Black Beauty
Anna Sewell’s Black Beauty is a classic of children’s literature and an important text in Victorian and animal studies. This critical edition reproduces the unabridged 1877 first edition and includes a critical introduction, contextual material, and notes.
This book argues that a religious worldview is only one of many identities immigrants use to assimilate. It finds that generational stage, gender, and religious tradition are more significant than religious orthodoxy in shaping immigrant stances on social and economic issues.
This book is a panorama of the most famous American monuments, highlighting the greatest American experiences from independence to today. Each chapter pays homage to the men and women of the American experience and the events immortalized in granite, stone and edifices.