A Peculiar Treasure
Autobiography by American author Edna Ferber
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A Peculiar Treasure is an autobiography by American author Edna Ferber. The book was first published in 1938 by Doubleday, Doran, & Co. at 398 pages long.[1] The book is Ferber's first autobiography, and recounts her small-town, Midwest childhood, and her subsequent rise to authorship and the Pulitzer Prize. Her ascent from night-court reporter at a small-town newspaper to the author of So Big is set against the rising tensions in Europe and upsurging antisemitism in the US.[2]
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Edna Ferber
- Our Mrs. McChesney (1915)
- $1200 a Year: A Comedy in Three Acts (1920)
- Minick: A Play (1924)
- The Royal Family (1927)
- Dinner at Eight (1932)
- Stage Door (1936)
- The Land Is Bright (1941)
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- Dawn O'Hara, The Girl Who Laughed (1911)
- Personality Plus (1914)
- Fanny Herself (1917)
- The Girls (1921)
- Gigolo (1922)
- So Big (1924)
- Show Boat (1926)
- Cimarron (1929)
- American Beauty (1931)
- Come and Get It (1935)
- Saratoga Trunk (1941)
- Great Son (1945)
- Giant (1952)
- Ice Palace (1958)
- "Old Man Minick" (1922 short story)
- A Peculiar Treasure (1939 autobiography)
"Old Man Minick" |
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Gigolo |
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So Big |
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Show Boat |
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The Royal Family |
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Cimarron |
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Dinner at Eight |
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Stage Door |
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Come and Get It |
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Saratoga Trunk |
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Giant |
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- Janet Fox (niece)