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    Mass Market Paperback. Zustand: Good. No Jacket. Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less 1.01.

  • Swanberg, W. A. (William Andrew), 1907-1992.

    Verlag: New York: Charles Scribner's Sons [1968]., 1968

    Anbieter: Alec R. Allenson, Inc., Westville, FL, USA

    Bewertung: 4 Sterne, Learn more about seller ratings

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    Near fine ivory above black cloth in illus. magenta and mauve dj. 159, [1] p.; 21 illus.; 21 cm. A hoax on Morgan Dix, rector of Trinity Church, New York, by Eugene Fairfax Williamson, in 1880. `On Monday, February twenty-third, a squally morning with a high wind blowing wet snow, the rector was still sipping his breakfast tea when he had his first caller. It was a Mrs. Zickels, clad in a threadbare overcoat and woolen shawl, who left a rickety wagon drawn by an ancient nag on the street. He gathered that she was the wife of a Chatham Street dealer in used clothing. She had come to appraise and to buy Mrs. Dix's wardrobe if the price was right. She had a postcard which she waved as if it were a ticket of admission. Of course it was the work of the same imposter. She retired warily to stand beside her wagon.as another second-hand clothing dealer, Mrs. Lindeman, arrived.' (p. 30) -- `The rector's own world had been unhinged for more than five weeks. One could hardly blame him if a small fraction of the lightness and happiness in his own soul came less from contemplation of the risen Christ than from relief over the imprisoned Gentleman Joe. The splendor of the Easter service was almost matched by the color and luxury of new gowns with a suggestion of the soon-to-be-modish bustle, new hats with brilliant feathers, new men's tailoring beyond the chancel. As always on this great day, the streets outside were choked with broughams and landaus tended by cocked-hatted coachmen who gossiped as they waited their masters' return from worship. At the Tombs a mile to the north, Eugene Fairfax Williamson's sybaritic soul was offended as he sat among pickpockets, pimps and other felons and heard a service read by a threadbare pastor named Wiggins from the Pearl Street Mission.' (p. 144). 1st edition. Binding is Hardcover.

  • Dreiser, Theodore) Swanberg, W.A. (William Andrew)

    Verlag: Charles Scribner's Sons, NY, 1965

    Anbieter: Dorley House Books, Inc., Hagerstown, MD, USA

    Bewertung: 5 Sterne, Learn more about seller ratings

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    EUR 7,08 Versand

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    Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Very Good. Illus (illustrator). dj w/chipping, unclipped price, in mylar; grey c w/gilt titles on black; 618 clean, unmarked pages Size: 8vo.

  • Swanberg, William Andrew (1907 November 23 -- 1992 September 17)

    Verlag: Longmans, Green & Co, London, 1962

    Anbieter: Syber's Books, Melbourne, VIC, Australien

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    Hardcover (Original Cloth). Zustand: Very Good. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: No Dust Jacket. Photographic (illustrator). First Edition. 900 g; XIV, 558 pages, last three pages blank, eight pages of black-and-white photography, three appendices, bibliography, index. A biography of William Randolph Hearst. There is ageing of the edges of the text block, and the previous owner's name stamp on the front paste down. Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Please refer to accompanying picture (s). Illustrator: Photographic. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: 1-2 kilos. Category: Biography & Autobiography; Inventory No: 0213600.

  • Swanberg, W. A. [William Andrew]

    Verlag: Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, 1972

    ISBN 10: 0684125927ISBN 13: 9780684125923

    Anbieter: Ground Zero Books, Ltd., Silver Spring, MD, USA

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    Hardcover. Zustand: Good. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Good. Christopher Lukas (author photograph) (illustrator). First Edition (Scribner's A on verso). xiii, [1], 529, [1] pages. Illustrations, Notes. Author's Notes. Index. William Andrew Swanberg (November 23, 1907 in St. Paul, Minnesota - September 17, 1992 in Southbury, Connecticut) was an American biographer. He is known for Citizen Hearst, a biography of William Randolph Hearst, which was recommended by the Pulitzer Prize board in 1962 but overturned by the trustees. He won the 1973 Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography for his 1972 biography of Henry Luce, and the National Book Award in 1977 for his 1976 biography of Norman Thomas. He followed a college friend to New York City in September 1935. After months of anxious job-hunting he secured an interview at the Dell Publishing Company with president George T. Delacorte Jr., and was hired as an assistant editor of three lowbrow magazines. When the United States entered World War II, Swanberg was 34 years old, father of two children, and suffering from a hearing disability. Rejected by the U.S. Army, in 1943 he enlisted in the Office of War Information and, after training, was sent to England following D-Day. In London, amid the V-1 and V-2 attacks, he prepared and edited pamphlets to be air-dropped behind enemy lines in France and later in Norway. With the end of the war he returned in October 1945 to Dell and the publishing world. Swanberg did not return to magazine editing but instead did freelance work within and without Dell. By 1953, he began carving out time for researching his first book (Sickles), which Scribner's purchased, beginning a long association. By the 1950s he had established himself as a biographer. Henry Robinson Luce (April 3, 1898 February 28, 1967), an American magazine magnate, was called "the most influential private citizen in the America of his day". He launched and closely supervised a stable of magazines that transformed journalism and the reading habits of upscale Americans. Time summarized and interpreted the week's news; Life was a picture magazine of politics, culture and society that dominated American visual perceptions in the era before television; Fortune explored in depth the economy and the world of business, introducing to executives avant-garde ideas such as Keynesianism; and Sports Illustrated which probed beneath the surface of the game to explore the motivations and strategies of the teams and key players. Add in his radio projects and newsreels, and Luce created the first multimedia corporation. Luce envisaged that the United States would achieve world hegemony, and in 1941 he declared the 20th century would be the "American Century'. It is impossible not to feel Luce's influence on his biographer W. A. Swanberg, whose concise writing holds the attention. With Swanberg's clean-swept prose, there's not a dull sentence to be found.