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Edith

Edith

Andrea Friederici Ross

Southern Illinois University Press
2020
sidottu
Chicago’s quirky patron saint. This thrilling story of a daughter of America’s foremost industrialist, John D. Rockefeller, is complete with sex, money, mental illness, and opera divas—and a woman who strove for the independence to make her own choices. Rejecting the limited gender role carved out for her by her father and society, Edith Rockefeller McCormick forged her own path, despite pushback from her family and ultimate financial ruin.Young Edith and her siblings had access to the best educators in the world, but the girls were not taught how to handle the family money; that responsibility was reserved for their younger brother. A parsimonious upbringing did little to prepare Edith for life after marriage to Harold McCormick, son of the Reaper King Cyrus McCormick. The rich young couple spent lavishly. They purchased treasures like the jewels of Catherine the Great, entertained in grand style in a Chicago mansion, and contributed to the city’s cultural uplift, founding the Chicago Grand Opera. They supported free health care for the poor, founding and supporting the John R. McCormick Memorial Institute for Infectious Diseases. Later, Edith donated land for what would become Brookfield Zoo.Though she lived a seemingly enviable life, Edith’s disposition was ill-suited for the mores of the time. Societal and personal issues—not least of which were the deaths of two of her five children—caused Edith to experience phobias and panic attacks. Dissatisfied with rest cures, she ignored her father’s expectations, moved her family to Zurich, and embarked on a journey of education and self-examination. Edith pursued analysis with then-unknown Carl Jung. Her generosity of spirit led Edith to become Jung’s leading patron. She also supported up-and-coming musicians, artists, and writers, including James Joyce as he wrote Ulysses.While Edith became a Jungian analyst, her husband, Harold, pursued an affair with an opera star. After returning to Chicago and divorcing Harold, Edith continued to deplete her fortune. She hoped to create something of lasting value, such as a utopian community and affordable homes for the middle class. Edith’s goals caused further difficulties in her relationship with her father and are why he and her brother cut her off from the family funds even after the 1929 stock market crash ruined her. Edith’s death from breast cancer three years later was mourned by thousands of Chicagoans.Respectful and truthful, Andrea Friederici Ross presents the full arc of this amazing woman’s life and expertly helps readers understand Edith’s generosity, intelligence, and fierce determination to change the world.
Edith

Edith

Andrea Friederici Ross

Southern Illinois University Press
2021
nidottu
Chicago’s quirky patron saint.This thrilling story of a daughter of America’s foremost industrialist, John D. Rockefeller, is complete with sex, money, mental illness, and opera divas—and a woman who strove for the independence to make her own choices. Rejecting the limited gender role carved out for her by her father and society, Edith Rockefeller McCormick forged her own path, despite pushback from her family and ultimate financial ruin.Young Edith and her siblings had access to the best educators in the world, but the girls were not taught how to handle the family money; that responsibility was reserved for their younger brother. A parsimonious upbringing did little to prepare Edith for life after marriage to Harold McCormick, son of the Reaper King Cyrus McCormick. The rich young couple spent lavishly. They purchased treasures like the jewels of Catherine the Great, entertained in grand style in a Chicago mansion, and contributed to the city’s cultural uplift, founding the Chicago Grand Opera. They supported free health care for the poor, founding and supporting the John R. McCormick Memorial Institute for Infectious Diseases. Later, Edith donated land for what would become Brookfield Zoo.Though she lived a seemingly enviable life, Edith’s disposition was ill-suited for the mores of the time. Societal and personal issues—not least of which were the deaths of two of her five children—caused Edith to experience phobias and panic attacks. Dissatisfied with rest cures, she ignored her father’s expectations, moved her family to Zurich, and embarked on a journey of education and self-examination. Edith pursued analysis with then-unknown Carl Jung. Her generosity of spirit led Edith to become Jung’s leading patron. She also supported up-and-coming musicians, artists, and writers, including James Joyce as he wrote Ulysses.While Edith became a Jungian analyst, her husband, Harold, pursued an affair with an opera star. After returning to Chicago and divorcing Harold, Edith continued to deplete her fortune. She hoped to create something of lasting value, such as a utopian community and affordable homes for the middle class. Edith’s goals caused further difficulties in her relationship with her father and are why he and her brother cut her off from the family funds even after the 1929 stock market crash ruined her. Edith’s death from breast cancer three years later was mourned by thousands of Chicagoans.Respectful and truthful, Andrea Friederici Ross presents the full arc of this amazing woman’s life and expertly helps readers understand Edith’s generosity, intelligence, and fierce determination to change the world.
Edith

