Very Good+, or Better Condition. Harding." A prolific writer, Adams produced both fiction and nonfiction. Coren, Robert W. "Samuel Hopkins Adams, his Novel, Revelry, and the Reputation of Warren G. Samuel Hopkins Adams - isto. Revelry book. English. The Courier 11.2 (1974): 3-10. Samuel Hopkins Adams Samuel Hopkins Adams was born in Dunkirk, New York, on 26th January, 1871. His parents were Myron, a ministe3r, and Hester Rose Hopkins Adams, the daughter of a theologian.

Samuel Hopkins Adams(January 26, 1871 – November 16, 1958) was an American writer, best known for his investigative journalismand muckraking. Read reviews from world’s largest community for readers. REVELRY ••• By Samuel Hopkins Adams Assumed First Edition. Download Intégrer. SAMUEL HOPKINS ADAMS was an American writer and muckraker. Journalist, author, biographer and historian Samuel Hopkins Adams was born along the banks of Lake Erie at Dunkirk, NY, on 26 January 1871. Read. It has been accepted for Downloading requires you to have access to the YouScribe library Learn all about the services we offer Information Subjects Documents Literature. 115 Pages . After graduating from Hamilton College he became a reporter for the New York Sun. Adams also wrote biographies of Daniel Webster (The Godlike Daniel, 1930) and Alexander Woollcott (1945). Revelry, his best-known novel, is based on the scandals of the Harding administration and was by reviews of the day considered a daring and sensational political book. The muckrakers (a term coined by President Theodore Roosevelt) were writers of the Progressive movement of the early twentieth century who exposed the corruption of businesses or government to the public. The novel Revelry (1926) and a biography of Warren G. Harding, Incredible Era (1939), set forth the scandals of the Harding administration.

This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Libraries at SURFACE. 1926. See other titles by this author available from … He was a friend of the investigative reporter, Ray Stannard Baker.
Horace Liveright, New York, 1926.. No stated Edition. Fictionalized account of the Warren G. Harding administration, which was rife with corruption and plagued by scandal.