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David Lindley re-examines the murder trials of Frances Howard and the historical representations of her as `wife, a witch, a murderess and a whore', challenging the assumptions that have constructed her as a model of female villainy.
In the wake of a series of global catastrophes that have destroyed industrial civilization, the inhabitants of Union Grove, a small New York town, do anything they can to get by, as they struggle to deal with a new way of life over the course of an eventful summer, in a novel set several decades in the future. By the author of The Long Emergency. Reprint.
Contains mostly personal papers, including school notebooks and college papers, 1893-1907; diary of his European trip in 1899 and photos of a trip to Canada; scrapbook about Means' books, with letters, photographs, clippings, and other items; World War I documents such as reports, correspondence, and orders; and autobiographical and biographical material. Also includes some personal and professional correspondence with his colleague Chester M. Jones among others; Harvard Medical School Curriculum Committee minutes, reports, and correspondence; manuscripts of lectures given at Lowell Institute and other places; and research notes on the history of the Association of American Physicians.