Jane Allen, Center

Jane Allen, Center

Author: Edith Bancroft

Publisher:

Published: 1920

Total Pages: 332

ISBN-13:

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Jane found love and fought high-school-level crime as she made her way on to the basketball team and grew up.


Jane Allen

Jane Allen

Author: Edith Bancroft

Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform

Published: 1918

Total Pages: 348

ISBN-13:

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Jane found love and fought high-school-level crime as she made her way on to the basketball team and grew up.


Ball Tales

Ball Tales

Author: Michelle Nolan

Publisher: McFarland

Published: 2014-11-26

Total Pages: 289

ISBN-13: 0786458305

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This history of American sports fiction traces depictions of baseball, basketball and football in works for all age levels from early dime novels through the 1960s. Chapters cover dime novel heroes Frank and Dick Merriwell; the explosion of sports novels before World War II and its influence on the authors who later wrote for baby boom readers; how sports novels persisted during the Great Depression; the rise and decline of sports pulps; why sports comics failed; postwar heroes Chip Hilton and Bronc Burnett; the lack of sports fiction for females; Duane Decker's Blue Sox books; and the classic John R. Tunis novels. Appendices list sports pulp titles and comic books featuring sports fiction.


The Dime Novel in Children's Literature

The Dime Novel in Children's Literature

Author: Vicki Anderson

Publisher: McFarland

Published: 2014-10-16

Total Pages: 274

ISBN-13: 0786483024

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With their rakish characters, sensationalist plots, improbable adventures and objectionable language (like swell and golly), dime novels in their heyday were widely considered a threat to the morals of impressionable youth. Roundly criticized by church leaders and educators of the time, these short, quick-moving, pocket-sized publications were also, inevitably, wildly popular with readers of all ages. This work looks at the evolution of the dime novel and at the authors, publishers, illustrators, and subject matter of the genre. Also discussed are related types of children's literature, such as story papers, chapbooks, broadsides, serial books, pulp magazines, comic books and today's paperback books. The author shows how these works reveal much about early American life and thought and how they reflect cultural nationalism through their ideological teachings in personal morality and ethics, humanitarian reform and political thought. Overall, this book is a thoughtful consideration of the dime novel's contribution to the genre of children's literature. Eight appendices provide a wealth of information, offering an annotated bibliography of dime novels and listing series books, story paper periodicals, characters, authors and their pseudonyms, and more. A reference section, index and illustrations are all included.