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autobiography and Franklin
Benjamin Franklin wrote in his autobiography, " Some books against Deism fell into my hands ; they were said to be the substance of sermons preached at Boyle's lectures.
In her autobiography, Rage to Survive, singer Etta James claimed that she viewed Cooke's body in the funeral home and that the injuries she observed were well beyond what could be explained by the official account of Franklin alone having fought with Cooke.
Temple would later work on the publication of the autobiography written by Benjamin Franklin.
In 1874 John Bigelow translated it to English ( from a French version ) and claimed that Benjamin Franklin wrote it, including it in his autobiography, The Life of Benjamin Franklin, published that year.
Ruth Franklin writes that Nights " resuscitation " by Oprah Winfrey came at a difficult time for the genre of memoir, after a previous book-club author, James Frey, was found to have fabricated parts of his autobiography, A Million Little Pieces.
Grandfather Horsfield was a friend of Benjamin Franklin and finds mention in the latter's autobiography.
According to his own account, he read the autobiography of Benjamin Franklin while in school and tried to imitate Franklin's approach toward spirituality.
He maintained a strong friendship with the Philadelphia printer Benjamin Franklin, who stayed with Shipley in Winchester, and while there wrote much of his autobiography.
The autobiography of Benjamin Franklin, and a sketch of Franklin's life from the point where the autobiography ends, drawn chiefly from his letters.
The autobiography of Benjamin Franklin.
The life of Benjamin Franklin: Franklin's autobiography with the continuation by Jared Sparks.
Franklin describes the formation and purpose of the Junto in his autobiography:
This is the list of questions Franklin devised to guide the discussions at Junto meetings ( from Franklin's papers, dated 1728, and included in some editions of his autobiography ):
His 1995 autobiography Up Late with Joe Franklin chronicles his long career and includes claims that he had dalliances with Marilyn Monroe, Jayne Mansfield, and that Veronica Lake " threw herself at me, but I always refrained.
Members of the Library Company soon opened their own book presses to make donations: A Collection of Several Pieces, by John Locke ; Logic: or, the Art of Thinking, by the Port Royalists Antoine Arnauld and Pierre Nicole, which Franklin in his autobiography said he had read at the age of 16 ; Plutarch's Moralia translated by Philemon Holland ; Lewis Roberts ' Merchants Mappe of Commerce, and others.
* He also translated into French the autobiography of Benjamin Franklin and the works of William Ellery Channing ( poet ).

autobiography and refers
Botham himself refers to the event as his " dismissal " in his autobiography.
In his autobiography White Niggers of America: The Precocious Autobiography of a Quebec " Terrorist " ( 1968 ), Pierre Vallières, a Front de libération du Québec leader refers to the oppression of the Québécois people in North America.
Heston's autobiography, however, and some other sources place his birth in No Man's Land, Illinois, which usually refers to a then-unincorporated area now part of Wilmette, a wealthy northern suburb of Chicago.
In his autobiography, Heston refers to his father participating in his family's construction business.
William Cody's autobiography refers to a Pawnee Indian legend: " While we were in the sandhills, scouting the Niobrara country, the Pawnee Indians brought into camp some very large bones, one of which the surgeon of the expedition pronounced to be the thigh bone of a human being.
Hughes ' autobiography A London Home in the 1890s repeatedly refers to halma as an alternative to chess for relaxation, though the actual playing is never described.
Note that this chapter has two sections: the first is an autobiography ( with a eulogy for Amos Tversky ), and the second is a transcript of his Nobel lecture, which is what the title refers to.
On page 509 of her autobiography Christie refers to the last Poirot and Miss Marple novels that she penned during the Second World War by saying she had written an extra two books during the first years of the war in anticipation of being killed in the raids, as she was working in London.
Elder E. J. Lambert, a Primitive Baptist minister who was raised among this body, and whose father was a minister of the Church of Christ, consistently refers to them in his autobiography as the Church of Christ ( Kelly Division of Missionary Baptists ).
The author Monica Dickens, who lived in nearby Hinxworth for four years after World War II, refers to her regular visits to Baldock and to The George and Dragon public house in particular, in her 1978 autobiography An Open Book.
The change in Reilly's appearance is explained in his autobiography, Tyrannosaurus Rex, which refers to his " on-air cranium transplant.
In his autobiography, Butlin refers to Clacton as his second camp ; however, in 1937, the architect Harold Ridley Hooper, who had drawn the plans for the camp at Skegness, created plans on behalf of Butlins ltd, for a second camp at Dovercourt, in Essex.
Alfred Neubauer, a famous motor racing team manager, refers to Hanussen in his autobiography ,' Speed Was My Life ' ( first published in English in 1960 ).
( In his autobiography, Dylan refers to the original version as a " demo ".
Taney's own memoir, completed from his unfinished autobiography by Samuel Tyler in 1872, refers to the Chief Justice's fears of arrest.
Mark Twain, in his autobiography, refers to the use of such currency in 1853, " The firm paid my wages in wildcat money at its face value "
* Spike Milligan repeatedly refers to the piece in his autobiography Adolf Hitler: My Part in His Downfall ( 1971 ) and in the subsequent books in the series as ' the bloody awful Warsaw Concerto '.
In his autobiography, in discussing the events that led to his secondary education, Gregorian refers to several " strangers " who allowed this transition in his life to take place ( and eventually move him to the United States ).
The title refers to Silent Bob, a character Smith created and portrayed in his New Jersey films, and is also a likely reference to Harpo Speaks, the autobiography of Harpo Marx.
Lyrically, the song drew inspiration from a poem published in Timothy Leary's 1966 book Psychedelic Prayers after the Tao Te Ching, although in Harrison's autobiography, he refers to the idea having come from " all kinds of mystics and ex-mystics ", including Leary.

