William Dean Howells: 27 Novels in One Volume (Illustrated). William Dean Howells
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William Dean Howells
William Dean Howells: 27 Novels in One Volume (Illustrated)
The Rise of Silas Lapham, A Traveler from Altruria, Through the Eye of the Needle & many more
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[email protected] 2017 OK Publishing ISBN 978-80-7583-832-2
Table of Contents
WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS by Charles Dudley Warner
A TRAVELER FROM ALTRURIA: A Romance
AN OPEN-EYED CONSPIRACY: An Idyl of Saratoga
THE MINISTER'S CHARGE (The Apprenticeship of Lemuel Barker)
THROUGH THE EYE OF THE NEEDLE: A Romance
THE FLIGHT OF PONY BAKER: A Boy's Town Story
Introduction:
WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS
by Charles Dudley Warner
Howells, William Dean, author, b. in Martin's Ferry, Ohio, 1 March, 1837. His ancestors on the father's side were Welsh Quakers, and people of substance; his great-grandfather introduced the manufacture of flannel into his town and built three mills; his grandfather, impelled by his democratic sympathies, emigrated to this country, and became an ardent Methodist; while his father adopted the beliefs of Swedenborg, in which young Howells was educated. In all these generations the family was a cultivated race, living in an atmosphere of books and moral and literary refinement. His father had, for the time and place, a good collection of books, but it was mostly poetry, and familiarity with this doubtless decided the nature of his early literary efforts. Almost as soon as he could read he began to make verses and put them in type in his father's printing-office. In his inherited literary tastes and refinement and liberal and undogmatic religious tendency, in the plain living of his early years and his learning a trade, in his contact with a thoroughly democratic society, in the early habit of self-dependence and the knowledge of the realities of life, it is evident what has given the man his charm as a writer, his courage of opinion, his sturdy Americanism, and his profound sympathy with common life. When he was three years old his father removed to Hamilton, Ohio, and bought the Hamilton “Intelligencer,” a weekly journal, in the office of which Howells learned to set type before he was twelve years old. In 1849, the elder Howells, unable, conscientiously, to support a slave-holding president, sold his newspaper, and removed with is family to Dayton, Ohio, where he purchased the Dayton “Transcript,” a semi-weekly newspaper, which he turned into a daily. After a struggle of two years, this enterprise completely failed, not, however, from any want of industry, for all the sons worked at the case, and young Howells often set type till eleven o'clock at night, and then arose at four in the morning to deliver newspapers. The announcement of the catastrophe in business was accepted with American insouciance. “We all,” says the author, “went down to the Miami river, and went in swimming.” In expectation, which was disappointed, of taking the superintendence of a projected paper-mill, the elder Howells took his family to Greene county, where they remained a year. During this year, in a log house, the author had his sole experience of