias of the media or the pressured slant of special-interest groups. Apart from being so highly entertaining that you will find it hard to put this book down, the historically accurate presentation will allow the non-South African reader to understand South Africa as well as it can possibly be understood by an outsider. Further, modern nations may possibly learn some lessons and avoid similar pitfalls which may threaten their domestic tranquility. An exciting book: sort of a cross between Shaka Zulu and Little House on the Prairie.
Eustace Mullins read it through several times and remarked,
“This is great, they ought to make a movie out of this one!”
Here is the glowing review by Ilana Mercer [Jewish] author of Into the Cannibal’s Pot: Lessons for America from Post-Apartheid South Africa (Hb., 319pp., available from STM for 20.00 (reg. 25.00) + P&H.
“Cuan Elgin is a rare breed: a born-and-bred South African man; an English-speaking Afrikaner, a Caucasian African, married to a tenth-generation descendant of hardy Trek-Boer pioneers; the dour indefatigable people whom Sir Arthur Conan Doyle described as “one of the most rugged, virile, unconquerable races ever seen upon earth.” Except that Cuan’s “Bulala” is never dour. Uneven, maybe—like the events it describes. Infuriating perhaps too—in part because it pulsates with conspiracy and pooh-poohs politically correct conventions. Nevertheless, Cuan writes with a great heart; his “Bulala” throbs with a passion for the South-Africa landscape and people. In the true tradition of the African storyteller, he lives and breathes Africa. And—also in the true tradition of the same storyteller—his voice is raw and real. Men and authentic Boer women will delight in the action-packed, intertwined story of Boer, Briton and Bantu. (The man knows his firearms!) Decades of emasculation—legal and cultural—have created a hunger among modern men for heroic, historic narrative, fiction and non-fiction. The story of the South African settlers is every bit as epic as that of the American settlers. Despite their comparable foibles and frailties, the last haven’t been blackened by historians as much as the first.”
[The Sequel to Bulala is mostly completed in its writing stage; but Cuan has been preoccupied with more-mundate pursuits such as trying to put food on the table while avoiding becoming the next casuality statistic of white genocide in a nation that has been returned to the law of the jungle in which only the jungle animals have any rights. What most people do not realize—due to being brainwashed with propaganda—the Dutch South Africans never owned the blacks or colored as slaves...! They only hired them as hired hands, and treated them well, just like most American slave owners treated their slaves well, building houses for them, providing food for them, etc. Also, the Dutch did not steal the land from the blacks. Part of it was uninhabited, part of it was purchased from the blacks and the whites built a prosperous civilization out of the wild—to which blacks later thronged. But before the Boers' arrival the blacks had not migrated that far south. When they did, the blacks nearly exterminated the smaller Khoi-Khoi / Khoi-San (Hottentots and Bushmen) and then undertook wars of rape, theft, arson, and extermination (not unlike the American Indians) against a peaceful people. Read these books to learn the truth, not propaganda.]
_________________________________________
- Just One More Chance (2014) Lorne J. Shields / Robert Alan Balaicius, 564pp., pb., 25.00 + P&H.
The story begins in Ireland and progresses like a whirlwind, which, to explain more would give away the suspense of the story. A gripping read you will not be able to put down and one of those rare books that you wish would never end. · One rash decision, a regrettable mistake, can snowball and cause a chain-reaction like an avalanche; so-far reaching one may wonder if it can be outrun even if he flees to the other side of the world. When such a brief mistake is made, as Tom McCauley finds out, it can carry you about like a beach-ball in the ocean, and all you can do is hang on for dear life and pray to God that you land safely, somewhere, eventually. · Here begins a touching story of down-to-earth people (well... most of them) often real life stories from an earlier era. A story of love and romance interwoven with cultures spanning several nations of a bye-gone era, hard work, drama, intrigue, foul-play, good versus evil, faithfulness, respect, devotion, desperation, and hope combined with real historical events. The epic story of all creation is presented in a whirl: a momentary fall from grace followed by repeated attempts at restoration, while battling a myriad of unforeseen obstacles to that goal which creep out of the past into the present like vipers from a pit that just won’t die. You will not be the same after reading this book; you may become a part of the drama itself: your heart knit with those of this story, as if they were family or dear friends. At least, that is how it affected me. Step back into the 1800s and enjoy an amazing story. . . · I cannot help but think of a paragraph penned by the eminent Charles Dickens, which shares similar sentiments with this moving, gripping, lively, fascinating story: “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had nothing before us, we were all going direct to heaven, we were all going direct the other way — in short, the period was so far like the present period, that some of its noisiest authorities insisted on its being received, for good or for evil, in the superlative degree of comparison only.” (A Tale of Two Cities) —Editor, Adapter, Publisher, R.A.B. must read. could be next Hallmark movie / miniseries
Lorne (Lawrence) Shields, born in South Africa and an Irish citizen, was as a young man set to become one of the greatest hits in Nashville, but due to contract licensing, was not released from his South African contract, and thus, sadly, "missed that train".
