The Regional Books was a book series of topographical guides to the British regions published by Robert Hale and Company [1] from 1952. It was edited by Brian Vesey-Fitzgerald. [2]
In the 1970s they published a broader Regions of Britain series.
Title | Date | Author |
---|---|---|
Black Country | 1952 | Phil Drabble |
Breckland | 1956 | Olive Cook |
The Broads | 1952 | R. H. Mottram |
The Channel Shore | 1953 | Aubrey de Selincourt |
The Cotswolds | 1955 | Edith Brill |
Dartmoor [3] | 1958 | Ernest Walter Martin |
Exmoor | 1953 | Laurence Meynell |
The Fens | 1953 | Alan Bloom |
Forest of Dean [4] | 1952 | Francis William Baty |
Gower | 1956 | Olive Phillips |
Holiday Lancashire | 1955 | Sydney Moorhouse |
The Isle of Wight | 1953 | Monica Hutchings |
The Mendips [5] | 1954 | Arthur Wilfred Coysh, Edward John Mason and Vincent Waite |
Merthyr, Rhondda and The Valleys | 1958 | Arthur Trystan Edwards |
The Northern Marches [6] | 1953 | Cledwyn Hughes |
Peakland | 1954 | Crichton Porteous |
Pembrokeshire | 1957 | Ronald Lockley |
Romney Marsh | 1953 | Walter J. C. Murray |
Salisbury Plain | 1955 | Ralph Whitlock |
The Scilly Isles [7] | 1953 | Clara Coltman Rogers Vyvyan |
Sedgemoor and Avalon | 1954 | Desmond Hawkins |
The Solway Firth | 1955 | Brian Blake |
The South Hams | 1955 | Margaret Willy |
The Southern Marches | 1952 | H. J. Massingham |
Thames Estuary | 1954 | William Wilkinson Addison |
Torridon Highlands [8] | 1953 | Brenda Grace Joan Macrow |
The Vale of Berkeley | 1954 | Lewis Wilshire |
The Vale of Pewsey | 1954 | H. W. Timperley |
The Weald of Kent and Sussex | 1953 | Sheila Kaye-Smith |
The Wessex Heathland | 1953 | Ralph Wightman |
The Wirral Peninsula | 1955 | Norman Ellison |
James Benjamin Blish was an American science fiction and fantasy writer. He is best known for his Cities in Flight novels and his series of Star Trek novelizations written with his wife, J. A. Lawrence. His novel A Case of Conscience won the Hugo Award. He is credited with creating the term "gas giant" to refer to large planetary bodies.
The Astrophysical Journal, often abbreviated ApJ in references and speech, is a peer-reviewed scientific journal of astrophysics and astronomy, established in 1895 by American astronomers George Ellery Hale and James Edward Keeler. The journal discontinued its print edition and became an electronic-only journal in 2015.
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Charles Frederick Tunnicliffe, OBE, RA was an internationally renowned naturalistic painter of British birds and other wildlife. He spent most of his working life on the Isle of Anglesey. He is popularly known for his illustrations for the novel Tarka the Otter.
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Oswald Stevens Nock, B. Sc., C. Eng, M.I.C.E., M.I.Mech.E., M.I.Loco.E.,, nicknamed Ossie, was a British railway signal engineer and senior manager at the Westinghouse company; he is well known for his prodigious output of popularist publications on railway subjects, including over 100 books, as well as many more technical works on locomotive performance.
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Footlights Theater is a 30-minute American television anthology series that aired on CBS on Fridays in the summers of 1952 and 1953 as a replacement for Our Miss Brooks.
Robert Hale Limited was a London publisher of fiction and non-fiction books, founded in 1936, and also known as Robert Hale. It was based at Clerkenwell House, Clerkenwell Green. It ceased trading on 1 December 2015 and its imprints were sold to The Crowood Press.
The County Books series, by Robert Hale and Company of London, covered counties and regions in the British Isles. It was launched in March 1947, and began with Kent, Surrey and Sussex. The series was announced as completed in 1954, in 60 volumes, with Lowlands of Scotland: Edinburgh and the South by Maurice Lindsay. The announced intention was to give "a true and lively picture of each county and people".
The Regions of Britain is a book series of topographical guides to the British regions published by Robert Hale and Company, by Eyre & Spottiswoode and by Eyre Methuen in the 1970s. The series included a blend of historical and contemporary material and it was the practice of the publishers to use authors native to the regions they wrote about such as S. H. Burton of Devon who wrote about the West Country, Marcus Crouch on the Home Counties was from Middlesex, and Arthur Raistrick who wrote about the Pennines was from Yorkshire. John Talbot White, a noted naturalist of Goldsmiths College, wrote two volumes for the series including on Kent, Surrey and Sussex, an area of Britain about which he wrote three other books after having become fascinated by it after he was evacuated from London to the Kent/Sussex border as a boy during the Second World War.
Samuel Holroyd "Tim" Burton was a British school teacher, college lecturer and prolific author of English language textbooks and books about the west of England. He also produced fiction, assembled anthologies and wrote a biography of William Shakespeare.
The Portrait of books is a series of topographical works describing the cities, counties, and regions of Britain and some of the regions of France. The series was published by Robert Hale from the late 1960s to the early 1980s and is part of a genre of topographical books in which Robert Hale specialised.