A Life Of General Robert E. Lee

A Life Of General Robert E. Lee

John Esten Cooke’s A Life of General Robert E. Lee is a biography of the venerable commander of the army of the Confederate States of America.Offered a commission in the Union army by President Lincoln in 1861, the distinguished career officer and combat engineer opted instead to follow his home state of Virginia out of the Union. Lee quickly developed a reputation as a gifted battlefield tactician, defeating larger Northern forces again and again, although this talent was not enough to overcome the industrial and financial strengths of the North. Today, Lee is a much admired military figure and continues to be as revered in the North as he was in the South.HarperTorch brings great works of non-fiction and the dramatic arts to life in digital format, upholding the highest standards in ebook production and celebrating reading in all its forms. Look for more titles in the HarperTorch collection to build your digital library.

La tragédie du Président. Scènes de la vie politique, 1986-2006

La tragédie du Président. Scènes de la vie politique, 1986-2006

"On ne se méfie jamais assez des journalistes. Pour n'avoir pas à courir derrière une mémoire qui n'a jamais cessé de me fuir, je prends des notes. C'est ainsi que, depuis plus de quinze ans, j'ai consigné sur des cahiers à spirale la plupart de mes conversations avec Jacques Chirac. Alors que son règne arrive à son couchant, il m'a semblé qu'il était temps de vider mes carnets. Je ne les avais pas écrits pour qu'ils restent à rancir au fond d'un tiroir mais parce que le métier qui mène mes pas consiste à faire la lumière sur tout. Telle est sa grandeur et sa misère. Si l'on veut garder sa part d'ombre, il ne faut pas fréquenter les journalistes. Ceci n'est donc pas une biographie au sens propre mais plutôt l'histoire d'une tragédie personnelle, devenue, sur la fin, une tragédie nationale. C'est cette histoire que j'ai voulu raconter. Une histoire bien française." F.-O.G., février 2006

Histoire intime de la Ve République (Tome 1) - Le sursaut

Histoire intime de la Ve République (Tome 1) - Le sursaut

"Quand le général de Gaulle a pris le pouvoir en 1958, la France était quasiment par terre, à cause, entre autres, de la guerre d’Algérie et de l’effondrement des "élites". Prophétique, machiavélique et prosaïque, il l’a remise debout en à peine un an, sans négliger les plus infimes détails, ni lésiner sur les roueries et les mensonges. Le personnage que je dépeins est bien plus complexe que celui de la légende." F.-O. G. Dans le premier tome de son Histoire intime de la Ve République en trois époques, Franz-Olivier Giesbert revisite les années de Gaulle en y mêlant ses souvenirs personnels, pour dresser un portrait du Général en visionnaire, aussi inspiré que madré.

Between Two Kingdoms

Between Two Kingdoms

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • A deeply moving memoir of illness and recovery that traces one young woman’s journey from diagnosis to remission to re-entry into “normal” life—from the founder of The Isolation Journals and a subject of the Netflix documentary American SymphonyONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR: The New York Times Book Review, The Washington Post, Bloomberg, The Rumpus, She Reads, Library Journal, Booklist“I was immersed for the whole ride and would follow Jaouad anywhere. . . . Her writing restores the moon, lights the way as we learn to endure the unknown.”—Chanel Miller, The New York Times Book Review  “Beautifully crafted . . . affecting . . . a transformative read . . . Jaouad’s insights about the self, connectedness, uncertainty and time speak to all of us.”—The Washington Post In the summer after graduating from college, Suleika Jaouad was preparing, as they say in commencement speeches, to enter “the real world.” She had fallen in love and moved to Paris to pursue her dream of becoming a war correspondent. The real world she found, however, would take her into a very different kind of conflict zone. It started with an itch—first on her feet, then up her legs, like a thousand invisible mosquito bites. Next came the exhaustion, and the six-hour naps that only deepened her fatigue. Then a trip to the doctor and, a few weeks shy of her twenty-third birthday, a diagnosis: leukemia, with a 35 percent chance of survival. Just like that, the life she had imagined for herself had gone up in flames. By the time Jaouad flew home to New York, she had lost her job, her apartment, and her independence. She would spend much of the next four years in a hospital bed, fighting for her life and chronicling the saga in a column for The New York Times. When Jaouad finally walked out of the cancer ward—after countless rounds of chemo, a clinical trial, and a bone marrow transplant—she was, according to the doctors, cured. But as she would soon learn, a cure is not where the work of healing ends; it’s where it begins. She had spent the past 1,500 days in desperate pursuit of one goal—to survive. And now that she’d done so, she realized that she had no idea how to live. How would she reenter the world and live again? How could she reclaim what had been lost? Jaouad embarked—with her new best friend, Oscar, a scruffy terrier mutt—on a 100-day, 15,000-mile road trip across the country. She set out to meet some of the strangers who had written to her during her years in the hospital: a teenage girl in Florida also recovering from cancer; a teacher in California grieving the death of her son; a death-row inmate in Texas who’d spent his own years confined to a room. What she learned on this trip is that the divide between sick and well is porous, that the vast majority of us will travel back and forth between these realms throughout our lives. Between Two Kingdoms is a profound chronicle of survivorship and a fierce, tender, and inspiring exploration of what it means to begin again.

