FALL 2001 HARDCOVERS
Introduction
Art & Architecture
Biography & Memoirs
Business & Personal Finance
Childcare & Parenting
Contemporary Affairs
Cookbooks, Wine & Entertaining
Fiction/First & Collections
Fiction/General & Short Stories
Fiction/Mystery & Suspense
Fiction/Science Fiction & Fantasy
Gardening
Gay & Lesbian Studies
Health, Beauty & Fitness
History
Humor
Lifestyle
Literary Criticism & Essays
Nature & Environment
New Age
Performing Arts & Film
Philosophy
Photography
Poetry
Politics
Psychology
Reference
Religion & Inspirational
Science
Self Help & Recovery
Social Sciences
Sports
Travel/Abroad
Travel/USA
War & Military
Women's Studies

ABBEVILLE PRESS
The Houses of Philip Johnson (Sept., $75) by Stover Jenkins and David Mohney, photos by Steven Brooke, surveys Johnson's innovative residential architecture.
Caravaggio (Oct., $95) by John T. Spike reproduces nearly every extant work by the artist.

ABRAMS

Art: 21: Art in the Twenty-First Century (Sept., $45) by Robert Storr et al. is a companion to a PBS-TV series on contemporary art. Ad/promo.
Gustav Klimt: Modernism in the Making (Sept., $60), edited by Colin B. Bailey, examines the life and work of the late 19th-century Viennese artist. Ad/promo. QPB and Reader's Subscription selections.
Impressionist Still Life (Sept., $45) by Eliza Rathbone et al. features paintings by Van Gogh, Renoir and other masters to be exhibited at the Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C., this fall. BOMC selection.

ANTIQUE COLLECTORS' CLUB
The Dog in Art: From the Collections of the American Kennel Club and the American Kennel Club Museum of the Dog (Nov., $80) by William Secord. Of the 350 color illustrations, many depict original prints, silver trophies, porcelains and antique dog collars as well as 19th- and 20th-century paintings and bronzes.

ARTISAN
Restoring a Home in Italy (Nov., $50) by Elizabeth Minchilli, photos by Simon McBride, remembers the trials and triumphs behind 22 projects, including a convent.
BARRON'S
A Century of Graphic Design (Sept., $39.95) by Jeremy Aynsley collects thumbnail biographies of more than 100 designers from the past 100 years.

BIRKHAUSER
(dist. by Princeton Architectural Press)

Santiago Calatrava: Art Works--Laboratory of Ideas, Forms and Structures (Nov., $90) by Michael Levin. More than 200 drawings, water colors and sculptural depictions reveal Calatrava's artistic work as the basis for his architectural designs.

BOOTH-CLIBBORN
(dist. by Abrams)
Zines
(Oct., $39.95), compiled by Liz Farrelly et al., collects 400 illustrations to show the range of current maverick zines and documents the emergence of the zine phenomenon.

DERRYDALE PRESS
Paul Brown: Master of Equine Art (Oct., $50) by M.L. Biscotti reports on the artist's life and work.

FOUR WALLS EIGHT WINDOWS

Visions of Spaceflight: Images from the Ordway Collection (Sept., $50) by Frederick I. Ordway III shares images spanning five centuries that relate to humans in space.

GINGKO PRESS
Cafes d'Artistes (Oct., $29.95) by Gerard-Georges Lemaire, photos by Martin H.M. Schreiber, is a history of Parisian artists' cafes as told through their quotes.
Broken Windows: Burning New York (Nov., $35) by James and Karla Murray studies the N.Y.C. graffiti art scene with pictorials and artists' interviews. Advertising. Author tour.

DAVID R. GODINE
Where Books Fall Open (Dec., $23.95), edited and illus. by Bascove, is about the pleasure of reading, the dedication of writing and the devotion to words.

HARPERCOLLINS
Churches (Nov., $35) by Judith Dupré is a richly illustrated exploration of religious architecture around the world from the author of Skyscrapers and Bridges. 75,000 first printing. Ad/promo. Author publicity.

HATJE/CANTZ
(dist. by D.A.P.)
Mark Rothko (Sept., $55) is an oversized monograph on the Russian-born abstract expressionist with more than 100 color plates, accompanying essays and biographical information.

HEYDAY BOOKS
Hideo Date: Line, Color and the Quest of a Japanese American Artist (Oct., $24) by Karin Hida pays tribute to the artist, now in his 90s, who was interned during WWII.

HUDSON HILLS PRESS
An American Collection: Works from the Amon Carter Museum (Sept., $50) by Patricia Junker et al. marks the Fort Worth museum's 40th anniversary and the reopening of its expanded Philip Johnson building by presenting masterworks from 1822 to 1998.

INDIANA UNIV. PRESS
The Monuments of Ancient Egypt (Oct., $39.95) by Jeremy Stafford-Deitsch offers large-scale color photos of temples and tombs from both major and little-known Egyptian sites; copublished with the British Museum Press.

LONELY PLANET
Buddhist Stupas in Asia: The Shape of Perfection (Sept., $34.99) by Joe Cummings, photos by Bill Wassman, depicts the spread of Buddhism and stupa building across India and Asia.

