|
Sort by:
title
, author
|
Alice Adams |
Booth Tarkington (1869 - 1946) |
Winner of the 1922 Pulitzer Prize.
The story of a young woman's attempt to move up the social ladder though her family seems to be slowly sinking.
|
Download this book (213 KBytes) Search at Barnes & Noble ... |
| Others who downloaded this book also downloaded ... |
|
Seventeen |
Booth Tarkington (1869 - 1946) |
Publishers Weekly #1 Best Seller for 1916.
Tarkington was a widely read and prolific multiple Pulitzer Prize winning novelist and dramatist.
Here Tarkington satirizes first love.
"Every man and woman over fifty ought to read Seventeen. It is not only a skillful analysis of adolescent love, it is, with all its side-splitting mirth, a tragedy. No mature person who reads this novel will ever seriously regret his lost youth or wish he were young again...." -- William Lyon Phelps, The Advance of the English Novel
|
Download this book (183 KBytes) Search at Barnes & Noble ... |
| Others who downloaded this book also downloaded ... |
|
The Magnificent Ambersons |
Booth Tarkington (1869 - 1946) |
Winner of the 1919 Pulitzer Prize. In 1942 Orson Wells directed a film version. The second book in the Growth trilogy, following The Turmoil.
"The Magnificent Ambersons is perhaps Tarkington's best novel," said Van Wyck Brooks. "[It is] a typical story of an American family and town -- the great family that locally ruled the roost and vanished virtually in a day as the town spread and darkened into a city. This novel no doubt was a permanent page in the social history of the United States, so admirably conceived and written was the tale of the Ambersons, their house, their fate and the growth of the community in which they were submerged in the end."
|
Download this book (256 KBytes) Search at Barnes & Noble ... |
| Others who downloaded this book also downloaded ... |
|
The Turmoil |
Booth Tarkington (1869 - 1946) |
Publishers Weekly #1 Best Seller for 1915.
Tarkington was a widely read and prolific multiple Pulitzer Prize winning novelist and dramatist.
The story uses a tale of two families following different trajectories but linked by romance to provide a glimpse of the changes induced by industrialization and urbanization.
|
Download this book (231 KBytes) Search at Barnes & Noble ... |
| Others who downloaded this book also downloaded ... |
|