Book Details
| Title: | The Anchor to Youth | ||||||||||
| Author: |
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| Illustrator: |
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| Published: | 1920 | ||||||||||
| Publisher: | Harper's Bazar | ||||||||||
| Tags: | fiction, short story | ||||||||||
| Description: | Dodo and Edith talk about free will and middle-age and Jack joins in and the discussion leads to getting old. [Suggest a different description.] |
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| Comments: | Originally published in the April 1920 edition of Harper’s Bazar | ||||||||||
| Downloads: | 52 | ||||||||||
| Pages: | 14 ![]() |
Author Bio for Benson, E. F. (Edward Frederic)
Edward Frederic Benson (24 July 1867 – 29 February 1940) was an English novelist, biographer, memoirist, archaeologist and short story writer, known professionally as E. F. Benson. His friends called him Fred.
Benson's first book was Sketches from Marlborough. He started his novel writing career with the (then) fashionably controversial Dodo (1893), which was an instant success, and followed it with a variety of satire and romantic and supernatural melodrama. He repeated the success of Dodo, which featured a portrait of composer and militant suffragette Ethel Smyth (which she "gleefully acknowledged", according to actress Prunella Scales), with the same cast of characters a generation later: Dodo the Second (1914), "a unique chronicle of the pre-1914 Bright Young Things" and Dodo Wonders (1921), "a first-hand social history of the Great War in Mayfair and the Shires". The Mapp and Lucia series, written relatively late in his career, consists of six novels and two short stories. The novels are: Queen Lucia, Lucia in London, Miss Mapp (including the short story "The Male Impersonator"), Mapp and Lucia, Lucia's Progress (published as The Worshipful Lucia in the United States) and Trouble for Lucia. The short stories are "The Male Impersonator" and "Desirable Residences". Both appear in anthologies of Benson's short stories, and the former is also often appended to the end of the novel Miss Mapp.--Wikipedia.
Author Bio for Mitchell, Charles D.
Charles Davis Mitchell (1887-1940) came of age at the same time as such sophisticated magazine illustrators as F.R. Gruger, Henry Raleigh, F.C. Yohn and John R. Neill. He began contributing to The Saturday Evening Post in 1907, and drew for many other magazines including The Delineator, Good Housekeeping, Ladies' Home Journal and McCall's. He was especially in demand for his spirited drawings of elegant young women and handsome men, often languishing in chairs or on sofas and engaged in ardent conversation.—Wikimedia
Available Formats
| FILE TYPE | LINK | ||
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| Epub, specific to Kindle | 20260135-k.epub | ||
| Mobi/Kindle | 20260135.mobi | ![]() | Not all Kindles or Kindle apps open all .mobi files. |
| PDF (tablet) | 20260135-a5.pdf | ||
| HTML Zip | 20260135-h.zip |
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