MBI

The American Amusement Park (Sept., $29.95) by Dale Osborn Samuelson features archival photography and modern illustrations that recall thrill rides, arcades, fun houses and tunnels of love.
mfa publications
A Studio of Her Own: Women Artists in Boston 1870-1940 (Sept., $40) by Erica E. Hirshler tells the interwoven stories of 40 women artists and their resourcefulness in dealing with societal restrictions.

MIT PRESS
Douglas Gordon (Oct., $40), compiled by Russell Ferguson, includes essays and illustrations to survey the work of the Scottish artist, who collaborated on the book design with Bruce Mau.
Images from the World Between: The Circus in Twentieth-Century American Art (Nov., $39.95) by Donna Gustafson assembles essays and illustrations to scrutinize circus imagery.

MONACELLI PRESS

The Henry Clay Frick Houses: Architecture, Interiors, Landscapes in the Golden Era (Oct., $65) by Martha Frick Symington Sanger visits four major "Gilded-Age" residences of the art collector and steel tycoon.
Harlem: Lost and Found (Dec., $65) by Michael Henry Adams, photos by Paul Rocheleau, is an architectural and social history of Harlem from the early days to the present.
Washington Through Two Centuries (Dec., $50) by Joseph Passonneau enlists street plans, archival photographs and color images to record the city's changing character.

MOUNTAIN PRESS PUBLISHING
The American West: People, Places and Ideas (Sept.; $34.95, paper $24.95) by Suzan Campbell showcases the Western and Native American collection of the Rockwell Museum of Western Art in Corning, N.Y.

LARS MULLER
(dist. by Princeton Architectural Press)
Freitag: A Bag Becomes a Cult Object
(Oct., $65), edited by Lars Müller, describes the history of the internationally popular "messenger bag" conceived by the two Freitag brothers, Daniel and Markus.

ORBIS BOOKS
Christ for All People: Celebrating a World of Christian Art (Sept., $30), edited by Ron O'Grady, pairs images of the Jesus story by contemporary artists from seven continents with meditations by well-known Christian writers. Advertising.

PBC INTERNATIONL
The Boutique Hotel (Sept., $50) by Susan Abramson and Marcie Stuchin. Color photos record small, high-styled hotels in 35 locations.

PELICAN
The Majesty of St. Charles Avenue (Sept., $45) by Cynthia Reece McCaffety, photos by Kerri McCaffety, takes readers inside spectacular homes along the posh New Orleans street.

CLARKSON POTTER
Preserving the World's Great Cities: The Destruction and Renewal of the Historic Metropolis (Sept., $40) by Anthony M. Tung concerns worldwide urban preservation.

PRESTEL
World Art: Africa (Oct., $29.95) by Peter Stepan is volume one in a new World Art series.
Architecture of the Night: The Illuminated Building (Feb., $65) by Deitrich Neumann explores the modern phenomenon of architectural lighting.

PRINCETON ARCHITECTURAL PRESS
California Modern: The Architecture of Craig Ellwood (Nov., $50) by Neil Jackson traces the history of this complex individual who had no professional license but was named one of the "three best architects of 1957" with Wright and van der Rohe.

PRINCETON UNIV. PRESS
Blue: The History of a Color (Oct., $35) by Michael Pastoureau takes a penetrating look at a color that has been loved and reviled.
Surrealism: Desire Unbound (Nov., $65), edited by Jennifer Mundy, accompanies a transatlantic exhibition of international surrealism.

RANDOM HOUSE
Manhattan Unfurled (Oct., $29.95, slipcased) by Matteo Pericoli renders, accordion-style (with the West on one side, the East on the other), Manhattan's entire skyline in the form of two continuous 22-foot-long line drawings. Author publicity.

RIZZOLI
The Peggy Guggenheim Collection of Modern Art (Sept., $75) by Sandro Rumney includes essays and captions to feature all aspects of Guggenheim's collection.
Home Sweet Home: The House in American Folk Art (Sept., $50) by Deborah Harding and Laura Fisher presents 150 color photos that show how various craft media have depicted the essential abode.

ROCKPORT/ROTOVISION
Best of Brochure Design 6 (Sept., $45) by Cheryl Dangel Cullen assembles more than 200 pages of noteworthy brochure layouts.

ROUTLEDGE
Pictures and Tears (Oct., $26) by James Elkins examines how paintings evoke emotions. Author tour.

SKIRA
(dist. by Rizzoli)
Asian Costumes and Textiles: From Bosporus to Fuji-Yama
(Oct., $75) by Mary Hunt Kahlenberg is devoted to the patterns, colors and fabrics of Asia, from Turkey to Japan, from India to Malaysia.

SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION PRESS
Currier and Ives: America Imagined (Nov., $29.95) by Bryan F. Le Beau appraises the cultural importance of the team's lithographs.

SPRINGER VIENNA
(dist. by Princeton Architectural Press)
Museumsquartier Vienna: The Architecture, Vol. 3
(Nov., $56) by Matthias Boeckl focuses on the architecture of the new Museum Quarter in Vienna and how historic architecture is integrated with the modern.

