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"Peter Binney," through Archibald Marshall, is a changing observe early twentieth-century relationships and social norms. The tale is ready Peter Binney, the boy or man in the title, who has to deal with the difficult elements of lifestyles in England during a time of social alternate. Peter has a tough time fitting in with what other humans consider him due to the fact he is sensitive and thinks loads about himself. It receives more difficult for him as he receives older because he has to cope with issues like love, own family, and the way he appears in public. The book goes into top notch…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"Peter Binney," through Archibald Marshall, is a changing observe early twentieth-century relationships and social norms. The tale is ready Peter Binney, the boy or man in the title, who has to deal with the difficult elements of lifestyles in England during a time of social alternate. Peter has a tough time fitting in with what other humans consider him due to the fact he is sensitive and thinks loads about himself. It receives more difficult for him as he receives older because he has to cope with issues like love, own family, and the way he appears in public. The book goes into top notch intensity about Peter's intellectual and emotional journey, capturing the essence of his mind as he tries to discern out wherein he fits in a world this is changing. Marshall is understood for carefully watching humans and the way societies paintings. The tale he tells appears real and has plenty of meaning. Marshall shows how society changed over time through the tale of Peter Binney. In order to do this, he writes approximately tough topics like individuality, social norms, and the selection of private pride. "Peter Binney" indicates how exact Marshall is at writing about the complex components of human beings's lives.
Autorenporträt
Arthur Hammond Marshall was an English author, publisher, and writer who wrote under the pen name Archibald Marshall. He was born on September 6, 1866, and died on September 29, 1934. His books were especially popular in the United States. He wrote more than 50 books, and his style was known as realistic. Some people saw him as a rival to Anthony Trollope. After going to Cambridge University for school, Yale University gave him an honors Doctor of Letters degree in 1921. He traveled a lot and met a lot of important people. Arthur Marshall, Archibald Marshall's father (1832-1900), ran a business in London. Archibald went to Highgate School for school. He didn't want to work for his father's shipping company, so he first wanted to be a priest. He studied religion at Trinity College, Cambridge, and made friends with Bertram Fletcher Robinson, Vaughan Williams, and other people. In 1902, he married Nellie Banks, whose maiden name was Ellen Pollard and who had three children from her previous marriage to Alfred Banks. They had one daughter together, Elizabeth, who was born in December 1904. He built a house in Beaulieu, Hampshire, where he moved to live in 1903.