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The book “Gold and Glory or Wild Ways of Other Days: A Tale of Early American Discovery” is a historical and adventurous novel written by Grace Stebbing. The book takes the video into the journey of American exploration era. The whole story is a backdrop of new world during the age of discovery and innovation and set the readers into the journey of uncharted territories. The book intervenes the tails obvious characters that explores indigenous people and intersect various challenges endangers that navigate the life. Throughout the book readers can travel in the voyage of excitement with uncertain exploration of classes of culture as the characters faces various hurdles during the forge alliance and grapple with the questions to identify the pursuit of their own dreams. The presence of historical events, conflicts and commitments explore and based on themes including ambition resilience and human spirit. The comprehensive description of historical details and fascinating characters, the book delivers a captivating journey through a most significant period of American history. It helps all the avid readers to celebrate the adventure and discovery that define the early days of new word.
Only an apology for having written this historical tale. My private opinion is, that all writers of historical tales should return me thanks if I apologize for them with myself, all in a body, the truer the tale the ampler being the spirit of the apology. While I have been writing this tale, sometimes in its most important or serious portions, I have been startled by detecting my own mouth widening with an absurd smile, or by hearing a ridiculous chuckle issuing from my own lips, and have suddenly discovered that I was quite unconsciously repeating to myself the famous old Scotch anecdote of the old woman and the Scotch preacher—"That's good, and that's Robertson; and that's good, and that's Chalmers; ... and that's bad, and that's himsel'." Turning the old woman into the more learned among my possible readers, and the Scotch preacher into myself, I read the anecdote—"That's good, and that's Prescott; that's good, and that's Robertson; that's good, and that's guide-book; that's good, and that's Arthur Helps; and that's bad, and that's hersel'." I can only wind up my apology by pleading, that at least my badness has not gone the length of distorting a single fact, nor of giving to this wonderful page of history any touch of false colouring.
American studies in the scholarly sense are old in Europe. But academic chairs and research institutions were late in developing, as they were in the United States themselves. In most European universities the subject was firmly established only after the Second World War. The University of Oslo in Norway in 1946 founded a full professorship of American literature, the first of its kind in Scandinavia, and in 1948 an American Institute. In the following year the Institute started a series of book publications in cooperation with the University of Pennsylvania. This is the second of two volumes titled Americana Norvegica.