STEWART, TABORI & CHANG
Blue Dog Love (Sept., $35) by George and Wendy Rodrigue is the latest installment in the continuing Blue Dog story.

TASCHEN
Codices Illustres: The World's Most Famous Manuscripts (Nov., $60) by Ingo F. Walther and Norbert Wolf reproduces about 170 medieval scripts, many in their original sizes, from the fourth century to 1600.
Designing the 21st Century (Nov., $TBA) by Charlotte Fiell and Peter Fiell. A hundred designers answer the question: "What is your vision for the future of design?"

TEN SPEED PRESS
Kingfisher Blue: Treasures of Ancient Chinese Art (Oct., $45) by Beverley Jackson reviews the craft of using the blue feathers of the kingfisher bird.

TEXAS A&M UNIV. PRESS
The Rich Cut Glass of Charles Guernsey Tuthill (Nov., $50) by Maurice Crofford is a history of Tuthill, born in 1871 in Corning, N.Y., and the cut glass business he dramatically influenced with creative new patterns, as well as the techniques he employed.

TEXAS CHRISTIAN UNIV. PRESS
Threading Time: A Cultural History of Threadwork (Oct., $42.50) by Dolores Bausum contends there is an essential link between the human spirit and the art of connecting threads, fibers and yarns.

THAMES & HUDSON
Van Gogh and Gauguin: The "Studio of the South" (Sept., $65) by Douglas Druick et al. delves into the artists' rivalrous friendship during their intense two-month collaboration in Arles; complements the Art Institute of Chicago's main fall exhibit. BOMC selection.
7 Reece Mews: Francis Bacon's Studio (Sept., $24.95), photos by Perry Ogden, examines how, why and what Bacon painted while inside his London home and studio.

TUTTLE/PERIPLUS EDITIONS
Things Thai by Tanistha Dansilp and Things Japanese (both Jan., $24.95 each) by Nicholas Bornoff, photos by Michael Freeman, inspect everyday objects particular to each country's culture and lifestyle.

UNIVERSE
At Home with the Impressionists: Masterpieces of French Still-Life Painting (Oct., $19.95) by the Phillips Collection accompanies a 2001 still-life exhibit traveling from the Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C., to Boston's Museum of Fine Arts.
American Home: From Colonial Simplicity to the Modern Adventure (Nov., $60) by David Larkin. Photographs and architectural historians trace the paths to characteristic American homes.

UNIV. OF ILLINOIS PRESS
Self-Taught and Outsider Art: The Anthony Petullo Collection (Sept., $50) by Anthony Petullo gathers diverse color representations of the genre treasured by the collector.

UNIV. OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS
La Foce: A Garden and Landscape in Tuscany (Oct., $49.95) by Benedetta Origo et al. takes a tour of one of Italy's striking estates.

UNIV. PRESS OF FLORIDA
The Highwaymen: Florida's African-American Landscape Painters (Nov., $29.95) by Gary Monroe tells of the loosely organized young black artists who peddled their quickly realized images of the Florida landscape from their cars in the 1950s.

UNIV. PRESS OF NEW ENGLAND
Following Proust: Norman Churches, Cathedrals and Paris Paintings (Oct., $27) by Susan Baker traces a pictorial itinerary augmented with the author's words.

VENDOME PRESS
Sicilian Twilight (Sept., $50) by Gerard Gefen, photos by Jean-Bernard Naudin, depicts palaces, gardens and interiors representing the Sicilian nobility limned in Giuseppe di Lampedusa's novel The Leopard.
English Manor Houses (Oct., $85) by Hugh Montgomery-Massingberd, photos by Christopher Simon Sykes, illustrates homes, many still privately owned, from simple Norman halls to picturesque Tudor dwellings.

VERSO
London: Millennial Follies (Nov., $20) by Jonathan Glancey dispenses the critic's views on the architectural excesses inspired by millennium fever along with a general critique of London's recent urban planning.

VIKING STUDIO
Secret Knowledge: Rediscovering the Lost Techniques of the Old Masters (Nov., $60) by David Hockney discloses the artist's sometimes controversial views on how many of Western art's great masterpieces were actually created. QPB and Insight Out selections.

WATSON-GUPTILL

Eternal Egypt: Pharaohs, Caesars, Caliphs & Sultans (Sept., $75). The observations of assorted Egyptologists supplement more than 240 photographs by Werner Forman.
Pre-Raphaelites at Home (Oct., $40) by Pamela Todd is an account of these legendary artists.

WEATHERHILL
Splendour in Wood: The Buddhist Monasteries of Burma (Sept., $60) by Sylvia Fraser-Lu praises the craftsmanship and decoration of Burmese monasteries in word and image.

WORKMAN
CowParade Houston (Sept., $29.95) is a companion book to the bovine-inspired civic event that was first staged in Zurich in 1998, moved to Chicago in 1999 and to New York City in 2000.

YALE UNIV. PRESS
Thomas Eakins (Oct., $65), edited by Darrel Sewell, is a companion book to a traveling exhibition of Eakins's life and career; published in association with the Philadelphia Museum of Art.