This collection presents a personal development series by Arnold Bennett. The trilogy addresses corporate workers and people who to work every day from nine to five. Bennett offers them practical advice on how to live life to the full potential as opposed to just exist.
In this delightful volume of insightful and good-humored advice, motivational writer Arnold Bennett points out that for all of the time we humans dedicate to learning, very little of that time is spent endeavoring to elucidate helpful points for living life well, and to the fullest. It's a sad state of affairs that Bennett sets out to remedy in The Human Machine.
This meticulously edited collection of Arnold Bennett's non-fiction works is formatted for your eReader with a functional and detailed table of contents. Bennett's non-fiction opus is quite diverse and it covers various fields such as the theatre, journalism, propaganda, as well as the personal development. Self and Self-Management Things That Have Interested Me The Human Machine The Truth about an Author How to Become an Author The Reasonable Life Literary Taste: How to Form It How to Live on 24 Hours a Day The Feast of St. Friend: A Christmas Book Mental Efficiency Those United States Friendship and Happiness Paris Nights and Other Impressions of Places and People The Author's Craft Over There: War Scenes on the Western Front Journalism For Women Books and Persons: Selections from The New Age 1908-1911
DigiCat presents to you a meticulously edited Florence Scovel Shinn collection. This ebook has been designed and formatted to the highest digital standards and adjusted for readability on all devices. Content: The Game of Life and How to Play It Your Word is Your Wand The Secret Door to Success The Power of the Spoken Word
This book delineates the unique role of Arnold Bennett in the transformation of the British novel from the aesthetic, psychological, and sociopolitical assumptions of modernity to those of modernism. Early in his career, Bennett believed that the rejection of inherited traditions and authorities that was promulgated by such champions of modernity as Darwin, Marx, and even Herbert Spencer, would culminate in an assertion of personal autonomy. Bennett eventually assimilated the modernist critique of modernity, which discovered (with the help of Freud and the First World War) an intractable human irrationality that expressed itself in the most apparently reasonable schemes for human improvement.