Autobiography

Autobiography

Rudolf Steiner seldom spoke of himself in a personal way, but in his Autobiography we are offered a rare glimpse into some of the most intimate aspects of his inner life, his personal relationships, and significant events that helped to shape the philosopher, seer, and teacher he became.This edition restores the original format of seventy chapters, just as they were written for the Goetheanum weekly newsletter. This autobiography is not merely a narrative of Rudolf Steiner's successes and failures, but the story of a soul possessed of a precise, probing scientific mind and a natural clairvoyant ability to see into the spiritual world. Although naturally clairvoyant, Steiner always recognized the integrity and importance of modern scientific methods, and thus he developed a modern discipline he named Anthroposophy, or spiritual science.During the century that followed the events recorded in this autobiography, Rudolf Steiner's insights have touched and enriched numerous areas of life in ways that continue to transform people’s lives in the twenty-first century.This illustrated, revised, updated, and expanded edition was the first volume to be released in The Collected Works of Rudolf Steiner. This series will eventually collect all of the English translations of Rudolf Steiner's works—including many never before in English—into an attractive and uniform set of his written and spoken words.

The Underground Railroad (Illustrated Edition)

The Underground Railroad (Illustrated Edition)

This book chronicles the stories of some 649 slaves who escaped to freedom via the Underground Railroad, a secret network formed by abolitionists and former slaves who helped them escape to the North. This book's original aim was to reunite those slaves with their families. But now it has turned into an important historical document that visiblises the existence of those who suffered inhuman cruelty at the hands of Southern Slave Owners and yet had the courage to break free. These unknown heroes and heroines were in true sense the founding fathers of African American Communities. This is why their stories must be heard and brought back from oblivion. A MUST READ! Excerpt: "Like millions of my race, my mother and father were born slaves, but were not contented to live and die so. My father purchased himself in early manhood by hard toil. Mother saw no way for herself and children to escape the horrors of bondage but by flight. Bravely, with her four little ones, with firm faith in God and an ardent desire to be free, she forsook the prison-house, and succeeded, through the aid of my father, to reach a free State. The old familiar slave names had to be changed…" William Still (1821–1902) was an African-American abolitionist, conductor on the Underground Railroad, writer, historian and civil rights activist. He was chairman of the Vigilance Committee of the Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society and directly aided fugitive slaves by keeping records of their lives and helping families reunite after the abolishment of slavery.

The Monk of Mokha

The Monk of Mokha

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • “A gripping, triumphant adventure” (Los Angeles Times) from the bestselling author of The Circle—the incredible true story of a young Yemeni American man, raised in San Francisco, who dreams of resurrecting the ancient art of Yemeni coffee but finds himself trapped in Sana’a by civil war.Mokhtar Alkhanshali is twenty-four and working as a doorman when he discovers the astonishing history of coffee and Yemen’s central place in it. He leaves San Francisco and travels deep into his ancestral homeland to tour terraced farms high in the country’s rugged mountains and meet beleaguered but determined farmers. But when war engulfs the country and Saudi bombs rain down, Mokhtar has to find a way out of Yemen without sacrificing his dreams or abandoning his people.

The Seven Storey Mountain

The Seven Storey Mountain

One of the most famous books ever written about a man’s search for faith and peace. The Seven Storey Mountain tells of the growing restlessness of a brilliant and passionate young man, who at the age of twenty-six, takes vows in one of the most demanding Catholic orders—the Trappist monks. At the Abbey of Gethsemani, "the four walls of my new freedom," Thomas Merton struggles to withdraw from the world, but only after he has fully immersed himself in it. At the abbey, he wrote this extraordinary testament, a unique spiritual autobiography that has been recognized as one of the most influential religious works of our time. Translated into more than twenty languages, it has touched millions of lives. .

