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Foreword | xiii | |
Part I | A Boy on Horseback | |
I | When I Was an Angel | 3 |
II | My Savage Stage | 11 |
III | A Miserable, Merry Christmas | 17 |
IV | A Boy on Horseback | 24 |
V | The Sporting Age | 34 |
VI | A Painter and a Page | 42 |
VII | The Neely Farm | 51 |
VIII | A Prince and a Cowboy | 59 |
IX | I Get Religion | 68 |
X | I Become a Hero, Save a Life | 77 |
XI | I Get a Colt to Break In | 86 |
XII | I Become a Drunkard | 94 |
XIII | Napoleon | 101 |
XIV | All Through with Heroism | 106 |
XV | Preparing for College | 111 |
XVI | I Go to College | 117 |
XVII | I Become a Student | 124 |
XVIII | Berlin: Philosophy and Music | 129 |
XIX | Heidelberg: There Is No Ethics | 134 |
XX | Munich: There Are No Artists | 140 |
XXI | Leipzig: Music, Science, Love | 146 |
XXII | Over the Alps to Paris | 153 |
XXIII | Paris, London-Home | 159 |
Part II | Seeing New York First | |
I | I Become a Reporter | 169 |
II | Wall Street | 179 |
III | Bulls and Bears | 187 |
IV | The Police | 197 |
V | Clubs, Clubbers, and Clubbed | 208 |
VI | Dr. Parkhurst's Vice Crusade | 215 |
VII | The Underworld | 221 |
VIII | Bosses: Political and Financial | 231 |
IX | The Ghetto | 239 |
X | The Lexow Police Investigation | 247 |
XI | Roosevelt and Reform | 255 |
XII | Schmittberger: An Honest Policeman | 266 |
XIII | Saving Schmittberger | 274 |
XIV | I Make a Crime Wave | 285 |
XV | I Inherit a Fortune | 292 |
XVI | I Become a Capitalist | 302 |
XVII | Remaking a Newspaper | 311 |
XVIII | A Happy Newspaper Staff | 320 |
XIX | Getting Old Bill Devery | 327 |
XX | The Cuban War and T.R. | 338 |
XXI | Colonel Roosevelt as Governer | 344 |
Part III | Muckraking | |
I | From Newspaper to Magazine | 357 |
II | St. Louis, a City Inside Out | 365 |
III | The Shame of Minneapolis | 374 |
IV | I Achieve Fame and Something Better | 385 |
V | The Shamelessness of St. Louis | 392 |
VI | Pittsburgh: Hell with the Lid Lifted | 399 |
VII | Philadelphia: A Defeated People | 407 |
VIII | The Dying Boss | 416 |
IX | Chicago: An Example of Reform | 422 |
X | New York: Good Government | 430 |
XI | Cos Cob: An Art Colony | 436 |
XII | The Shame of the States: Missouri | 443 |
XIII | Illinois: The Progressive Movement | 450 |
XIV | Wisconsin and Bob La Follette | 454 |
XV | Rhode Island: The Good Old American Stock | 464 |
XVI | Ohio: A Tale of Two Cities | 470 |
XVII | The City On a Hill | 477 |
XVIII | Cincinnati and Boss Cox | 482 |
XIX | Some Theories: Big Business and Privileged Business | 489 |
XX | New Jersey: A Trust Factory | 495 |
XXI | T.R. as President | 502 |
XXII | The President Is Shaved | 509 |
XXIII | Ben Lindsey: The Kids' Judge | 516 |
XXIV | Muckraking Myself-A Little | 521 |
XXV | Life Insurance | 527 |
XXVI | Making the "American Magazine" | 535 |
XXVII | Timber Frauds in Oregon | 544 |
XXVIII | San Francisco: A Labor Government | 552 |
XXIX | How Hard It Is to Keep Things Wrong | 561 |
XXX | Los Angeles and the Apple | 570 |
XXXI | Free-Lancing in Washington, D.C. | 575 |
XXXII | Wall Street Again | 583 |
XXXIII | Cubs: Walter Lippmann, for Example | 592 |
XXXIV | A Successful Failure | 598 |
XXXV | The Muck I Raked in Boston | 604 |
XXXVI | "Boston 1915" | 612 |
XXXVII | Principals and Heelers | 621 |
Part IV | Revolution | |
I | Playing with Reds and Liberals in New York | 631 |
II | Experimenting with Philanthropy and Education | 641 |
III | Seeing Europe with Business Men-Greenwich Village | 648 |
IV | Dynamite | 658 |
V | Settling with Dynamiters' Case. An Experiment with "Big, Bad Men" | 670 |
VI | The Churches Decide Against Christianity | 679 |
VII | I Become a Goat | 690 |
VIII | Europe: A Procession of Nations Marching to War | 702 |
IX | Mexico: The First Revolution | 712 |
X | Carranza and Madero | 722 |
XI | Wilson and Mexico | 733 |
XII | To Russia: A Second Revolution | 741 |
XIII | The Russian Revolution | 747 |
XIV | Kerenski | 757 |
XV | Kerenski to Wilson | 764 |
XVI | Preparing for Peace | 773 |
XVII | The Peacemaker | 778 |
XVIII | The Bullitt Mission to Moscow | 790 |
XIX | The Peace that Was No Peace | 803 |
XX | Mussolini | 812 |
XXI | Experimental Europe | 821 |
XXII | A European View of America | 830 |
Part V | Seeing America at Last | |
I | The Dynamiters Again | 841 |
II | The New United States | 849 |
III | Prohibition: A Hang-Over | 858 |
IV | Prophecy | 865 |
V | Falling Out of Bed | 872 |
Index | 875 |
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Add The Autobiography of Lincoln Steffens, Cultural Writing. Here is the autobiography of one of the world's first celebrity journalists: Lincoln Steffens (1866-1936), a man whose writing was so notorious that President Theodore Roosevelt coined a term for it—muckraking. THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF LINCO, The Autobiography of Lincoln Steffens to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add The Autobiography of Lincoln Steffens, Cultural Writing. Here is the autobiography of one of the world's first celebrity journalists: Lincoln Steffens (1866-1936), a man whose writing was so notorious that President Theodore Roosevelt coined a term for it—muckraking. THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF LINCO, The Autobiography of Lincoln Steffens to your collection on WonderClub |