_________________________________________
- A Rhino Crying a Nation Dying (2015) Jans Rautenbach (South Africa) edited by RAB, 606pp., 6.75” x 9.75”, pb., 32.00 + P&H.
A gripping historical novel similar in plot to “The Turner Diaries” and “The Hunter”; though set in South Africa and much more elaborate; hard to put down; very limited edition of 200 copies printed; which may become valuable collector’s items as a major actor/publisher in South Africa was interested in the book for a movie.
______________________________________________
See also this title (I have reprinted about a dozen and a half in this superb series; inquire for the others)
- The Story of the Nations: South Africa (1894) George M’Call Theal, D.Litt., LL.D., 452pp., + 23 added pages and photos, about the author and rulers of South Africa from Earliest times until its fall; pb., 25.00 + P&H.
_________________________________________
and I also reprint these in plastic-comb bound (but will print in paperback if there is enough interest):
- History of Great Boer Trek and Origin of South African Republics (1899) Hon. Henry Cloete, LL.D., 196pp. comb-bound, 18.00 + P&H.
- The Boer Fight For Freedom (1902) Michael Davitt (Member of Parliament, witnessed the Boer war, resigned in protest
and wrote this book) 600+pp., plastic comb-bound, 35.00 + P&H.
_________________________________________
- The History of the Anglo-Saxons (1841) Sharon Turner (he was a London attorney) complete set in 2 volumes, 1,284pp., pb., 80.00 + P&H; Excellent Book! the classic/definitive work on topic.
-------------------------
Books on Freedom:
- Aaron’s Rod Blossoming (1646) George Gillespie (minister at Edinburgh) 7.25 x 10.25 276pp., Hb., treatise on the Biblical view of separation of church and state; 20.00 + P&H. [This & Civil Magistrate’s Power, Lex Rex, Tenure of Kings and Magistrates, & Vindiciae, main books used by our Founding fathers in establishing our nation.]
- The Civil Magistrates’ Power (1653, retype-set) Thomas Cobbett; 170pp., Hb., 25.00 + P&H.
- Lex Rex (1644) Rutherford, 340p., Hb., (framers of Constitution drew idea “consent of governed” from here; rulers have authority from God, through people, only when rulers obey God) 22.00 + P&H.
- The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates: A Thesis presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Yale University in Candidacy for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy (1649) John Milton, Edited with Introduction and Notes by William Talbot Allison, B.D., Ph.D. (1911) 245pp., pb., 18.00 + P&H.
- Vindiciae Contra Tyrannos, a Defence of Liberty Against Tyrants, Or, of the Lawful Power of the Prince Over the People, and of the People Over the Prince (1579 Latin; 1689 English transl.; 1924 ed. modern type-face w/ hist. intro. by Laski) “Stephanus Junius Brutus,” pen name for Huguenot Reformer Hubert Languet; 229pp., original + Modern Publisher’s 18-page illustr. Hist. Intro. & Note Concerning author of 1924 Historical Intro., by R.A.B., pb., 18.00 + P&H.
- This is a Republic, not a democracy! Let’s keep it that way (1965) Langford, 39pp., 5.00 + P&H.
- The “Dick” Bill and Comments - H.R. 11,654 - “A Bill to Promote the Efficiency of the Militia and for Other Purposes” - To Supersede the Archaic Militia Laws of 1792 (1902) 30pp., 3.50 + P&H. Un-repealable Bill; gun rights cannot be abrogated; militia not the military, comprised of all able-bodied men 18-45.
- Brave Little Holland and What She Taught Us (1894) W.E.Griffis, 252pp., pb., 17.50 + P&H. Excellent/we can learn from.
- Young Folks’ History of The Netherlands (Holland and Belgium) (1878) Alex. Young, 672pp., pb., 36.00 + P&H; excellent; must for all students of our history... tied to the Reformation & eventually the American Revolution; Catholic Spain attempted to exterminate the Protestant Dutch, and at one point, the Dutch were even thinking of blowing up the dykes, returning the land to the sea, and moving en masse to the U.S.. Highly recommended. Not on child’s level by any means; collegiate level by today’s standards.
