Little Miss Grouch


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Little Miss Grouch by James Hopkin Adams is a cute ship romance about a young male love interest and a distraught young brunette. Excerpt: "Several tugs were persuasively nudging the Clan Macgregor out from her pier. Beside the towering flanks of the sea monster, the newest and biggest of her species, they seemed absurdly inadequate for the job. But they made up for their insignificance by self-important and fussy puffings and pipings, while, like an elephant harried by terriers, the vast mass slowly swung outward toward the open. From the pier, there arose a composite clamor of farewell."




Little Miss Grouch


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Little Miss Grouch (Esprios Classics)


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Samuel Hopkins Adams (January 26, 1871 - November 16, 1958) was an American writer, best known for his investigative journalism and muckraking. From 1891 to 1900, he was a reporter for the New York Sun where his career began, and then joined McClure's Magazine, where he gained a reputation as a muckraker for his articles on the conditions of public health in the United States. In 1904, Adams became an editorial staffer with McClure's Magazine working with Lincoln Steffens, Ida Tarbell, and Ray Stannard Baker. Adams considered himself a freelance writer and used his writings to support himself. In 1905, Adams was hired by Collier's to prepare articles on patent medicines.




Little Miss Grouch


Book Description

Little Miss Grouch




Little Miss Grouch


Book Description

Amusing story about a young American woman who boards a ship for England, to run away from her family, because she doesn't want to marry the person her father has picked out for her.




Little Miss Grouch


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Little Miss Grouch


Book Description

"[...]the closing of the mails he hastened to the rendezvous on deck. She was there before him, still muffled up, still swollen of feature, and still, as he indignantly put it to himself, "blubbering." Meantime there had reached the giant ship Clan Macgregor a message signed by a name of such power that the whole structure officially thrilled to it from top to bottom. The owner of the name demanded the instant return, intact and in good order, C.O.D., of a valuable daughter, preferably by pilot-boat, but, if necessary, by running the ship aground and sending said[...]".




Little Miss Grouch


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The Delineator


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The Independent


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