Edith

James Robinson

British Library, Historical Print Editions
2011
pokkari
Title: Edith: a tale of Belle Isle, Windermere. In verse.Publisher: British Library, Historical Print EditionsThe British Library is the national library of the United Kingdom. It is one of the world's largest research libraries holding over 150 million items in all known languages and formats: books, journals, newspapers, sound recordings, patents, maps, stamps, prints and much more. Its collections include around 14 million books, along with substantial additional collections of manuscripts and historical items dating back as far as 300 BC.The POETRY & DRAMA collection includes books from the British Library digitised by Microsoft. The books reflect the complex and changing role of literature in society, ranging from Bardic poetry to Victorian verse. Containing many classic works from important dramatists and poets, this collection has something for every lover of the stage and verse. ++++The below data was compiled from various identification fields in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as an additional tool in helping to insure edition identification: ++++ British Library Robinson, James; 1853. 8 . 11646.f.49.
Edith

Edith

Jo Barney

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2015
nidottu
SYNOPSIS: EDITH by Jo BarneyEdith, sixty-seven, wakes on Christmas morning to find her husband Art lying next to her, dead. Their shotgun wedding, forty-some years before, has not led to a happy-ever-after scenario. Edith is pretty sure she doesn't like Art, perhaps never has, and she is sure he has felt the same way, but their senses of responsibility have kept them together. Edith has focused on raising her son Brian, who has become successful in all parts of his life: job, marriage, fatherhood, and he is the joy of her life, just about the only one.Art is cremated and buried, but a mystery uncovered by an autopsy (required because of his sudden, unexpected demise) involves a high alcohol blood content, barbiturates, and Valium. Art, to Edith's knowledge, did not take sedatives or other psychotropic drugs, drank, yes, but not to excess. The insurance company questions the possibility of suicide and the resulting lower payout. Edith, so angry at her husband for guilt-punishing her and their son in this way, goes through the dead man's pockets, discovers a secret life involving bars, restaurants, a hotel, and as she follows up on the clues to this life--matchbooks, receipts, a pink Kleenex--she discovers Art's connection to an l8-year-old girl, dark-skinned, curly wig, and beautiful.She also meets the girl's social worker and Seth, a good-looking older black man who says she is handsome. Edith, trying to begin life over, is glad she's had her hair colored and a make-over.In the meantime, Brian's wife Kathleen reveals that Brian is coming home at night smelling like another woman, sometimes like citrus. He's taken large sums out of their savings account. Brian, the perfect son, apparently isn't so perfect. Edith hasn't liked Kathleen much, but their husbands' secret transgressions bring the two women closer, and they separately and together attempt to find out what is going on. The men, one dead, the other saying, "It's going to be all right," aren't talking.Their clues lead them to a bar, to a rib joint, to a high-class restaurant, and to the Hilton; Edith agrees to meet Latisha, who calls herself Art's friend, and who is about to go to college. Kathleen discovers more money missing and that Brian has a code in his datebook that indicates secret meetings. She goes to a lawyer, discusses divorce.Edith decides that Latisha, the black-haired teenager, may be either Art's lover or his daughter. Either way, she's had it with Art's secrets, but somewhere in her sleepless nights she also realizes that if he committed suicide, it could have been her fault, her un-love of him. A phone call from a kind policemen lessens her guilt about his death, but not about what Art might have been up to the nights he left the house late at night, coming home smelling like alcohol and one night, oranges. Seth and the social worker who has worked with Latisha are brother and sister. They know more than anyone what has gone on, what is happening at this point, including who Latisha's mother is. But not everything. They don't know who is paying for Latisha'scollege tuition and that both Art and Brian have been involved with Patsy, Latisha's mother. Brian isn't the perfect son Edith believed he was, and the mysteries settle into truths, as he confesses to his mother. Edith discovers that Art's pockets have revealed his secrets and have brought her a new life.
Edith

