Thomas Boyd eBooks
eBooks di Thomas Boyd di Formato Pdf
The Jubilee History of the Leigh Friendly Co-Operative Society Limited: 1857 1907. E-book. Formato PDF Thomas Boydell - Forgotten Books, 2017 -
The history of the Co-operative Movement in Leigh, during the fifty years of its existence, is so closely connected with the history and condition of the town itself and its inhabitants, or at any rate so far as regards the condition of the working classes, that it seemed desirable, by way of introduction, to give a brief account of the same for a number of years prior to the introduction of co-operation.Leigh is greatly in need of a historian. There is no connected record of local events prior to the publication of the local papers, the first of which was published in 1848 under the title of The Leigh Advertiser, and was continued as a four-page monthly for one year only; being edited by Mr. Thomas Halliwell. After this there is an interval of three years, when in January, 1852, the Leigh Chronicle commences, also as a monthly, and continues until July, 1855, when it commences as a weekly, and has continued as such to the present day. The Leigh Times commenced in 1871 and the Leigh Journal in 1873, the two being amalgamated as the present-day Leigh Journal and Times in 1875.
Through the Wheat. E-book. Formato PDF Thomas Boyd - Ionlineshopping.Com, 2019 -
Through the Wheat (1923) was the first book published by Thomas Alexander Boyd, about the experiences of a young American Marine during World War I. Through the Wheat follows the experience of William Hicks, an automatic rifleman in the US Marine Corps, through his first experience of combat, at Belleau Wood. He enlists in the summer of 1917, but spends a year in France, where he serves military policeman, stevedore, and construction laborer, doesn't see frontline action and combat until the summer of 1918, when the novel begins. First, Hick's company is set to the frontline trenches, where they spend more than a month without fighting, and only once does Hicks and a squad of men leave the trenches to go on a small raid. However, during the raid, a communication mix-up causes their own lines to open fire on them, killing one of the squad and ending the raid. A few weeks later, the battalion is relieved from frontline duty. Not long after, the Germans begin their Spring Offensive, and Hick's company is sent to northern France to help repel the invasion. They engage the Germans, and fight the Battle of Belleau Wood, as one by one members of Hick's original platoon get picked off by gunfire, bombardment, gas, and even self-inflicted injury. By the end of the novel, everyone that Hicks knew a few months before is dead, and he's been so pushed by starvation, dehydration, and exhaustion that Hicks is skirting the edge of delirium. The novel ends with Hicks losing all care in the world and going emotionally numb. Contemporary reviews of Through the Wheat compared it to The Red Badge of Courage. F. Scott Fitzgerald said that the novel was a "work of art" & published a review to the New York Evening Post praising the novel.