- Documents of Anglo-American Freedom (retype-set with notes by R.A. Balaicius, entire text of: Magna Charta (1215) Declaration of Arboath (1320) The Dutch Declaration of Independence (1581) 20pp.; For The Colony in Virginea Britannia Lavves Diuine, Morall and Martiall, &c. (1612) Mayflower Compact (1620) Petition of Right (1628) Scottish National Covenant (1638) and the Solemn League and Covenant (1643) Body of Liberties (1641) Governor John Winthrop’s “Little Speech” on Liberty (1645) Agreement of the People (1649) Instrument of Government (1653) Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina (1669) Charlestown, Massachusetts Thanksgiving Proclamation (1676) Frame of Government of Pennsylvania (1682) [English] Bill of Rights (1689) An Essay Towards Present and Future Peace of Europe, William Penn (1693) The Law of Nature in Government [excerpts] (1717) The Virginia Resolves (1765) George Washington’s General Orders to the Continental Army (1756-1775) Declaration of Rights of the Stamp Act Congress (1765) Rights of the Colonists (1772) Fairfax County Resolves (1774) Prayer of Congress (1774) Declaration of the First Continental Congress (1774) Fast Day Proclamation (1776) Constitution of Virginia, Bill of Rights, Virginia Declaration of Rights (1776) Declaration of Independence (1776) Thanksgiving Day Proclamation (1777) Articles of the Confederation and Perpetual Union (1778) Thanksgiving Day Proclamation (1782) Northwest Ordinance (1784) Benjamin Franklin’s Constitutional Convention Address on Prayer (1787) United States Constitution (1787) Letter of Transmittal (of the Continental Congress) (1787) Letter of Transmittal (of the Continental Congress to the President of Congress) (1787) Amendments to the U.S. Constitution (1-10, a.k.a. the Bill of Rights) (1789) George Washington’s Thanksgiving Day Proclamation (1789) John Adam’s Thanksgiving Day Proclamation (1798) Jonathan Trumbull’s Thanksgiving Day Proclamation (1807) James Madison’s Humiliation and Prayer Fast Proclamation (1812) James Buchanan’s Humiliation and Prayer Fast Proclamation (1860); includes 28 color reproduction pages on photographic paper of some of the originals. plastic comb-bound, 532pp., 25.00 + P&H These documents are important for understanding our historical freedom as well as our future prospects of freedom.
- Good-Bye America! Farewell Addresses, Inaugural Speeches, and Other Words of Wisdom From the Founders of Our Republic and Sterling Patriots of Freedom (George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, James Monroe, James Madison, John Q. Adams, A. Jackson, Davy Crockett, Douglas MacArthur) 84pp., compiled by R.A. Balaicius, what these men had to say about government, taxation, government spending, foreign policy, etc., also includes some common law citations showing unconstitutional laws are void and need not be observed (theoretically, from a legal perspective of natural, constitutional, and common law) 6.00 + P&H.
_________________________________________
There can be no freedom or deliverance if God's people are in sin against Him; there must first be true revival:
- The Power of Prayer: The New York Revival of 1858 (1858) Samuel Prime, 237pp., pb,. retypset, notes by R.A. Balaicius; excellent shows moving of God’s Spirit upon His people when they truly seek Him; 16.50 + P&H.
- Historical Collections Relating to Remarkable Periods of the Success of the Gospel / Historical Collections of Accounts of Revival (1754/revised 1845, ed. updated by Horatius Bonar) Gillies, pb., 8.5x11, 600+pp., 35.00 + P&H. The print was small and the book 7x10 so I expanded to 8.5x11 and was able to enlarge the print 19%.
- In the Day of Thy Power: The Scriptural Principles of Revival, Arthur Wallis, 297pp., pb., 15.00 + P&H. This is a book on God moving in His Spirit to bring them to repentance, not a book about “revival meetings.” An incredible book.
- Stories of Great Revivals with Contributions on Revival Work (1906) H. Johnson, Canon Aitken, F.B. Meyer, Stuart Holden, Gipsy Smith; c.420pp., pb., 25.00 + P&H. Chapters: Evangel. Revival of 18th Century England; Evangel. Revival of 18th Century Scotland; Evangel. Revival of 18th Century Wales; Evangel. Revival of 18th Cent. Ireland; Awakenings of 1858-1862 England, of 1858-1862 Scotland, of 1858-1862 Wales, of 1858-1862 North of Ireland; Work of Moody & Sankey 1873 - 1875; 1881-1884; Revival in Wales, 1904-1905; Torry-Alexander Mission, 1903-1905.