autobiography and Book
According to Arnaz himself, in his autobiography A Book ( 1976 ), the family owned three ranches, a palatial home, and a vacation mansion on a private island in Santiago Bay, Cuba.
To promote his autobiography, A Book, on February 21, 1976, Arnaz served as a guest host on Saturday Night Live, with his son, Desi, Jr., also appearing.
* 1960: A Book ( autobiography up to 1960 )
* In his autobiography, Harold Bauer-His Book, pianist Harold Bauer laments his inability to play well under pressure.
This led to the urban legend that Zappa was the son of Hugh Brannum, who played Mr. Green Jeans, a myth Zappa officially dispelled in his 1989 autobiography, The Real Frank Zappa Book, as did Keeshan in his 1996 autobiography, Good Morning, Captain.
As well as being a fine example of autobiography, the " Book of Deeds " expresses concepts of the power and purpose of monarchy, examples of loyalty and treachery in the feudal order, and medieval military tactics.
Composer Frank Zappa said in his autobiography The Real Frank Zappa Book that he agreed with many of the beliefs of the church, but refrained from joining as a full member.
These plans include the publication of Tender's " autobiography " and the " Book of Very Common Prayer ", as well as the conversion of the former Creedish land into the Tender Branson Sensitive Materials Sanitary Landfill ( a repository for America's outdated porn ).
He comes up with the ideas that Tender is credited for, such as his autobiography, the " Book of Very Common Prayer ", and the Tender Branson Sensitive Materials Sanitary Landfill.
His later novels, including the Book of Bebb series and Godric, received hearty praise ; in his 1980 review of Godric, Benjamin DeMott summed up a host of positive reviews, saying “ All on his own, Mr. Buechner has managed to reinvent projects of self-purification and of faith as piquant matter for contemporary fiction, producing in a single decade a quintet of books each of which is individual in concerns and knowledge, and notable for literary finish .” In 1982, author Reynolds Price greeted Buechner ’ s The Sacred Journey as “ a rich new vein for Buechner – a kind of detective autobiographyand “ he result is a short but fascinating and, in its own terms, beautifully successful experiment .”
2009 ), an autobiography which won an American Book Award in 1998.
Near the end of Book XI of his autobiography, Dichtung und Wahrheit (" Poetry and Truth "), Goethe wrote, almost in passing:
In the mid-1980s, she commenced work on her 1994 autobiography, Joan's Book.
" Reich's son, Peter, wrote in his autobiography, Book of Dreams ( 1973 ) about the pain this caused him.
Cosmopolitan Book Company commissioned Long Lance's autobiography as a boy's adventure book on Indians.
Ruhnama ( The Book of the Soul ), is a book written by Saparmurat Niyazov, late President for Life of Turkmenistan, combining spiritual / moral guidance, autobiography and revisionist history ; much of it is of dubious or disputed factuality and accuracy.
Margery Kempe ( c. 1373 – after 1438 ) is known for dictating The Book of Margery Kempe, a work considered by some to be the first autobiography in the English language.
Daché's books include Lilly Daché's Glamour Book ( published in 1956 ) and her autobiography, Talking through My Hats ( published in 1946 ).
Bob Barker has written his autobiography, assisted by former L. A. Times Book Review editor Digby Diehl, titled Priceless Memories.
Six National Book Critics Circle Awards recognize " best books " published in the United States during the preceding year in six categories: fiction, nonfiction, autobiography, biography, criticism, and poetry.
His autobiography The Book of Ammon originally released as The Autobiography of a Catholic Anarchist, describes his work in nonviolent, anarchist, social action, and provides insight into the lives of Christian anarchists in the United States of the 20th century.
( The full story can be found in Over the Airwaves, the autobiography of Trevor Hill published by Book Guild in 2005 ).
She published her autobiography in 2005, which was nominated for the National Book Award and a Pulitzer Prize.

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