BY THE SAME AUTHORWith Poor Immigrants to AmericaDecorated cloth, 8vo, illustrated, $2.00“We collected on the quay at Liverpool—English, Russians, Jews, Germans, Swedes, Finns.... Three hundred yards out in the harbor stood the red funneled Cunarder which was to bear us to America....” The beginning of the voyage is thus described, a voyage during which the reader sees life from a new angle. The trip across is, however, but the forerunner of even more interesting days. Stephen Graham has the spirit of the real adventurer and the story of his intimate association with the immigrants is an intensely human and dramatic narrative, valuable both as literature and as a sympathetic interpretation of a movement which too frequently is viewed only with unfriendly eyes.“Mr. Graham has the spirit of the real adventurer. He prefers people to the Pullmans, steerage passage to first cabin. In his mingling with the poorer classes he comes in contact intimately with a life which most writers know only by hearsay, and interesting bits of this life and that which is picturesque and romantic and unlooked for he transcribes to paper with a freshness and vividness that mark him a good mixer with men, a keen observer and a skillful adept with the pen.”—North American.THE MACMILLAN COMPANYPublishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
BY THE SAME AUTHORWith Poor Immigrants to AmericaDecorated cloth, 8vo, illustrated, $2.00“We collected on the quay at Liverpool—English, Russians, Jews, Germans, Swedes, Finns.... Three hundred yards out in the harbor stood the red funneled Cunarder which was to bear us to America....” The beginning of the voyage is thus described, a voyage during which the reader sees life from a new angle. The trip across is, however, but the forerunner of even more interesting days. Stephen Graham has the spirit of the real adventurer and the story of his intimate association with the immigrants is an intensely human and dramatic narrative, valuable both as literature and as a sympathetic interpretation of a movement which too frequently is viewed only with unfriendly eyes.“Mr. Graham has the spirit of the real adventurer. He prefers people to the Pullmans, steerage passage to first cabin. In his mingling with the poorer classes he comes in contact intimately with a life which most writers know only by hearsay, and interesting bits of this life and that which is picturesque and romantic and unlooked for he transcribes to paper with a freshness and vividness that mark him a good mixer with men, a keen observer and a skillful adept with the pen.”—North American.
BY THE SAME AUTHOR
With Poor Immigrants to America
Decorated cloth, 8vo, illustrated, $2.00
“We collected on the quay at Liverpool—English, Russians, Jews, Germans, Swedes, Finns.... Three hundred yards out in the harbor stood the red funneled Cunarder which was to bear us to America....” The beginning of the voyage is thus described, a voyage during which the reader sees life from a new angle. The trip across is, however, but the forerunner of even more interesting days. Stephen Graham has the spirit of the real adventurer and the story of his intimate association with the immigrants is an intensely human and dramatic narrative, valuable both as literature and as a sympathetic interpretation of a movement which too frequently is viewed only with unfriendly eyes.
“Mr. Graham has the spirit of the real adventurer. He prefers people to the Pullmans, steerage passage to first cabin. In his mingling with the poorer classes he comes in contact intimately with a life which most writers know only by hearsay, and interesting bits of this life and that which is picturesque and romantic and unlooked for he transcribes to paper with a freshness and vividness that mark him a good mixer with men, a keen observer and a skillful adept with the pen.”—North American.
THE MACMILLAN COMPANYPublishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York