Memoirs of R. Morris ... Second Edition Revised
Title | Memoirs of R. Morris ... Second Edition Revised PDF eBook |
Author | Benjamin Godwin |
Publisher | |
Pages | 95 |
Release | 1819 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Memoirs of R. Morris
Title | Memoirs of R. Morris PDF eBook |
Author | Benjamin Godwin (D.D.) |
Publisher | |
Pages | 18 |
Release | 1818 |
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ISBN |
Stone Motel
Title | Stone Motel PDF eBook |
Author | Morris Ardoin |
Publisher | Univ. Press of Mississippi |
Pages | 280 |
Release | 2020-04-15 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 1496827759 |
In the summers of the early 1970s, Morris Ardoin and his siblings helped run their family's roadside motel in a hot, buggy, bayou town in Cajun Louisiana. The stifling, sticky heat inspired them to find creative ways to stay cool and out of trouble. When they were not doing their chores—handling a colorful cast of customers, scrubbing motel-room toilets, plucking chicken bones and used condoms from under the beds—they played canasta, an old ladies’ game that provided them with a refuge from the sun and helped them avoid their violent, troubled father. Morris was successful at occupying his time with his siblings and the children of families staying in the motel’s kitchenette apartments but was not so successful at keeping clear of his father, a man unable to shake the horrors he had experienced as a child and, later, as a soldier. The preteen would learn as he matured that his father had reserved his most ferocious attacks for him because of an inability to accept a gay or, to his mind, broken, son. It became his dad’s mission to “fix” his son, and Morris’s mission to resist—and survive intact. He was aided in his struggle immeasurably by the love and encouragement of a selfless and generous grandmother, who provides his story with much of its warmth, wisdom, and humor. There’s also suspense, awkward romance, naughty French lessons, and an insider’s take on a truly remarkable, not-yet-homogenized pocket of American culture.
Dutch
Title | Dutch PDF eBook |
Author | Edmund Morris |
Publisher | Modern Library |
Pages | 909 |
Release | 2011-10-19 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 0307791424 |
This book, the only biography ever authorized by a sitting President--yet written with complete interpretive freedom--is as revolutionary in method as it is formidable in scholarship. When Ronald Reagan moved into the White House in 1981, one of his first literary guests was Edmund Morris, the Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer of Theodore Roosevelt. Morris developed a fascination for the genial yet inscrutable President and, after Reagan's landslide reelection in 1984, put aside the second volume of his life of Roosevelt to become an observing eye and ear at the White House. During thirteen years of obsessive archival research and interviews with Reagan and his family, friends, admirers and enemies (the book's enormous dramatis personae includes such varied characters as Mikhail Gorbachev, Michelangelo Antonioni, Elie Wiesel, Mario Savio, François Mitterrand, Grant Wood, and Zippy the Pinhead), Morris lived what amounted to a doppelgänger life, studying the young "Dutch," the middle-aged "Ronnie," and the septuagenarian Chief Executive with a closeness and dispassion, not to mention alternations of amusement, horror,and amazed respect, unmatched by any other presidential biographer. This almost Boswellian closeness led to a unique literary method whereby, in the earlier chapters of Dutch: A Memoir of Ronald Reagan, Morris's biographical mind becomes in effect another character in the narrative, recording long-ago events with the same eyewitness vividness (and absolute documentary fidelity) with which the author later describes the great dramas of Reagan's presidency, and the tragedy of a noble life now darkened by dementia. "I quite understand," the author has remarked, "that readers will have to adjust, at first, to what amounts to a new biographical style. But the revelations of this style, which derive directly from Ronald Reagan's own way of looking at his life, are I think rewarding enough to convince them that one of the most interesting characters in recent American history looms here like a colossus."
Robert Morris's Folly
Title | Robert Morris's Folly PDF eBook |
Author | Ryan K. Smith |
Publisher | Yale University Press |
Pages | 359 |
Release | 2014-09-23 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 0300196040 |
In 1798 Robert Morris—“financier of the American Revolution,” confidant of George Washington, former U.S. senator—plunged from the peaks of wealth and prestige into debtors' prison and public contempt. How could one of the richest men in the United States, one of only two founders who signed the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation, and the Constitution, suffer such a downfall? This book examines for the first time the extravagant Philadelphia town house Robert Morris built and its role in bringing about his ruin. Part biography, part architectural history, the book recounts Morris’s wild successes as a merchant, his recklessness as a land speculator, and his unrestrained passion in building his palatial, doomed mansion, once hailed as the most expensive private building in the United States but later known as “Morris’s Folly.” Setting Morris’s tale in the context of the nation’s founding, this volume refocuses attention on an essential yet nearly forgotten American figure while also illuminating the origins of America’s ongoing, ambivalent attitudes toward the superwealthy and their sensational excesses.
Robert Morris
Title | Robert Morris PDF eBook |
Author | William Graham Sumner |
Publisher | N. Y., Dodd, Mead |
Pages | 208 |
Release | 1892 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Works, ed from the original editions and manuscripts by R. Morris, with a memoir by J.W. Hales
Title | Works, ed from the original editions and manuscripts by R. Morris, with a memoir by J.W. Hales PDF eBook |
Author | Edmund Spenser |
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Pages | |
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