Verlag: Deseret Book Company
Anbieter: ThriftBooks-Atlanta, AUSTELL, GA, USA
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. No Jacket. May have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.
Verlag: Deseret News Press
Anbieter: The Book Garden, Bountiful, UT, USA
Staple Bound. Zustand: Very Good - Cash. Minor rubbing and edge wear to cover, with light reader wear to pages. Still great condition. Stock photos may not look exactly like the book.
Verlag: The H. K. Fly Company, New York, 1914
Anbieter: Muir Books [Robert Muir Old & Rare Books], PERTH, WA, Australien
Signiert
pp 32, b/w fronts. port., presentation copy signed by author, uncut edges, centre leaves loose with small open tears at top of page, wraps, creased, edges frayed, a bit sunned and discoloured. Privately printed. The author's memoir of his friendship with O. Henry.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Signature Books, Salt Lake City, UT, 1998
ISBN 10: 156085023X ISBN 13: 9781560850236
Anbieter: Ken Sanders Rare Books, ABAA, Salt Lake City, UT, USA
Erstausgabe
Hardcover. Zustand: Near Fine. First edition. 379pp. Octavo [24 cm] Beige and light blue cloth boards with gilt strips. Trivial bumping to the spine ends. Significant Mormon Diaries Series No. 8. Limited publication of 350. This is number 163. Best Book Award, Mormon History Association. Foreword by Leonard Arrington. James Henry Moyle was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury under U.S. president Woodrow Wilson, Commissioner of Customs under President Theodore Roosevelt, and special assistant to treasury secretary Henry Morgenthau. He was also president of the LDS Eastern States Mission. By his own count, he had two religions, Mormonism and the Democratic Party, and he alternately praised and criticized both. As one who was intimately acquainted with every major religious and political figure in Utah and elsewhere over six decadesand as the father of a future LDS apostlehe mustered surprisingly profound and entertaining insights in his memoirs. Part of his prominence was due to his aristocratic flair. Apostle Matthew Cowley admitted that he "always had to take another look when [he] passed Brother James H. Moyle on the street." Nor was this large-framed, gray-haired statesman one to mince words. It is the raw edge to his comments that makes his autobiography so memorable. This former political kingpin's life is also recounted in LDS church president Gordon B. Hinckley's James Henry Moyle: The Story of a Distinguished American and Honored Churchman, who, by his own account, refers to Moyle as a colorful, highly opinionated, uncensored voice, who has a unique value.