Sweet Cicely (Esprios Classics)


Book Description

Marietta Holley (1836-1926) was a popular United States humorist who used satire to comment on U. S. society and politics. She was the youngest of seven children and was an unhealthly child. This caused her to become a private person. At the age of 14 she stopped her formal education to help her family on their farm. After her father died she took care of the farm and her sick mother and sister. When she was 17 she joined the Adams village Baptist Church. There she found her voice. In 1860 she sent her poetry to the Adams Journal. Her successful series of Samantha books revolved around the character of Samantha Allen, a wise small-town woman who went on satirical adventures throughout big-city America, and her foolish husband, Josiah Allen.




Sweet Cicely


Book Description

"Sweet Cicely" from Marietta Holley. American humorist (1836-1926).




Sweet Clover (Esprios Classics)


Book Description

Clara Louise Burnham (née, Root; May 25, 1854 - June 20, 1927) was an American novelist. After the success of No Gentlemen (1881), other books followed, including A Sane Lunatic (1882), Dearly Bought (1884), Next Door (1886), Young Maids and Old (1888), The Mistress of Beech Knoll (1890), and Miss Bagg's Secretary (1892). The daughter of George Frederick Root, she wrote the text for several his most successful cantatas. The 1923 film, A Chapter in Her Life is based on Burnham's 1903 novel Jewel: A Chapter in Her Life. Born in Massachusetts, she died at the family home in Maine in 1927.







The Fighting Shepherdess (Esprios Classics)


Book Description

Caroline Lockhart was born in Eagle Point, Illinois on February 24, 1871. She grew up on a ranch in Kansas. She attended Bethany College in Topeka, Kansas and the Moravian Seminary in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. A failed actress, she became a reporter for The Boston Post and later for the Philadelphia Bulletin. She also started writing short stories. In 1904, she moved to Cody, Wyoming to write a feature article about the Blackfoot Indians, and settled there. She started writing novels and her second novel, The Lady Doc, was based on life in Cody. In 1918-1919, she lived in Denver, Colorado and worked as a reporter for The Denver Post. In 1919, her novel The Fighting Shepherdess, loosely based on the life of sheepherder Lucy Morrison Moore, was made into a 1920 movie starring Anita Stewart, with uncredited script adaptation by Lenore J. Coffee.




Aurora the Magnificent (Esprios Classics)


Book Description

Gertrude Hall (1863-1961) was an American poet, novelist, and translator. She was born in Boston, Massachusetts. Her mother, Edna Amile, was a concert and her father, David Culver Hall, was a concert tour conductor. The family lived in London, Florence, and New York. Gertrude Hall married literary critic William Crary Brownell in 1921. Her works include: Verses (1890), Age of Fairygold (1899), April's Sowing: A tale (1900), Aurora the Magnificent (1917), and The Wagnerian Romances (1925).