Letters of a Businessman to His Daughter

Letters of a Businessman to His Daughter
Author: G. Kingsley Ward
Publisher:
Total Pages: 180
Release: 1989
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780771088025

Ward's letters to his daughter provide straightforward advice on such topics as the importance of setting goals, delegating responsibility, balancing work and family, and how, as a woman, to ensure equal treatment in the workplace. Companion volume to "Letters of a businessman to his son". Bestseller 1989.

Sherwood Anderson's Secret Love Letters

Sherwood Anderson's Secret Love Letters
Author: Sherwood Anderson
Publisher: LSU Press
Total Pages: 336
Release: 1999-03-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780807125021

In 1927, tired of the literary life of New York City, New Orleans, and Chicago, a famous but aging American writer named Sherwood Anderson (1876-1941) -- author of Winesburg, Ohio(1919) and other short stories in which he virtually invented the modern American short-story -- moved to rural Southwest Virginia to write for and edit two small-town weekly newspaper that he owned, the Marion Democrat. and the Smyth County News. Living again among the small-town figures with whom he was usually most content, William Faulkner, Thomas Wolf, and indeed an entire generation of the greatest American writers -- worked for several years at making his newspaper nationally famous while struggling to come to terms with a life-threatening psychological depression and a failing third marriage. Both of Anderson's midlife problems were complicated when he met Eleanor Copenhaver, lovely young daughter in one of the prominent first families of Marion and a career social worker for the YWCA. Trying to keep their ardent affair secret in the small town, Anderson avidly courted the socially prominent and much younger Miss Copenhaver while at the same time trying to free himself from his embittered third wife and overcome the disadvantages of his age and his lover's family's distrust of him.Having by the end of 1931 continued for three years his surreptitious and consuming affair with Miss Copenhaver, Anderson determined on the first day of 1932 that the new year should be the year of decisions for him to gain his love in marriage or perhaps to end his life, and he began the new year with a creative venture unique in literature. Starting on January1, Anderson secretly wrote and hid away for Eleanor Copenhaver to find after his eventual death one letter each day, letters that she should someday discover, whether they had ever become married or not, and thereby relive in her memory their days of intense lovemaking a mutual despair about their then-unlikely marriage.Found by Eleanor Copenhaver Anderson only at Sherwood Anderson's death in 1941 and then preserved intact by this grieving widow who had married Anderson in 1933, the carefully hidden letters of 1932 recording their intense and seemingly doomed love affair have remained secret until now. Chosen by Eleanor Copenhaver Anderson before her death in 1985 to publish her husband's secret love letters, Anderson scholar Ray Lewis White has prepared a fascinating edition of these unique letters for the enjoyment of students and scholars of literature as well as for all other readers who savor compelling and inspiring stories of loss and love.

The Bookman

The Bookman
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 754
Release: 1924
Genre: Book collecting
ISBN:

The Letters of William Lloyd Garrison

The Letters of William Lloyd Garrison
Author: William Lloyd Garrison
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 646
Release: 1971
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780674526655

"Collected letters of newspaper editor, reformer, and key American abolitionist, William Lloyd Garrison from 1822, at age 17, to his death in 1879... These volumes are an important source of historical and biographical documentation -- with contextual insight by the editors, offering extensive insight into the mind of this influential reformer. Topics seen within include race relations, abolition of slavery, the rights of women, the role of religion and religious institutions, and the relation of the state and its citizens."--

Letters From the People

Letters From the People
Author: Ralph E. Shaffer
Publisher: The Endangered History Project
Total Pages: 812
Release: 2020-11-14
Genre: History
ISBN:

In 1881, Los Angeles was a rough, frontier community more in touch with the past than the future. The city had two dailies, the Herald and the Express, and the founding of the Times drew only modest attention. Then, in 1882, Harrison Gray Otis launched a formal column, LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE. Hundreds of letter writers used the column to call attention to the matters they thought should be the immediate concern of all Angelenos. While historians have recorded the euphoria of skyrocketing real estate prices, mass migration from the east, the Americanization of the city, and the growth of specific industries and institutions, life in Los Angeles can only be fully understood by examining the concerns of its citizens. The topics discussed reveal a Los Angeles that was occupied with concerns that still divide us today: education, crime, unequal justice, immigration, the treatment of minorities, women's rights, health care, transit, water, the river, lack of infrastructure, and government's negative effect on the business climate. Derived from more than 2,000 letters to the editor, LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE is an in-depth anthology supplemented with much historical data about the writers and events that shaped early Los Angeles on the eve of its explosive growth.

Letters from a Life

Letters from a Life
Author: Benjamin Britten
Publisher: Boydell Press
Total Pages: 692
Release: 2008
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9781843833826

Letters by the British composer to his friends, family, and colleagues document his life from school days to the end of World War II.

The Letters of Luisa de Carvajal y Mendoza Vol 1

The Letters of Luisa de Carvajal y Mendoza Vol 1
Author: Glyn Redworth
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 359
Release: 2024-08-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1040238068

Luisa de Carvajal y Mendoza (1566–1614) was a noblewoman who left her native Spain for a life of self-imposed exile and Catholic evangelism in Jacobean England. Her letters provide an unparalleled resource. This edition presents 180 letters, newly translated and set in context.