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A Hazard of New Fortunes by William Dean Howells | |
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About 408 pages (122,401 words) in 10 products |
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Biography of William Dean Howells
18467 words, approx. 61.6 pages
 William Dean Howells, whose literary career began on the eve of the Civil War and ended after World War I, is one of the three most important American writers of the late nineteenth century. Samuel Langhorne Clemens and Henry James, both of whom were his...
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Biography of William Dean Howells
17397 words, approx. 58 pages
 William Dean Howells , whose literary career began on the eve of the Civil War and ended after World War I, is one of the three most important American writers of the late nineteenth century. Samuel Clemens and Henry James, both of whom were his close fr...
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Biography of William Dean Howells
8190 words, approx. 27.3 pages
 William Dean Howells combined a career as an important novelist with that of a journalist. As editor of The Atlantic Monthly and later as author of, or contributor to, the "Editor's Study" and "Editor's Easy Chair" columns in Harper's Monthly, he was an...



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A Hazard of New Fortunes Information
1,006 words, approx. 3 pages
 A Hazard of New Fortunes is a novel by William Dean Howells. First published in 1890, the book was well-received for its awareness of social injustice—indeed, the book, considered by many to be his best work, was one of three Howells had written...


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A Hazard of New Fortunes by William Dean Howells | |
|
About 408 pages (122,401 words) in 10 products |
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