Books from Cameron Books

  • Bliss
    By Randall Kaplan

    "A collection of aerial photography of beaches and exotic coastal locations around the world"--

  • Letters To 87
    By Matt Maiocco

    The letters that Clark and Maiocco received tell the story of how the man who wore number 87 brought together a city and a franchise through his sincerity, his loyalty, and his spirit for life and the game.

  • English Hitchcock
    By Charles Barr

    Charles Barr is Professor of Film Studies at the University of East Anglia, Norwich, England. His Ealing Studios, now in its third edition, is widely acclaimed as the finest book ever written on British cinema.

  • Postmark Paris
    By Leslie Jonath

    Her adventures in the City of Light are magically captured in the evocative images of the postage stamps she collects there, and readers young and old will delight in this uniquely told story of finding one's place in a world far from home.

  • Among the Ruins: Arnold Genthe's Photographs of the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake and Firestorm
    By Karin Breuer

    Now, over a century later, the Achenbach Foundation for Graphic Arts presents the definitive collection of Genthe's historic photographs."--Provided by publisher.

  • Gold Mountain, Big City: Ken Cathcart's 1947 Illustrated Map of San Francisco's Chinatown
    By Jim Schein

    The unique character of San Francisco's Chinatown is revealed in a historical map and fascinating photographs This colorful and playful time capsule of San Francisco's Chinatown shares the stories of the unique businesses, culture, and ...

  • Howard Kazanjian: From Hitchcock and Peckinpah to Spielberg and Lucas: 5o Years of Collaboration
    By J. W. Rinzler

    "A chronicle of the life and career of legendary movie producer Howard Kazanjian, who worked with directors ranging from Sam Peckinpah and Alfred Hitchcock to George Lucas and Steven Spielberg"--

  • Fashioning San Francisco: A Century of Style
    By Laura L. Camerlengo

    The early collections in this book reflect San Francisco's bohemian tendencies and its long-standing practice of using fashion as a form of personal expression.