The Storm
AUDIOBOOK
40 loans, 10 Concurrent loans
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AUDIOBOOK
5 loans, 5 Concurrent loans
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AUDIOBOOK
55 loans, One at a time
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"The Storm" (1704) is a founding document of modern journalism. It tells of the events of November 1703, when a hurricane struck Britain. It is composed of verbatim eyewitness accounts, solicited from survivors through a newspaper advertisement that Defoe placed shortly after the hurricane struck. This account remains a required reading for journalism students to this day. Daniel Defoe (c. 1660-1731) was and English writer and spy. His most famous novel, "Robinson Crusoe" (1719), is one of the earliest novels ever written, making Defoe a founding figure of the English novel. He is also remembered for his "Moll Flanders" (1722) and "Journal of the Plague Year" (1722), which remains a required reading for journalism students to this day, side-by-side with the non-fiction account of "The Storm" (1704). He wrote more than three hundred books, pamphlets and journals in his lifetime and was often in trouble with the authorities.

Publication date
November 02, 2021
Publisher
Collection
Language
English
Audiobook Isbn
9788726472325
EPUB ISBN
9788726553857
File size
394 MB
AUDIOBOOK
AUDIOBOOK licenses accessibility
The publisher has not provided information about accessibility.

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