Franklin, the Apprentice Boy
Author : Jacob Abbott
Publisher :
Page : 172 pages
File Size : 40,50 MB
Release : 1855
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Jacob Abbott
Publisher :
Page : 172 pages
File Size : 40,50 MB
Release : 1855
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Archive Publishers
Publisher :
Page : 160 pages
File Size : 35,22 MB
Release : 1855-01-01
Category :
ISBN : 9781930679542
Author : Ruth Ashby
Publisher : Holiday House
Page : 89 pages
File Size : 11,93 MB
Release : 2014-04-15
Category : Juvenile Fiction
ISBN : 1561457442
Everyone knows Benjamin Franklin was an important statesman, inventor, and a signer of the Declaration of Independence. But did you know he started the first public library in America? Ben Franklin was always a "bookish" boy. The first book he read was the Bible at age five, and then he read every printed word in his father's small home library. Ben wanted to read more, but books were expensive. He wanted to go to school and learn, but his family needed him to work. Despite this, Ben Franklin had lots of ideas about how to turn his love of reading and learning into something more. First, he worked as a printer's apprentice, then he set up his own printing business. Later, he became the first bookseller in Philadelphia, started a newspaper, published Poor Richard's Almanac, and in 1731, with the help of his friends, organized the first subscription lending library, the Library Company. Ruth Ashby's fast-paced biography takes young readers through Franklin's life from his spirited, rebellious youth through his successful career as an inventor and politician and finally to the last years of his life, surrounded by his personal collection of books.
Author : William Cabell Bruce
Publisher :
Page : 564 pages
File Size : 38,62 MB
Release : 1917
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Author :
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Page : pages
File Size : 42,87 MB
Release : 1890
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Author :
Publisher :
Page : 970 pages
File Size : 35,51 MB
Release : 1893
Category : Encyclopedias and dictionaries
ISBN :
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 898 pages
File Size : 47,22 MB
Release : 1879
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Day Otis Kellogg
Publisher :
Page : 906 pages
File Size : 17,34 MB
Release : 1903
Category : Encyclopedias and dictionaries
ISBN :
Author : Thomas Spencer Baynes
Publisher :
Page : 902 pages
File Size : 18,46 MB
Release : 1879
Category : Encyclopedias and dictionaries
ISBN :
Author : Richard S. Lowry
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 188 pages
File Size : 20,56 MB
Release : 1996-06-27
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 0195356241
As Mark Twain, Samuel Clemens straddled the conflicts between culture and commerce that characterized the era he named the Gilded Age. In "Littery Man", Richard Lowry examines how Twain used these conflicts in his major texts to fashion an "autobiography of authorship," a narrative of his own claims to literary authority at that moment when the American Writer emerged as a profession. Drawing on wide range of cultural genres--popular boys' fiction, childbearing manuals, travel narratives, autobiography, and criticism and fiction of the period--Lowry reconstructs how Twain participated in remaking the "literary" into a powerful social category of representation. He shows how, as one of our cultures first modern celebrities, Samuel Clemens transformed his life into the artful performance we have come to know as Mark Twain, and his texts into a searching critique of modern identity in a mass-mediated society. "Littery Man" will appeal to both Twain scholars and to scholars and students of nineteenth-century American literature and culture.