Newspaper Days: An AutobiographyDavid R. Godine Publisher, 2000 - 771 pages During Christmas 1891, Dreiser, age twenty-one and miserable as a bill collector in Chicago, decided to find a job as a reporter: "I conceived of newspapers as wonderlands in which all concerned were prosperous and happy. . . I was also determined to shake off the garments of the commonplace in which I seemed swathed and step forth into the public arena, where I could be seen and understood for what I was--a writer." He at last found a slot at the Chicago Daily Globe, helping cover the 1892 Democratic National Convention. |
Table des matières
Section 1 | 3 |
Section 2 | 28 |
Section 3 | 49 |
Section 4 | 68 |
Section 5 | 91 |
Section 6 | 105 |
Section 7 | 135 |
Section 8 | 156 |
Section 22 | 419 |
Section 23 | 439 |
Section 24 | 459 |
Section 25 | 464 |
Section 26 | 498 |
Section 27 | 503 |
Section 28 | 509 |
Section 29 | 532 |
Section 9 | 163 |
Section 10 | 171 |
Section 11 | 198 |
Section 12 | 229 |
Section 13 | 240 |
Section 14 | 282 |
Section 15 | 295 |
Section 16 | 335 |
Section 17 | 345 |
Section 18 | 357 |
Section 19 | 365 |
Section 20 | 385 |
Section 21 | 396 |
Section 30 | 558 |
Section 31 | 581 |
Section 32 | 600 |
Section 33 | 613 |
Section 34 | 675 |
Section 35 | 683 |
Section 36 | 688 |
Section 37 | 689 |
Section 38 | 708 |
Section 39 | 745 |
Section 40 | 746 |
Section 41 | 747 |