Search Type
  • All
  • Subject
  • Title
  • Author
  • Publisher
  • Series Title
Search Title

Download

Hand over the Global Empires and the World Goes Free - 2012 Social Engineering Business Plan

Hand over the Global Empires and the World Goes Free - 2012 Social Engineering Business Plan( )
Author: Kullos, Gabriel
Twain, Mark
Contribution by: Steinbeck, John
Sales, Soupy
Dunne, Dominick
Novak, Robert Novak
Purdy, James
Keil, Braden
Foote, Horton
Bawden, Nina
Hitchens, Christopher
Crockett, Davy
Salinger, J. D.
Boone, Daniel
Sendak, Maurice
Twitchell, Paul
Durham, Jim
Browne, Malcolm
Kennedy, Erica
Colvin, Marie
Simon, Joe
ISBN:978-0-615-72718-9
Publication Date:Nov 2012
Publisher:Gabriel Kullos
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:USD $10.33
Book Description:

Plans and Philosophy of setting the world free from poverty, hunger, and slavery that includes over 50 innovative unheard-off, radical ideas. For the development of a family business planning model and workbook. It took a look into business possibilities and determined what the most lucrative business today is, and that's a family social engineering company, built from family business model. I presented a possible family business model with an exclusive source of information where any...
More Description

Book Details
Pages:274
Detailed Subjects: Philosophy / General
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):8.5 x 11 x 0.62 Inches
Book Weight:1.75 Pounds
Author Biography
Kullos, Gabriel (Author)
In recent years Steinbeck has been elevated to a more prominent status among American writers of his generation. If not quite at the world-class artistic level of a Hemingway or a Faulkner, he is nonetheless read very widely throughout the world by readers of all ages who consider him one of the most "American" of writers.

Born in Salinas County, California on February 27, 1902, Steinbeck was of German-Irish parentage. After four years as a special student at Stanford University, he went to New York, where he worked as a reporter and as a hod carrier. Returning to California, he devoted himself to writing, with little success; his first three books sold fewer than 3,000 copies. Tortilla Flat (1935), dealing with the paisanos, California Mexicans whose ancestors settled in the country 200 years ago, established his reputation. In Dubious Battle (1936), a labor novel of a strike and strike-breaking, won the gold medal of the Commonwealth Club of California. Of Mice and Men (1937), a long short story that turns upon a melodramatic incident in the tragic friendship of two farm hands, written almost entirely in dialogue, was an experiment and was dramatized in the year of its publication, winning the New York Drama Critics Circle Award. It brought him fame.

Out of a series of articles that he wrote about the transient labor camps in California came the inspiration for his greatest book, The Grapes of Wrath (1939), the odyssey of the Joad family, dispossessed of their farm in the Dust Bowl and seeking a new home, only to be driven on from camp to camp. The fiction is punctuated at intervals by the author's voice explaining this new sociological problem of homelessness, unemployment, and displacement. As the American novel "of the season, probably the year, possibly the decade," it won the Pulitzer Prize in 1940. It roused America and won a broad readership by the unusual simplicity and tenderness with which Steinbeck treated social questions. Even toda



Rate this title:

Select your rating below then click 'submit'.






I do not wish to rate this title.