Children and Young Adults
Children’s Picture Books
Young Adults
Nonfiction
Architecture
Chesapeake Bay Watercraft
Cookbooks
Decoys & Carving
Folklore & Narrative
Regional History
Hunting, Fishing, & Sports
Knots & Leatherwork
Natural History
Maritime
Boats and Boatbuilding
First Aid & Medical
Marine Engineering
Marine Insurance & Law
Maritime History
Model Building
Naval Architecture & Shipbuilding
Navigation
Seamanship: Handbooks & Manuals
Ship Management
Towing
Transportation
Subsidiary
Baltimore Architecture Foundation
Chesapeake Bay Museum
Independence Seaport Museum
The Literary House at Washington College
Maryland Historical Press
University of Maryland Sea Grant Publications

Maryland Lost
and Found...Again
| $15.95 | Order | Add to Cart |
2003 | 296 pp | Black-and-white photographs | Index | 6x9 | Paper | 978-0-87033-548-8
Veteran Washington Post reporter and award-winning writer Eugene L. Meyer directs a tour across the “Free State” that is part love letter, part oral history, part obituary. He explores what makes Maryland special, the people who make it unique, and the places and livelihoods that have vanished over the years. The whole of the American experience is found within or close to the state’s borders and between the covers of this book—megalopolis, Appalachia, the Chesapeake Bay, the Deep South, the industrial North, rich farmland, a major port, the nation’s capital, the primary car and rail routes carrying East Coast interstate traffic. Maryland Lost and Found…Again transcends the state to comment on the American landscape.