$12.00 Vintage El Paso Saddle Co 100% Cotton “Storyteller” Southwest Native American Symbol Placemat Tan Fringe Replacement
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$5.00 Vintage Postcard Green tree frogs Louisiana's Atchafalaya Swamp, home to these two Green tree frogs, is also a nesting and feeding habitat for more than 170 bird species. To find out how you can help save America's wildlife by becoming a member, call the National Audubon Society
$5.00 Vintage Postcard Our national symbol, the Bald eagle Protected by the Endangered Species Act, the majestic Bald eagle has made a spectacular comeback from the brink of extinction To find out how you can help save America's wildlife by becoming a member, call the National Audubon Society
$5.00 Vintage Postcard Black Writers PHOTOGRAPHS BY JILL KREMENTZ DARRYL PINCKNEY, New York, N.Y., October 18, 1995 Darryl Pinckney (b. 1953) is an award-winning critic, essayist, and novelist whose witty, brilliant, and lyrical prose has been called as good as any now being written in English. His picaresque debut novel, High Cotton 1992), was lauded for its excruciating honesty and total freedom from restraint.
$5.00 Vintage Postcard Black Writers PHOTOGRAPHS BY JILL KREMENTZ DORI SANDERS, Charlotte, N.C., April 3, 1994 Dori Sanders (b. 1934) was raised on her family's peach farm in York County, South Carolina, which is still in operation. Her first novel, Clover 1990), draws on that setting to create an instantly memorable tale of race relations in the modern South. Her second novel, Her Own Place (1993), was equally well received. POMEGRANATE
$5.00 Vintage Postcard Black Writers PHOTOGRAPHS BY JILL KREMENTZ CONNIE BRISCOE, Falls Church, Va., February 15, 1996 Connie Briscoe added a fresh new voice to contemporary fiction with her debut novel, Sisters d- Lovers (1994), a witty and instructive tale of three sisters living in Washington, D.C. Her literary gifts were reaffirmed in the best-selling Big Girls Don't Cry (1996). Deaf for most of her adult life, Briscoe is former managing editor of American Annals of the Deaf at Gallaudet University. POMEGRANATE BOX
$5.00 Vintage Postcard Black Writers PHOTOGRAPHS BY JILL KREMENTZ A. J. UERDELLE, Brooklyn, N.Y., March 1, 1996 A. J. Verdelle (b. 1960) made an immediate impact on the literary scene with her debut novel, The Good Negress (1995), which won wide praise and was a finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award. A graduate of the University of Chicago, Verdelle founded and operates a successful consulting company in New York, Applied Statistics & Research.
$5.00 Black Writers PHOTOGRAPHS BY JILL KREMENTZ TONI MORRISON, New York, N.Y., February 13, 1974 Toni Morrison (b. 1931) creates richly textured prose that mines her experience as an African American woman in a predominantly white society. For her entire body of work-from her first novel, The Bluest Eye (1970), through Jazz (1992)-she was awarded the 1993 Nobel Prize in literature. © Jill Krementz POMEGRANATE
$5.00 Black Writers PHOTOGRAPHS BY JILL KREMENTZ ANN PETRY, Old Saybrook, Conn., March 12, 1996 Ann Petry (b. 1908) grew up in Old Saybrook, Connecticut, where her family ran the local drugstore. In 1938 she moved to Harlem, attended Columbia University, and began writing fiction. Her first novel, The Street (1946), was a stunning debut and is now regarded as an American classic. Her later novels Country Places and The Narrows were set in New England, to which she returned in 1948. © Jill Krementz POMEGRANATE
$5.00 Vintage Postcard Green tree frogs Louisiana's Atchafalaya Swamp, home to these two Green tree frogs, is also a nesting and feeding habitat for more than 170 bird species. To find out how you can help save America's wildlife by becoming a member, call the National Audubon Society
$5.00 Vintage Postcard Our national symbol, the Bald eagle Protected by the Endangered Species Act, the majestic Bald eagle has made a spectacular comeback from the brink of extinction To find out how you can help save America's wildlife by becoming a member, call the National Audubon Society
$5.00 Vintage Postcard Black Writers PHOTOGRAPHS BY JILL KREMENTZ DARRYL PINCKNEY, New York, N.Y., October 18, 1995 Darryl Pinckney (b. 1953) is an award-winning critic, essayist, and novelist whose witty, brilliant, and lyrical prose has been called as good as any now being written in English. His picaresque debut novel, High Cotton 1992), was lauded for its excruciating honesty and total freedom from restraint.
$5.00 Vintage Postcard Black Writers PHOTOGRAPHS BY JILL KREMENTZ DORI SANDERS, Charlotte, N.C., April 3, 1994 Dori Sanders (b. 1934) was raised on her family's peach farm in York County, South Carolina, which is still in operation. Her first novel, Clover 1990), draws on that setting to create an instantly memorable tale of race relations in the modern South. Her second novel, Her Own Place (1993), was equally well received. POMEGRANATE
$5.00 Vintage Postcard Black Writers PHOTOGRAPHS BY JILL KREMENTZ CONNIE BRISCOE, Falls Church, Va., February 15, 1996 Connie Briscoe added a fresh new voice to contemporary fiction with her debut novel, Sisters d- Lovers (1994), a witty and instructive tale of three sisters living in Washington, D.C. Her literary gifts were reaffirmed in the best-selling Big Girls Don't Cry (1996). Deaf for most of her adult life, Briscoe is former managing editor of American Annals of the Deaf at Gallaudet University. POMEGRANATE BOX
$5.00 Vintage Postcard Black Writers PHOTOGRAPHS BY JILL KREMENTZ A. J. UERDELLE, Brooklyn, N.Y., March 1, 1996 A. J. Verdelle (b. 1960) made an immediate impact on the literary scene with her debut novel, The Good Negress (1995), which won wide praise and was a finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award. A graduate of the University of Chicago, Verdelle founded and operates a successful consulting company in New York, Applied Statistics & Research.
$5.00 Black Writers PHOTOGRAPHS BY JILL KREMENTZ TONI MORRISON, New York, N.Y., February 13, 1974 Toni Morrison (b. 1931) creates richly textured prose that mines her experience as an African American woman in a predominantly white society. For her entire body of work-from her first novel, The Bluest Eye (1970), through Jazz (1992)-she was awarded the 1993 Nobel Prize in literature. © Jill Krementz POMEGRANATE
$5.00 Black Writers PHOTOGRAPHS BY JILL KREMENTZ ANN PETRY, Old Saybrook, Conn., March 12, 1996 Ann Petry (b. 1908) grew up in Old Saybrook, Connecticut, where her family ran the local drugstore. In 1938 she moved to Harlem, attended Columbia University, and began writing fiction. Her first novel, The Street (1946), was a stunning debut and is now regarded as an American classic. Her later novels Country Places and The Narrows were set in New England, to which she returned in 1948. © Jill Krementz POMEGRANATE