- Does God Repent...? Can God Change His Mind...? [And an Utter Demolishment of the Humanistic Myth of Man’s “Free Will” and Arminianism], Balaicius, 506pp., 25.00 + P&H. Dovetails nicely with God and Evil and The Sovereignty of God.... Lively, profound, revealing, thought provoking, convincing thought, logic, Scripture. Exposes the subversion of true Christian faith in counter reformation re-introducing false theology of Origen and Pelagius and corruption of modern church by Jesuits and crypto-jews and terribly deceived humanists such as Schleiermacher, Kierkegaard, Spinoza, Barth, Schweitzer, Erasmus of Rotterdam, and many more, including undermining of Puritan church by Solomon Stoddard, and much more; also dissects the false theology from one chapter of two different books; one by Dr. Normal Geisler and one by Brother Andrew.
P&H = 10% (4.50 minimum) within the U.S.
_________________________________________
ready in a few weeks:
- The Liberty Document: The National Debt: Does It Exist & If So Who Owes It? & Some Thoughts On The Hidden Agenda Behind Immigration, Gun Control & The Health sCARE Monopoly; Balaicius, Full of statistics, common law citations, court rulings, clear thought, powerful information; around 150 pages added and completely re-written, 350pp., pb., 20.00 + P&H. Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall set you free.
_________________________________________
The United States: A Christian Nation (1905) Associate Supreme Court Justice, David J. Brewer, 127pp., notes by RAB, 190pp. total, 6x9 pb., 16.50 + P&H.
_________________________________________
General Principles of Constitutional Law (1891) Judge Thomas Cooley, 390pp., pb., 24.00 + P&H. [This is a reprint of a classical legal text written by Judge Thomas M. Cooley in 1891 (2nd Edition). As the author of other legal texts, and a Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court, Cooley has become one of the most frequently cited authorities in American law. Topics covered include: 1. Legal Definitions. 2. The Rise of the American Union. 3. The Distribution of Powers. 4. Powers of Congress. 5. Powers of the President. 6. The Judicial Department. 7. Checks and Balances. 8. Constitutional Rules of State Comity. 9. The Guarantee of Republican Government. 10. Guarantee of Civil and Political Rights. 11. Protection to Persons Accused of Crime. 12. Protections to Contracts and Property. The text as been reset in modern type for easy reading. Has a table of cases and topical index to aid in research.]
-----------------------------------------------------------
See also these other fascinating and educational books:
Titles Concerning Experiences Among the Indians and Muslims
- The Adventures of Thomas Pellow, of Penryn, Mariner: Three and Twenty Years in Captivity among the Moors (1740) 304pp., pb., 12.00 + P&H.
- Barbary Corsairs: Warfare in the Mediterranean 1480-1580, Heers, 272pp., Hb. 30.00 (reg 35) + P&H very good, final defeat of Turks (1571) after half century of Turkish ravaging, rape, pillage, plunder, kidnapping of hundreds of thousands of Christians in Mediter.
- Captives of Abb’s Valley (c.1850) Brown, 1st hand account of mother and 11 children who endured capture by indians, after murder of her husband, father, mother and sister; Hb., 18.00 (reg. 20.00) + P&H.
- The Captured: A True Story of Abduction by Indians on the Texas Frontier, Zesch, 362pp., pb., 17.00 + P&H.
- Captured By The Indians: 15 Firsthand Accounts, 1750-1870, Drimmer, 384pp., pb., 14.00) + P&H. SUPERB!
- Empire of the Summer Moon: Quanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches, the Most Powerful Indian Tribe in American History, Gwynne, 371pp., pb., 16.00 + P&H; last / greatest Comanche chief's mother was captured white woman.
- The Frontiersman (conquest of America’s NW Territory: today’s northern mid-west) Narratives of America Series by Allan Eckert; gripping historical novels based wholly on fact; depict how life really was, extol some great Americans overlooked in history. (6 books in series; inquire); this one covers wars against British & Indians, centered around Simon Kenton; greatest frontiersman/pioneer; greater than Daniel Boone (he saved Boone’s life); God watched over him even as Washington in battle. A true legend. 1 of only 2 men who could fire & reload & fire musket rifle behind at those chasing him while running full speed. One of best books I have ever read. One of only men in history to have survived any (let alone numerous) running of Indian gauntlet; British/French treachery, frontier-life, Indian Wars, American independence; 626pp., 9x10 pb., 1900; Hb. 35.00 + P&H; incredible! A must! [Inquire for others in the series.] SUPERB!
- Indian Atrocities! Affecting and Thrilling Anecdotes Respecting the Hardships and Sufferings of the Brave and Venerable Forefathers, in their Bloody and Heart-Rending Skirmishes and Constests with the Ferocious Savages; Containing Numerous Engravings Illustrating the Most General Traits of Indian Character, Their Customs and Deeds of Cruelty, with Interesting Accounts of the Captivity, Sufferings, and Heroic Conduct of Many Who Have Fallen Into Their Hands (1846) 32pp., 3.50 + P&H.
