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This book is about me and some of my experiences. I started this book from the time I was a teenager. I included some of my travels as I got older: Atlantic City; Canada; Bermuda; Puerto Rico; St. Thomas; China; Hawaii; Las Vegas; Los Angeles; South Carolina; North Carolina; Pennsylvania; Washington, DC; Maryland; New York; Connecticut; Atlanta, Georgia; Texas; Kentucky; Arkansas; and back to Florida.
"A memoir about childhood, relilience, and the trumphant power of storytelling."--From back cover.
The magazine that helps career moms balance their personal and professional lives.
The autobiography of the early radical leader and her participation in communist, anarchist, and feminist activities
EBONY is the flagship magazine of Johnson Publishing. Founded in 1945 by John H. Johnson, it still maintains the highest global circulation of any African American-focused magazine.
The magazine that helps career moms balance their personal and professional lives.
An “absorbing” biography of the playwright and Nobel laureate that “unflinchingly explores the darkness that dominated O’Neill’s life” (Publishers Weekly). This extraordinary biography fully captures the intimacies of Eugene O’Neill’s tumultuous life and the profound impact of his work on American drama, innovatively highlighting how the stories he told for the stage interweave with his actual life stories as well as the culture and history of his time. Much is new in this extensively researched book: connections between O’Neill’s plays and his political and philosophical worldview; insights into his Irish American upbringing and lifelong torment over losing faith in God; his vital role in African American cultural history; unpublished photographs, including a unique offstage picture of him with his lover Louise Bryant; new evidence of O’Neill’s desire to become a novelist and what this reveals about his unique dramatic voice; and a startling revelation about the release of Long Day’s Journey Into Night in defiance of his explicit instructions. This biography is also the first to discuss O’Neill’s lost play Exorcism (a single copy of which was only recently recovered), a dramatization of his own suicide attempt. Written with both a lively informality and a scholar’s strict accuracy, Eugene O’Neill: A Life in Four Acts is a biography worthy of America’s foremost playwright. “Fast-paced, highly readable . . . building to a devastating last act.” —Irish Times