Librería Samer Atenea
Librería Aciertas (Toledo)
Kálamo Books
Librería Perelló (Valencia)
Librería Elías (Asturias)
Donde los libros
Librería Kolima (Madrid)
Librería Proteo (Málaga)
An authoritative commercial natural history guide from the Victorian era, arranged with the clarity of a modern handbook. A practical reference for traders. John Yeats’s The Natural History of the Raw Materials of Commerce organises global raw materials into synoptical tables and explanatory plates, making it both an illustrated trade materials book and a meticulous historical commodities reference. It functions as a commercial products dictionary and a multilingual trade terms compendium: names, origins and uses set side-by-side so collectors, historians and entrepreneurs can trace how fibres, resins, ores and botanicals moved from field to market. The volume also includes a copious list of commercial products with synonyms in principal European and Oriental languages, a feature that turns taxonomic detail into usable, cross-cultural vocabulary. Crisp tables and an overarching folio chart gild the scholarship with practical immediacy, converting a serious academic research resource into a collectors reference volume that rewards casual browsing as readily as rigorous enquiry.Rooted in Victorian trade history and economic botany collection, Yeats’s work ranks among essential nineteenth-century commerce sources - a synoptical tables compendium that reveals the practical taxonomy behind empire-era exchange and the material networks that sustained industrial markets. Its value is both documentary and visceral: librarians, museum curators and economic historians will find primary reference material; design historians, collectors and curious readers will find the tactile vocabulary of trade and manufacture. Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions. Restored for today’s and future generations. More than a reprint - a collector’s item and a cultural treasure. For those assembling a classic-literature collection, or anyone drawn to the lived history of goods, Yeats’s book is a rare bridge between natural science, commerce and the language of trade. Its multilingual index aids identification across markets, while the folio chart and tables make comparative study intuitive. Elegant enough for a display shelf and robust enough for citation, the volume rewards repeated consultation by readers, curators and researchers alike.