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E. Haldeman-Julius (1889–1951)

Author of The Essence of Buddhism

87+ Works 162 Members 3 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: Pittsburgh State

Works by E. Haldeman-Julius

The Essence of Buddhism (2013) — Editor — 23 copies, 1 review
The meaning of atheism (1931) 9 copies
Dust (2015) — Author — 7 copies
Rhyming Dictionary — Editor — 4 copies
Why I do not fear death (1929) 3 copies
Tales of the Mysterious and Weird (1947) — Editor — 2 copies
The Humor of Whistler (1922) 2 copies
Masterpieces of American Humor — Editor — 2 copies
Proverbs of Ireland (1930) — Editor — 2 copies
Embers. a Play in One Act (1923) 2 copies
The Big American Parade (1929) 2 copies
Proverbs of Arabia (2007) — Editor — 2 copies
The Art of Digesting Ideas (1947) — Editor — 2 copies
What Is a Liberal? (1945) 2 copies
Caught 1 copy
A Trip to Plutopia (2015) 1 copy
Why I, a Man, Must Dress As a Girl — Editor — 1 copy
Proverbs of Russia (1924) — Editor — 1 copy
Proverbs of Italy (2010) — Editor — 1 copy
Great Stories of the Sea (1940) — Editor — 1 copy
The Art of Reading (1923) 1 copy
Epigrams of Wit, Wisdom and Wickedness (1924) — Editor — 1 copy
Poems of Robert Burns — Editor — 1 copy

Associated Works

Enoch Arden (1864) — Editor, some editions — 119 copies, 3 reviews
Fourteen Little Essays (1930) — Editor — 1 copy
Boccaccio's Stories (1923) — Editor — 1 copy
The Psychology of the Affections (1919) — Editor — 1 copy
Barns and Coal Mines Around Girard, Kansas (1947) — Introduction — 1 copy
Legends of Greek and Roman Heroes (1924) — Editor — 1 copy
Hints on Writing Poetry Little — Editor — 1 copy
The Obliterated Man and Other Stories (1920) — Editor — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

3 reviews
This is an accessible and thought-provoking memoir about books and sales written by the once popular publicist and socialist businessman, Emmanuel Haldeman-Julius. This deserves to be read by anyone with an interest in publishing, but also in the shaping of American history and its 'public psychology' in the twentieth century. From the small town of Girard, in Kansas, Haldeman-Julius took over an important socialist organ of thought called An Appeal to Reason, and followed in the footsteps show more of giants of American literature such as Jack London. Publishing out of print or cheap classics, as well as gathering together writers such as Will Durant, Haldeman-Julius worked with his wife Ana Marcet Julius to publish millions of editions of pamphlets in the Little Blue Books series. At the small size of 8cm x 12cm, these Little Blue Books were bought up by mail order by millions of readers during the depression in the 1920s and ended up in vending machines in the 1930s. Haldeman-Julius' empire in book publishing started crumbling after J. Edgar Hoover put him on his enemies list because of his frank treatment of subjects such as marriage, sex, socialism, atheism, and politics, finally convicting him of tax evasion. Haldeman-Julius died in mysterious circumstances in 1951, appearing to drown in his own pool. This book published in 1928 by the legendary publish Simon and Schuster in New York tells the story of Haldeman-Julius' success and gives his insights into the reading public in America. show less
Sheeple, press and both political parties need to put down the gun control and immigration reform and read this booklet, it just might scare you enough to save America from committing suicide.

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Statistics

Works
87
Also by
9
Members
162
Popularity
#130,373
Rating
3.9
Reviews
3
ISBNs
20

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