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Philip McFarland has written 7 work(s)
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Cover for 9781442222816 Cover for 9781442212268 Cover for 9781442212275 Cover for 9780773445017 Cover for 9780802118455 Cover for 9780802143907 Cover for 9780802117762 Cover for 9780802142054 Cover for 9780813334400 Cover for 9780813336527 Cover for 9780805239904
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Hardcover:

9781442222816, titled "Walking With Giants: John Hay’s Friendships With Abraham Lincoln, Mark Twain, Henry James, and Theodore Roosevelt" | Rowman & Littlefield Pub Inc, December 15, 2016, cover price $27.00

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Hardcover:

9781442212268 | Rowman & Littlefield Pub Inc, July 16, 2012, cover price $28.00

Paperback:

9781442212275 | Reprint edition (Rowman & Littlefield Pub Inc, January 16, 2014), cover price $19.95

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Product Description: This volume of Lady Jane Wilde's letters contains letters to her daughter-in-law, Constance Wilde, her Swedish friend Fru Rosale Olivecrona, the editor of the 'Nation,' Charles Gavan Duffy, a family friend, Sir Thomas Larcom, and other friends and acquaintances, revealing aspects of her character and life and the nature of the relationships she enjoyed...read more
By Philip McFarland (foreword by) and Karen Sasha Anthony Tipper (editor)

Hardcover:

9780773445017 | Edwin Mellen Pr, July 30, 2013, cover price $139.95 | About this edition: This volume of Lady Jane Wilde's letters contains letters to her daughter-in-law, Constance Wilde, her Swedish friend Fru Rosale Olivecrona, the editor of the 'Nation,' Charles Gavan Duffy, a family friend, Sir Thomas Larcom, and other friends and acquaintances, revealing aspects of her character and life and the nature of the relationships she enjoyed.

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A lively portrait of the author of one of the most important books of the nineteenth century describes Harriet Beecher Stowe's early life, her literary career, the seminal influence of Uncle Tom's Cabin in terms of shaping America's attitude toward slavery, and her relationships with her father, husband, and brother, preacher Henry Ward Beecher.

Hardcover:

9780802118455 | Grove Pr, November 10, 2007, cover price $26.00 | About this edition: A lively portrait of the author of one of the most important books of the nineteenth century describes Harriet Beecher Stowe's early life, her literary career, the seminal influence of Uncle Tom's Cabin in terms of shaping America's attitude toward slavery, and her relationships with her father, husband, and brother, preacher Henry Ward Beecher.

Paperback:

9780802143907 | Reprint edition (Grove Pr, November 1, 2008), cover price $17.00

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Written to celebrate the bicentennial of Hawthorne's birth, this fascinating chronicle of the author's most fertile years reconstructs his love affair with the town of Concord--a Massachusetts village that hosted more than its share of literary legends, including Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau. Reprint.

Hardcover:

9780802117762 | Grove Pr, May 1, 2004, cover price $26.00 | About this edition: Written to celebrate the bicentennial of Hawthorne's birth, this fascinating chronicle of the author's most fertile years reconstructs his love affair with the town of Concord--a Massachusetts village that hosted more than its share of literary legends, including Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau.

Paperback:

9780802142054 | Reprint edition (Grove Pr, July 10, 2005), cover price $16.00 | About this edition: Written to celebrate the bicentennial of Hawthorne's birth, this fascinating chronicle of the author's most fertile years reconstructs his love affair with the town of Concord--a Massachusetts village that hosted more than its share of literary legends, including Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau.

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Most Americans are familiar with the Revolution through its defining moments: the Stamp Act riots, the Boston Massacre, the Boston Tea Party, Paul Revere’s ride, the first shots fired at Lexington and Concord. These were events fueled by the anger of an array of Bostonians in search of liberty and justice for an American cause. As a legacy of the Revolution, their heroic tales have intimately defined our consciousness as Americans and the sense of history we carry with us today.But there is another side to the story, a story of Bostonians equally brave and as intensely devoted to liberty and justice, who watched with horror as their homes were pillaged, their reputations destroyed, and their lives torn apart. They were the losers, far more deeply than Britain, King George, or a host of British Redcoats. But their story is largely forgotten.In The Brave Bostonians, acclaimed novelist and historian Philip McFarland traces both sides through the intertwined lives of three native, and eminently respected, Bostonians during the turbulent year preceding the Revolution. Thomas Hutchinson, the last civilian governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, stands as the centerpiece of the story. Unfalteringly loyal to British law and order and far from home as an exile in London, he could only agonize over letters and newspaper headlines as his beloved Boston burst apart at the seams. Josiah Quincy, an archpatriot and feverish enemy of Hutchinson’s loyalism, drove himself to his own tubercular death in pursuit of the colony’s independence. And Benjamin Franklin, the venerable diplomat, scientist, and devoted Anglophile, fought with considerable skill to hold the British Empire together before conceding at last to declare himself heart and soul an American. These three men, each fiercely loyal in his own way to Boston and America, stood in separate corners of the conflict. And each found his own fate.Told in skillful style through the words of those who endured the struggles of the times, The Brave Bostonians brings fresh life to this stirring period of America’s past.

Hardcover:

9780813334400 | Reissue edition (Westview Pr, April 1, 1998), cover price $25.00 | About this edition: Most Americans are familiar with the Revolution through its defining moments: the Stamp Act riots, the Boston Massacre, the Boston Tea Party, Paul Revere’s ride, the first shots fired at Lexington and Concord.

Paperback:

9780813336527 | Westview Pr, March 1, 1999, cover price $16.00

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A recreation of the harrowing events aboard the brig 'Somers' that touched the lives of many nineteenth-century Americans, including Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and Herman Melville, includes new insights into this controversial affair

Hardcover:

9780805239904 | Schocken Books, August 1, 1990, cover price $3.98 | About this edition: A recreation of the harrowing events aboard the brig 'Somers' that touched the lives of many nineteenth-century Americans, including Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and Herman Melville, includes new insights into this controversial affair

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