Books by "Andrew George Little"

12 books found

A Remarkable Man

A Remarkable Man

by Andrew Murtagh

2013 · Bloomsbury Publishing

I can truthfully say that there has never been a nicer man in the game. George Chesterton is a gentleman to the core. And he wasn't a bad bowler either!' Tom Graveney OBE. Wartime pilot dropping supplies over occupied Europe; county cricketer; housemaster teaching and disciplining mischievous teenage boys; family man and civic figure, there have been few dull moments in George Chesterton's life. And he can probably manage to turn even those into amusing anecdotes. Andrew Murtagh tells the story of this remarkable man.

Also includes the history of the Seaton family in Scotland and other Seaton families.

The Bravest of the Brave, Michel Ney

The Bravest of the Brave, Michel Ney

by Andrew Hilliard Atteridge

1912

Adventures in the Skin Trade

Adventures in the Skin Trade

by Andrew Sinclair

1968 · New Directions Publishing

Napoleon's Brothers

Napoleon's Brothers

by Andrew Hilliard Atteridge

1909

Into Enemy Waters

Into Enemy Waters

by Andrew Dubbins

2022 · Diversion Books

A veteran US frogman recounts his experiences in World War II and the risky pre-invasion missions of the Underwater Demolition Teams. ? Into Enemy Waters is the story of World War II's most elite and daring unit of warriors, the direct precursors to the Navy SEALs, told through the eyes of its last living member, ninety-five-year-old George Morgan. Morgan was just a wiry, seventeen-year-old lifeguard from New Jersey when he joined the Navy's new combat demolition unit, tasked to blow up enemy?coastal defenses ahead of landings by Allied forces. His first assignment: Omaha Beach on D-Day. When he returned stateside, Morgan learned that his service was only beginning. Outfitted with swim trunks, a dive mask, and fins, he was sent to Hawaii and then on to deployments in the Pacific as a member of the elite and pioneering Underwater Demolition Teams. GIs called them "half fish, half nuts." Today, we call them frogmen—and Navy SEALS. Led by maverick Naval Reserve Officer Draper Kauffman, Morgan would spend the fierce final year of the war swimming up to enemy controlled beaches to gather intel and detonate underwater barriers. He'd have to master the sea, muster superhuman grit, and overcome the demons of Omaha Beach. Moving closer to Japan, the enemy's island defenses were growing more elaborate and its soldiers more fanatical. From the black sand beaches of Iwo Jima to the shark infested reefs of Okinawa, to the cold seas of Tokyo Bay, teenaged George Morgan was there before most, fighting for his life. And for all of us. Perfect for fans of? Unbroken,? The Right Stuff, and? Band of Brothers. Praise for Into Enemy Waters "A compelling narrative full of World War II fireworks." — Kirkus Reviews "A rousing history. . . . Drawing on extensive interviews with Morgan, Dubbins creates a vivid and fast-moving narrative of courage and sacrifice under the most extreme conditions. WWII buffs will be thrilled." — Publishers Weekly "This well-researched book is both visceral and uplifting, telling of a time of great courage, integrity and camaraderie." —Jill?Heinerth,?author of Into The Planet: My Life as a Cave Diver

Essays in Little

Essays in Little

by Andrew Lang

1891 · New York, Scribner's

The Texas Criminal Reports

The Texas Criminal Reports

by Texas. Court of Criminal Appeals, Alexander M. Jackson, Alexander M. Jackson (Jr.), Sam Andrew Willson, John Preston White, Rudolph Kleberg, W. W. Nelms, W. C. Wear

1916

The Blodgett Readers

The Blodgett Readers

by Frances Eggleston Blodgett, Andrew Burr Blodgett

1910

The Galloping Ghost

The Galloping Ghost

by Gary Andrew Poole

2014 · HarperCollins

In the 1920s four athletes defined American sports: Babe Ruth, Jack Dempsey, Bobby Jones, and Red Grange. They were the country's first athletic pantheon, its Mount Rushmore, and for a few brief years Red Grange outshone them all. The Galloping Ghost tells the remarkable untold story of this fleet-footed college football player who inspired poetry, dazzled fans as he felled opponents on the field, and, with the help of an unscrupulous and utterly brilliant manager (the first real-life Jerry Maguire), helped launch and legitimize professional football, changing American sports forever. In this first major biography of Red Grange, Gary Andrew Poole draws on exhaustive research and interviews to evoke the golden age of sports in all its splendor and outrageousness. He transports readers from college football rallies to barnstorming tours, from the locker room to the White House to Hollywood, as he recounts Grange's rise and tragic fall. And he lays bare the fascinating and psychologically complex relationship between a star athlete and the nation's first real sports agent—a relationship that encapsulated the good and shadowy sides of sports and how they inevitably intersected. For fans of Cinderella Man, The Devil and Sonny Liston, and The Devil in the White City, The Galloping Ghost is a provocative, character-driven, atmospheric sports history that gives us a new understanding of a seminal sports figure, from raw and innocent athletic talent to mortal American icon. A symbol of rebellious manhood and virility, Red Grange is a reminder of the fleeting nature of fame, youth, and physical dominance.

The Blodgett Readers by Grades

The Blodgett Readers by Grades

by Frances Eggleston Blodgett, Andrew Burr Blodgett

1910

Rural Education

Rural Education

by Andrew Ezra Pickard

1915