- The Indians or Narratives of Massacres and Depredations on the Frontier, in the Wawasink and its Vicinity, during the American Revolution (1846) by A Descendent of the Huguenots [Abraham G. Bevier], designed to commemorate the noble deeds of our ancestors, and inculcate principles of patriotism and piety, 80pp., pb., 14.00 + P&H.
- Legends of the Shawangunk (Shon Gum) and Its Environs, Including historical sketches, biographical notices, and thrilling border incidents and adventures relating to those portions of the counties of Orange, Ulster and Sullivan lying in the Shawangunk Region (1887) Philip Henry Smith, also mentions a few stories of Tom Quick. 168pp., and several pages of illustrations; 7x10 pb., 22.00 + P&H.
- Memoirs of a Captivity Among the Indians of North America from Childhood to the Age of Nineteen (1824) John Hunter, 460pp., pb., 33.00 (reg. 38); Hb., 46.00 (reg. 53) + P&H (brutality of “noble savages”).
- Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson (c.1678) 56pp., pb., 13.00 + P&H (earliest account of sufferings of woman captured by the Indians from Lancaster, who eventually escaped.)
- The Original Life and Adventures of Tom Quick, The Indian Slayer, as Published at Monticello in 1851: And the Pioneers of Minisink and Wawarsink (1894 ed.) James E. Quinlan & T. G. Cutler, 123pp., pb., rare, 12.50 + P&H; true story son avenging death of father during French & Indian Wars, devoted life to exterminating few remaining Indians in N.E. Pennsylvania. Settling in Milford, Pennsylvania: family enjoyed peaceful relationship w/ Indians; but at outbreak of F&I Wars, relationship became strained; dispute about land known as Minisink. Quick’s father killed & scalped during sudden attack, led Quick to long, vengeful campaign to kill as many Indians as he could; nearly 100 over many years; died of old age.; he was one of great icons of American folklore; exploits common fare of fireside storytellers. Today, virtually forgotten. Political correctness motivated his hometown of Milford, PA to dismantle handsome monument over remains & replace w/ apologetic plaque! References to him have been eliminated from local history; original biography of Tom Quick, published in 1851; containing virtually every tale associated with craft & cunning of Tom Quick, & many narratives relating to early settlers of the upper Delaware Valley. Of special interest to historians are chapters devoted to Battle of Minisink during American Revolution; other abridged versions, lacks few chapters, footnotes, appendix; this ed. has all.
- Pirate Coast: Thomas Jefferson, First Marines, & Secret Mission of 1805, Zacks, 432pp., new pb., 16.00 + P&H; Hb. good used copies available for 20.00 (reg. 26) + P&H. As fascinating as Cochrane: The Life and Exploits of a Fighting Captain (also highly recommended, inquire); excellent book, I could not put it down. SUPERB!
- The Redeemed Captive (1704) Rev. John Williams (his family and 46 other people killed in French & Indian raid; he was taken captive) pb., 192pp., pb., 12.00 + P&H.
- Scalp Dance: Indian Warfare on the High Plains 1865-1879, Goodrich, 340pp., pb., 19.00 (reg. 22.00) + P&H; (barbarity)
- Slavery, Terrorism & Islam (2009 ed.), Peter Hammond, 182pp., 17.00 + P&H.
- Three Years Among the Indians and Mexicans (1846) Gen. Th. James (of Monroe County, Illinois) 130pp,. the original was small print, so I have expanded to legal-half size (7x8.5); which enlarged it by 23%, plastic comb-bound, 10.00 + P&H or modern-retypeset edition, by another publisher, paperback, 196pp., 13.00 + P&H.
- True Stories of Our Pioneers: The Heroic Deeds and Devoted Lives of the Fathers and Mothers of America, Embracing the Principle Episodes of the White Race with the Red Men for the Possession of the New World; a True and Vivid Account of the Dark Captivities and the Unconquerable Courage of the Men and Women Who Wrested the American Forests from the Aborigines and gave them to the plow and the sickle (1904) Augustus Lynch Mason, LL.D. / John Clark Ridpath, LL.D. / Trumbull White, 694pp., 6x9 pb., 38.00 + P&H. SUPERB!
- White Gold: The Extraordinary Story of Thomas Pellow and Islam’s One Million White Slaves, Milton, 316pp., pb., 15.00 + P&H; Hb., 20.00 + P&H.
- White Slavery in The Barbary States (1853) Charles Sumner, 135pp., 12.50 + P&H.