11,99 €
inkl. MwSt.

Versandfertig in 1-2 Wochen
payback
6 °P sammeln
  • Broschiertes Buch

I am Saumya Madan, living in a tiny suburb of Haryana(Sonipat) in India. I completed my higher studies from Holy Child Sr. Sec School in the same city itself and now I'm pursuing BA English Honors from SRM University, Rai, Delhi-NCR. I have a keen interest in writing poetries as they help me showcase my emotions and feelings through words only because of being an introvert who pens down every feeling onto the paper. So, out of my interest, I wrote a few poems which I think almost every teenager now and then feels when alone or with the world. But for this girl, family is everything¿Other than…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
I am Saumya Madan, living in a tiny suburb of Haryana(Sonipat) in India. I completed my higher studies from Holy Child Sr. Sec School in the same city itself and now I'm pursuing BA English Honors from SRM University, Rai, Delhi-NCR. I have a keen interest in writing poetries as they help me showcase my emotions and feelings through words only because of being an introvert who pens down every feeling onto the paper. So, out of my interest, I wrote a few poems which I think almost every teenager now and then feels when alone or with the world. But for this girl, family is everything¿Other than writing, I'm an avid reader. Moreover, I've also interned with Nyx Wolves for a few days as a content writer.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Autorenporträt
Horatio Alger, an American novelist who lived from January 13, 1832, to July 18, 1899, authored books for young adults about poor lads who, through their good deeds, climb from impoverished roots to lives of stability and comfort in the middle class. His works are known for their "rags-to-riches" narrative, which had a formative influence on the Gilded Age United States. All of Alger's young adult books revolve around the idea that a young man can change his situation for the better by acting morally. The "Horatio Alger myth" holds that the young man achieves success via toil, however, this is untrue. The youngster behaves according to classic characteristics like honesty, generosity, and altruism in the actual stories, and success is invariably the result of an accident that works to the boy's advantage. The youngster might recover a sizable sum of money that was misplaced or save a passenger from a derailed carriage. A wealthy person notices the youngster and his predicament as a result of this. For instance, in one tale, a little child narrowly avoids being hit by a streetcar before being snatched away to safety by a homeless orphan youth.