Carnets de Moleskine

Carnets de Moleskine

Préface de Jean Giono. C'est insensé. Ça ne ressemble plus à rien. Il faut gueuler pour s'entendre. Je m'entends scander la marche folle, brancard aux épaules, avec ces mots : Tu veux vivre... tu veux vivre... tu veux vivre... À chaque éclatement je me demande où et comment je vais être touché. Je ne veux pas traîner comme Georges, pas être aveugle surtout, pas au ventre et puis soudain les limites de l'angoisse dépassées, je me sens devenu indifférent à tout. Je ne pense plus à rien qu'à être digne devant la mort. Ça ne dure pas longtemps. Une rafale toute proche volatilise mon courage et je recommence... pas mourir... pas mourir... Vivre... Vivre... À chaque ébranlement, tout est à refaire. La vue de Damien qui marche à ma hauteur me réconforte soudain. Je l'aperçois à la lueur d'une fusée, derrière les pieds du blessé que nous portons. Son regard durci fouille la nuit. À sa bouche, je vois qu'il siffle. Et je me mets à chanter à tue-tête... De juillet 1914 à août 1915, Lucien Jacques a tenu son journal, témoignage de l'enfer quotidien de la guerre. Dans cet enfer, quels sentiments existent encore, et les mots ont-ils encore un sens?

Paula

Paula

Newly ReissuedNew York Times Bestselling Author“Beautiful and heartrending. . . . Memoir, autobiography, epicedium, perhaps even some fiction: they are all here, and they are all quite wonderful.” —Los Angeles TimesWhen Isabel Allende’s daughter, Paula, became gravely ill and fell into a coma, the author began to write the story of her family for her unconscious child. In the telling, bizarre ancestors appear before our eyes; we hear both delightful and bitter childhood memories, amazing anecdotes of youthful years, the most intimate secrets passed along in whispers. With Paula, Allende has written a powerful autobiography whose straightforward acceptance of the magical and spiritual worlds will remind readers of her first book, The House of the Spirits.

Ecce homo, Wie man wird, was man ist

Ecce homo, Wie man wird, was man ist

In Voraussicht, dass ich über Kurzem mit der schwersten Forderung an die Menschheit herantreten muss, die je an sie gestellt wurde, scheint es mir unerlässlich, zu sagen, wer ich bin. Im Grunde dürfte man's wissen: denn ich habe mich nicht "unbezeugt gelassen". Das Missverhältniss aber zwischen der Grösse meiner Aufgabe und der Kleinheit meiner Zeitgenossen ist darin zum Ausdruck gekommen, dass man mich weder gehört, noch auch nur gesehn hat. Ich lebe auf meinen eignen Credit hin, es ist vielleicht bloss ein Vorurteil, dass ich lebe?… Ich brauche nur irgend einen "Gebildeten" zu sprechen, der im Sommer ins Oberengadin kommt, um mich zu überzeugen, dass ich nicht lebe… Unter diesen Umständen giebt es eine Pflicht, gegen die im Grunde meine Gewohnheit, noch mehr der Stolz meiner Instinkte revoltirt, nämlich zu sagen: Hört mich! denn ich bin der und der. Verwechselt mich vor Allem nicht!.

The Complete Personal Memoirs of Ulysses S. Grant

The Complete Personal Memoirs of Ulysses S. Grant

This book contains the complete memoirs of the revered United States General and President, Ulysses S. Grant, including the original illustrations and maps.  In Volume I, we learn of Grant's early life and education, his entry into the West Point military academy, and what influenced his views on life and the situation of the United States as a nation. General Grant's gradual rise from his original posting as second lieutenant is charted through the various conflicts and skirmishes he was involved in.  Various battles such as Monterrey, and sieges such as Vera Cruz, are recounted in this volume, with Mexico's actions and abilities as an enemy much detailed. Grant is keen to narrate the experience from his perspective as a junior officer, bringing perspective of both the strategic planning and the tactical manoeuvres such conflicts entailed together with the morale of the rank and file ahead of each skirmish.  We also hear of Grant's resignation in 1854, and how issues over supporting his family financially and emotionally played their part. His return to the Army, as tensions rose following the election of the anti-slavery President Abraham Lincoln, is thereafter related along with the activities of the U.S. Army as war crept closer and was declared by the secessionist states of the Confederacy.  The later chapters of Volume I mention Grant's injury and participation in battles such as Shiloh, and his famous advance upon Chattanooga. Ulysses S. Grant demonstrated courage and ability in the face of an enemy more dogged and skilled than he had ever faced before; through levelheaded aptitude, he steadily rose through the command structure.  Volume II begins with Ulysses S. Grant assuming his place as commander of the Chattanooga detachment of the Union Army. Early difficulties with supply lines are detailed, as the military sets about rebuilding railways to ensure the ultimate success of their campaign. Hereafter, we witness Grant's activities as he gradually wore down the Confederate war machine, physically outmanoeuvring the opposing army and gradually outmatching them for resources of men, arms and essential supplies.  Grant's immense devotion to his country, and his essential honesty - such as in downplaying the much-discussed final surrender of General Lee at the Appomattox Court House, is demonstrated at the conclusion of this volume. Declining to glorify war, Grant writes meditatively on the loss of life and destruction he beheld in his military roles. To a large extent this autobiography corroborates accounts by Grant's associates that he was a methodical and moral person, able in his work and convinced of the righteous abolition of slavery.  Chiefly, accounts of battle as it was in the nineteenth century characterize this memoir. First and foremost, Ulysses S. Grant was a military man with an intense interest in strategical movements and battle tactics. However, he also frequently recalls the personalities and views of his friends, colleagues and enemies in a manner which enlivens the book's tone. Furthermore, we gain an impression of Grant as a family man, with a profound devotion to his wife and children.  Together with U.S. Grant's own recollections, which are detailed and comprehensive, we find in this edition appendices in the form of original correspondences sent and received regarding the Union and Confederate forces. At the time he authored his memoirs in the mid-1880s, Grant was determined in spite of illness to add to the burgeoning historical narrative as a reliable source. With this autobiography, it is indisputable that he achieves this goal.

