New Releases by Eleanor Roosevelt

Eleanor Roosevelt is the author of What I Hope to Leave Behind (1995), Anne Franks dagbok (1994), The Post-war Years, 1945-1952 (1990), Eleanor Roosevelt's My Day: Her acclaimed columns, 1936-1945 (1989), Eleanor Roosevelt's My Day: The post-war years, her acclaimed columns, 1945-1952 (1989).

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What I Hope to Leave Behind

release date: Jan 01, 1995
What I Hope to Leave Behind
Arranged under nine thematic topics that include personal testimony, women''s roles, and issues of war and peace, this collection presents 126 of Eleanor Roosevelt''s articles and speeches, tracing her development as a journalist, politician, activist, diplomat, and educator.

Anne Franks dagbok

release date: Jan 01, 1994

The Post-war Years, 1945-1952

release date: Jan 01, 1990

Eleanor Roosevelt's My Day: Her acclaimed columns, 1936-1945

release date: Jan 01, 1989
Eleanor Roosevelt's My Day: Her acclaimed columns, 1936-1945
A selection of the best of Eleanor Roosevelt''s newspaper columns describing her day-to-day activities.

Eleanor Roosevelt's My Day: The post-war years, her acclaimed columns, 1945-1952

release date: Jan 01, 1989
Eleanor Roosevelt's My Day: The post-war years, her acclaimed columns, 1945-1952
A selection of Mrs. Roosevelt''s newspaper columns that provides a look at her social and political life and a first-hand look at the events that changed the world.

Eleanor Roosevelt's My Day: First lady of the world, her acclaimed columns, 1953-1962

release date: Jan 01, 1989

Eleanor Roosevelt's My Day

release date: Jan 01, 1989

Mother and Daughter

release date: Jan 01, 1988
Mother and Daughter
Collects a correspondence spanning fifty years, a period that included the New Deal, the Second World War, and the postwar years, between a famous mother her only daughter

Christmas, 1940

release date: Jan 01, 1986
Christmas, 1940
Set in occuppied Netherlands, the First Lady tells the story of simple faith overcoming evil

The Papers of Eleanor Roosevelt, 1933-1945

release date: Jan 01, 1986

You Learn by Living

You Learn by Living
She was born before women had the right to vote yet went on to become one of America''¿¿s most influential First Ladies. A Gallup poll named her one of the most admired people of the twentieth century and she remains well known as a role model for a life well lived. Roosevelt wrote You Learn by Living at the age of seventy-six, just two years before her death. The commonsense ideas''¿¿and heartfelt ideals''¿¿presented in this volume are as relevant today as they were five decades ago. Her keys to a fulfilling life? Some of her responses include: learning to learn, the art of maturity, and getting the best out of others.

The White House Press Conferences of Eleanor Roosevelt

Memorial Addresses in the House of Representatives Together with Tributes on the Life and Ideals of Anna Eleanor Roosevelt

Memorial Addresses in the House of Representatives Together with Tributes on the Life and Ideals of Anna Eleanor Roosevelt, Etc

Your Teens and Mine. [Reminiscences.] By E. Roosevelt with Helen Ferris. [With a Portrait.].

Your Teens and Mine

Your Teens and Mine
A "memoir of Mrs. Roosevelt''s teen-age years, in which she recalls some of the problems that she faced (shyness, for example) and the ways in which she, sometime with the help of sympathetic elders, overcame them."-Publishers'' Weekly.

Autobiography

Autobiography
One of the world''s best-loved and most-admired human beings, writing out of her own experience, has set down her basic philosophy of life in this book.

An Address by Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt on the Occasion of the Annual Kansas Library Association Meeting in Emporia, Kansas, October 6, 1959

Letter from Eleanor Roosevelt to Charles McIntosh

70th Birthday Dinner in Honor of Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt Monday, October Eleventh Nineteen Hundred and Fifty-four, Grand Ballroom, Roosevelt Hotel

Nittany Lion Inn Dinner Menu

Nittany Lion Inn Dinner Menu
Dinner menu contains the pencil autograph of Eleanor Roosevelt for donor, L. Edwin Brown, when he waited on her in the Gilpin Room, Nittany Lion Inn, The Pennsylvania State University, on 7 October 1953. Brown underlined in pencil the items chosen by Mrs. Roosevelt for dinner. The four-page menu features a line drawing of the Inn by Milton S. Osborne on the cover, a two-page dinner menu of items and their prices, and a short history of the university on the last page of the "souvenir menu" which a diner could address and the inn would mail.

Address by Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt [at] 11th Meeting, Oct. 2-4, 1952, Washington

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