Edward I Koch Books In Order

Edward Koch Books In Order

  1. Murder at City Hall (1995)
  2. Murder on 34th Street (1997)
  3. The Senator Must Die (1998)

Novels

  1. Murder On Broadway (1996)

Picture Books

  1. Eddie (2004)
  2. Eddie’s Little Sister Makes a Splash (2007)

Non fiction

  1. Mayor (1984)
  2. All the Best (1990)
  3. Im Not Done Yet (1999)
  4. Guiliani (2003)
  5. Buzz (2007)
  6. The Koch Papers (2008)
  7. Politics (2011)

Edward Koch Book Covers

Novels Book Covers

Picture Books Book Covers

Non fiction Book Covers

Edward I Koch Books Overview

Murder at City Hall

In his first Ed Koch mystery, the former Mayor of New York City introduces his fictional alter ego who turns amateur sleuth to flush out a murderer who had the nerve to kill on Hizzoner’s doorstep.

Murder on 34th Street

Christmas in New York. The city’s legendary Ramsey’s Department Store is suffering its worst season in years. General manager Barnaby Tischler knows it’s because their rival, Weatherly’s superstore, is scaring off the store’s customers with bomb threats! But when Ramsey’s Santa for hire is found in a utility closet shot through the heart, Tischler’s only hope lies in his old buddy, Mayor Ed Koch.

Murder On Broadway

When Conor Matthews, the star of The Last Laugh, is murdered during the tenth anniversary performance of Broadway’s longest running musical, mayor turned sleuth Ed Koch sets out to find the killer before he or she can make an encore performance.’

Eddie

No matter how much Eddie practices, he just can’t play baseball like his big brother, Harold. In fact, there’s only one part of the game Eddie‘s any good at, and it has nothing to do with double plays or home runs Eddie‘s great at talking, and gives a fantastic game wrap up. Fortunately for Eddie, Harold helps him see just how talented he really is and starts him on an amazing career! James Warhola’s richly detailed artwork, full of wit and wonderful period details, brings the Koch brothers to life.

Eddie’s Little Sister Makes a Splash

Patty can t wait for summer vacation! She’s five years old, finally a big girl, and she s going to have a great time and remember every minute. Unfortunately, there aren t any other kids her age at the lake, and big brother Eddie doesn t want her tagging along with him and his friends. So Patty takes matters into her own hands and ends up making a big splash none of them will ever forget!

The team who created Eddie: Harold s Little Brother brings us another uplifting family story.

All the Best

All the Best is Ed Koch at his most candid and flamboyant. Here are the mayor’s most combative, illuminating, and amusing letters letters which reveal as never before Koch’s personal views on the people, issues, and events of the last decade.

Im Not Done Yet

I’m Not Done Yet! is a lively primer on remaining relevant into the so called retirement years. Ed Koch, the colorful three term mayor of New York City and now a noted television and radio personality, columnist, and commentator, offers anecdotal evidence to suggest that the healthiest outlook on advancing age is to keep active at the work you love. Koch reflects on life after politics and life after turning seventy. The book takes readers through the author’s various career turns since losing the Democratic mayoral primary to David Dinkins in 1989, with occasional looks back at related experiences and childhood memories. Included are discussions of the up and downturns of what Koch refers to as the third act of his varied career, and a frank account of his recent medical history. Published to coincide with Koch’s seventy fifth birthday, I’m Not Done Yet! ends with the author’s vision of his own obituary, reflecting on the life he has lived and the choices he has made. Here, for the first time, he speaks openly about what it has meant to live a life alone without a partner, without children and what it might mean in the years ahead. By turns funny, candid, insightful, and unflinchingly honest, I’m Not Done Yet! is a fearless account of an extraordinary man’s understanding of what it means to reach one’s autumn years.I’m Not Done Yet! is a lively primer on remaining relevant into the so called retirement years. Ed Koch, the colorful three term mayor of New York City and now a noted television and radio personality, columnist, and commentator, offers anecdotal evidence to suggest that the healthiest outlook on advancing age is to keep active at the work you love. Koch reflects on life after politics and life after turning seventy. The book takes readers through the author’s various career turns since losing the Democratic mayoral primary to David Dinkins in 1989, with occasional looks back at related experiences and childhood memories. Included are discussions of the up and downturns of what Koch refers to as the third act of his varied career, and a frank account of his recent medical history. Published to coincide with Koch’s seventy fifth birthday, I’m Not Done Yet! ends with the author’s vision of his own obituary, reflecting on the life he has lived and the choices he has made. Here, for the first time, he speaks openly about what it has meant to live a life alone without a partner, without children and what it might mean in the years ahead. By turns funny, candid, insightful, and unflinchingly honest, I’m Not Done Yet! is a fearless account of an extraordinary man’s understanding of what it means to reach one’s autumn years.

Guiliani

In the pantheon of politicians people love to hate, Rudy Giuliani is number one. But how much Rudy bashing is mindless, and how much is meaningful? Former New York City mayor Ed Koch answers that question in Giuliani: Nasty Man, which chronicles Giuliani’s two terms in office from the vantage point of a man qualified to judge a Big Apple mayor’s performance. Koch exposes Giuliani’s nastiness as an impediment to effective governing.

Buzz

How does a political unknown, with little wealth or family connections, take on the most powerful figures in New York politics and rise to the top, becoming not only the Mayor, but an enduring influential figure on the American scene. According to the former Mayor of New York for three terms, 1978 1989, Ed Koch, the explanation is ‘Buzz.’In politics, creating a buzz is about making a memorable entrance by not letting the crowd forget who you are and what you stand for. Koch has always been great at making an entrance, attracting attention, and getting people not only to take notice, but to listen. How else, he suggests, does a loudmouth lifelong New York Democrat get a prime speaking slot at the Republican National Convention? The book will showcase Koch’s humor and legendary candor in an in your face, informative style. In it, Koch reveals the secrets of his success, and explains how others can use his techniques to generate the kind of buzz that can further their business, public, and private lives…
techniques that can make an unknown into a star.

The Koch Papers

For more than three decades, Ed Koch has been one of America’s most interesting and outspoken political figures. In this provocative new book, Koch with Rafael Medoff guides readers through the major battles in his life long fight against anti Semitism. Interviews, speeches, new essays, never before published personal correspondence, and more highlight his leadership on campuses, in the media, on the streets of New York City, and in the halls of power in Washington, DC. The book also features personal letters from Henry Louis Gates, former President George Bush, and other prominent figures. Koch will reveal startling information for the first time here, and his writings are controversial, piercing, teasing, and questioning. This book will ignite discussion for years to come

Politics

Politics is ‘the science and art of political government.’ It is also ‘factional scheming for power and status within a group’ and ‘crafty or unprincipled methods.’ That’s the Webster definition. It is all of that and more…

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