Edith

Martina Devlin

THE LILLIPUT PRESS LTD
2022
nidottu
Martina Devlin, an award-winning columnist for the Irish Independent and podcaster for Dublin City of Literature #CityofBooks, has delivered a new novel based on the life of Edith Somerville of ‘Somerville and Ross’ fame – authors of The Irish R.M. In this work, set during the turbulent period of Irish Independence 1921–22, Somerville finds herself at a crossroads. Her position as a member of the Ascendancy is perilous as she struggles to keep her family home, Drishane House in West Cork, while others are burned out. After years in a successful writing partnership with Violet Martin, Edith continues to write after her partner’s death, comforted in the belief they continue to connect through automatic writing and séances. Against a backdrop of Civil War politics and lawlessness erupting across the country via IRA flying columns, people across Ireland are forced to consider where their loyalties lie. In Edith, Devlin limns a vivid historical context in this story of proto-feminist Edith Somerville courageously trying to keep home and heart in one piece. The story of Somerville and Ross is unique in the history of Irish women writers. Academic Shawn R. Mooney described these best-selling authors as ‘undeniably New Women: single, educated and economically independent writers whose lives and literary collaboration were unique manifestations of late-nineteenth century feminist strivings toward political and sexual equality’. Devlin depicts Edith in the round, suffering from loss, striving for safety, and keeping hold of hope in this captivating narrative set in the early years of a nascent state — a triumph of ventriloquism rooted in a society on the cusp of change.
Edith

Edith

Brigitte Galle

BoD - Books on Demand
2023
pokkari
Je m'appelle dith. Je suis n e en France, Grenoble. J'ai t plac e par les services sociaux dans une famille d'accueil. l' ge de 19 ans je me suis enfuie. Je suis arriv e Paris. La vie d'aventures qui m'a emmen e J rusalem et en Inde, n' tait pas celle que j'avais imagin e enfant. Ma m re, laquelle j'avais t arrach e alors que j' tais encore une enfant, avait r v pour moi, une vie paisible, entour e de ma famille. Le destin avait pr vu bien autre chose. La paix, je l'ai trouv e apr s un tr s long voyage. Les impr vus, les contretemps ont jalonn mon existence. J'ai aim vous faire part de mes espoirs et de mes d sespoirs.
Edith

Edith

Ernst Brunner

Dejavu Publicerings AB
2010
nidottu
I karelska Raivola vid ryska gränsen är det midsommar och syrenen blommar. Edith är svårt sjuk och hennes liv hänger på en mycket skör tråd. Hon har hunnit bli 31 år och halva hennes liv har tuberkulosen rasat inom henne. Trots sin svåra sjukdom och ringa ålder är hon en berömd poet med fyra diktsamlingar bakom sig. Hon lever på gården i Raivola, ensam med sin mor och sina katter. Huset har förfallit. Efter den ryska revolutionen är familjens förmögenhet endast ett vackert minne. Det lilla som Ediths författande inbringar kan nätt och jämnt hålla hungern borta. Hon har ett stolt avsked till kärleken bakom sig, en blind hänförelse som hon fått plikta med hån och förnedring. Edith Södergran är den stora banbrytaren i svensk diktning. Ernst Brunner har här skrivit en förunderligt fängslande, rörande, sensuell och dramatisk roman om henne och hennes liv.
Édith

Édith

Stéphane Auvray-Nauroy

Labyrinthes, Editions
2025
pokkari
C'est quoi, dire ? Comment c'est ? Ce n'est pas parler intelligemment. C'est peut- tre cette capacit mettre en sons nos pulsions organiques, nos sensations, celles qui f condent notre pens e, nos fantasmes enfouis impossibles noncer mais que l'on peut faire entendre dans le tremblement de nos voix, dans l' ructation de nos cris, dans la violente douceur de nos murmures. Comme chez Racine, comme chez Duras, comme chez Piaf, dith.