The Journal of an American Farmer, 19331934
De som köpt den här boken har ofta också köpt The 48 Laws of Power av Robert Greene (häftad).
Köp båda 2 för 750 krProsperity Far Distant is a small gem of a book. Charles Wiltses journal of life on his parents Ohio farm in 1933 and 1934 describes farmings unrelenting physical toil, the grim fight to stave off ruin, the anger of Depression-era farmers, and the pleasures of rural life. Having just earned a doctorate in history and political philosophy, Wiltse was an unusual farm diarist, and his journal is also the story of a young scholars quest to make sense of a badly disrupted world. This book is a pleasant surprise. Wiltse paints a highly articulate and engaging picture of the frustrations of attempting to make a living farming when the agricultural economy was imploding all around(The) book is a thought-provoking page-turner. * The Annals of Iowa * In addition to contributing to the relatively small number of firsthand accounts of northeastern (sic) farming during the Depression, the diary offers a unique perspective from the viewpoint of an extremely educated and articulate observer. Recommended. * Choice * This is (Wiltses) journal of the problems and rewards, humorous moments, and financial difficulties of a man of letters on a hardscrabble farm. * Book News * You know the story: A young man graduates from college but can't find work. He moves back in with his parents and helps around the house to pay for room and board. He thinks government relief might ease his family's burden in hard times but instead meets frustration at every turn. The book is Prosperity Far Distant, and the diary covers not 2010-11 but 1933-34. A lot of things changed in the intervening years, but youthful ambition thwarted by an economic meltdown is as central to Wiltse's story as it is common among today's boomerang generation. * Concord Monitor * (Prosperity Far Distant) is a Depression-era diary by Charles M. Wiltse. And it is bleak. Sound like fun? It isn't. Oddly enough, that's the first reason it should go on your autumn reading list. It's a true artifact, an unvarnished window into history. Rarely has the Great Depression's effects on ordinary folks been so vividly, meticulously chronicled. * The Plain Dealer * A brief, editorial summary of Wiltses life and works after he left the farm rounds out this fascinating lens and firsthand testimony of the plight of small farmers in the Great Depression, and the haphazard efforts of the government to help them. Highly recommended for lay readers and scholars alike. * The Midwest Book Review * One of a kind. A freshly minted but jobless Cornell PhD in political philosophy and history becomes a chicken farmer in Pike County, Ohio, early in the Great Depression. He keeps a journal, mixing standard farm diary entrieson weather, crop progress, priceswith an intellectuals assessment of bureaucracy, the New Deal, class antagonism, and much more. The journal provides a rich source of information for scholars and a compelling narrative for all readers. Editor Michael Birkner adds to the richness with two essays treating the extraordinary postfarming career of the journals author, Charles Wiltse.
Charles M. Wiltse was a professor of history at Dartmouth College and the general editor of the fifteen-volume The Papers of Daniel Webster. He was also the author of many other books, including a three-volume biography of John C. Calhoun and The Jeffersonian Tradition in American Democracy. Michael J. Birkner is a professor of history and Benjamin Franklin Professor of Liberal Arts at Gettysburg College, where he has taught since 1989. He is the author or editor of twelve books, including the forthcoming James Buchanan and the Coming of the Civil War.