Glass Theatres The Woman Who Brought the Sea to the City

$ 23.77

Topic: Women, Fish & Aquariums, Europe / Great Britain / General gtin13: 9781904095361 Publication Year: 2003 Publisher: Short Books, The Limited Item Height: 0.7 in Item Length: 7.9 in Format: Hardcover Genre: Pets, Biography & Autobiography, History ISBN: 9781904095361 Release Year: 2003 Book Title: Theatres of Glass : the Woman Who Brought the Sea to the City Author: Rebecca Stott Item Width: 5.6 in Language: English Item Weight: 11 Oz Number of Pages: 160 Pages Illustrator: Yes

Description

Note : Any images shown are stock photographs and product may differ from what is shown. You are purchasing a New copy of 'Theatres of Glass: The Woman Who Brought the Sea to the City'

  1. Item arrived quickly even with Media Mail. Book was packaged securely. The condition was near mint, with an excellent quality and appearance. I would rate this a Fantastic value. Communication was clear, concise and quick, and the seller was very helpful. I would most certainly do business with them again. Give them a look, and buy/bid with confidence. Thank you very much for your time, attention and help. Many Thanks!!! A+A+A+A+A+ Panzers.....'nuff said!

    Abhilash Krishnan
  2. Awesome book with great value and amazing quality. The condition of the book upon arrival was exceptional and definitely came as described by the seller. The appearance was on point and the book was unscathed while going through transit. The shipping was good and the package had accurate tracking information while in transit. Thank you to the seller for a great transaction and experience. I look forward to doing business with you again in there future!

    Lucas Pelizza
  3. Fantastic price for this item! Great seller, and the item arrived as described. It arrived in an unpadded mailer. Additionally, thank you for having a listing with *accurate* information about the presence of writing inside the book. (It explicitly said it didn't, which was clear to read and much appreciated!)! The book itself appears well-read, but is a clean internal copy, which works for my purpose :)

    Aragorn1e672