The Day Gone By

The Day Gone By

Richard Adams, author of 'Watership Down' and described recently as a legend of literature, was born in Newbury in 1920 as the replacement for a baby brother who died in the great influenza epidemic of 1917-19. His mother was well over 40 at the time of his birth, and his was a solitary childhood spent in a large garden. Here he explains how his days spent watching bird, beetles and wild creatures around his home engendered in him a lifelong love of nature. His years at prep and public school, at Oxford and in the army are all vividly described, and their influence on the recurrent themes in his writing of battle, leadership, friendship, bullying, solitude and longing made plain.

The Confessions of Saint Augustine

The Confessions of Saint Augustine

The world’s most famous spiritual autobiography Written between 397 and 398 CE, The Confessions of Saint Augustine is the story of Augustine of Hippo’s childhood in Numidia, his youth and early adulthood in Carthage, Rome, and Milan, and his conversion to Christianity. As he struggled to liberate himself from his sinful past, Augustine embarked on a quest that would transform him into one of the most influential religious thinkers of all time.   A moving testament to the power of faith and an inspirational guide to a fulfilled life, The Confessions of Saint Augustine is a masterwork of Western literature.   This ebook has been professionally proofread to ensure accuracy and readability on all devices.

Un historien du dimanche

Un historien du dimanche

Philippe Ariès a été en délicatesse avec les RR PP jésuites, un jury d'agrégation, le général de Gaulle, les curés de gauche, l'histoire événementielle, un monstre froid nommé l'Etat, l'administration, l'Université, le bacille de Koch, le national-progressisme de la droite au pouvoir, les enfants de Marx et de Coca-Cola. En revanche, il cousine ou conspire avec les Pieds-Noirs, les Algériens de Maisons-Laffitte, les gauchistes, les maurrassiens hétérodoxes, la liturgie latine, l'histoire selon les Annales, l'ancienne France, les Québécois, la sociabilité méditerranéenne, le vin blanc de Californie, Michel Foucault, Ivan Illich, la Maison de France... Historien d'avant-garde, longtemps solitaire, brusquement célèbre, il a pressé notre passé de quelques questions aussi nouvelles que fondamentales : quelles étaient les attitudes de nos ancêtres devant la naissance, l'enfance, la famille, la sexualité, la mort ? Avec lui, la vieille histoire historisante, la chronique des grands, les événements politiques, les guerres entre les peuples ont pris figure d'anecdotes : le tuf de notre passé est ailleurs, en deçà de nos consciences et au-delà de nos manuels. Personnalité peu commune, qui avoue ses contradictions avec une franche joie de vivre et un goût prononcé pour l'amitié, Philippe Ariès se rit des étiquettes sous lesquelles on voudrait consigner les individus et contenir les passions. S'il aime une chose entre toutes, c'est la liberté de l'esprit - comme on pourra l'apprécier tout au long de cet auto-portrait.

Dobbeltspil - den sande historie om D-dags spionerne

Dobbeltspil - den sande historie om D-dags spionerne

D-Dag var vendepunktet under Anden Verdenskrig. Med landgangen i Normandiet bed de allierede tropper sig fast i det europæiske fastland. Det blev begyndelsen til enden på Det Tredje Rige.Men sejren blev ikke vundet med kanoner alene. I ugerne op til invasionen startede de Allierede en vildledningskampagne, der skulle føre tyskernes opmærksomhed væk fra Normandiet.Dobbeltspil er fortællingen om de fem agenter, der med fantasi og mod, forræderi og grådighed førte Hitler bag lyset og Europa mod friheden. Ben Macintyre (f. 1963) er engelsk forfatter, historiker og klummeskribent ved The Times. Han har skrevet en lang række bestsellere om spionage og kontraspionage under Anden Verdenskrig.