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In her column, Re-Covered, Lucy Scholes exhumes the out-of-print and forgotten books that shouldn’t be.
When I began writing this column two years ago, I initially restricted myself to discussing only titles that were out of print. But over the past year, as publishers continue to increase their efforts to resurrect lost classics, I’ve begun including pieces about previously neglected books that have been rediscovered and repackaged for a new generation. There are many success stories: the unexpected triumph of the Vintage Classics edition of John Williams’s
Stoner, a book that sold less than two thousand copies when it was first published in 1965 before falling swiftly out of print, but as a reprint went on to become the Waterstones Book of the Year in 2013; or Lucia Berlin’s unforeseen posthumous literary stardom in 2015 after her selected short stories,
this isn t just an outrage one, this is a hard one for us as a country. congressman, stand by. we do want to for a moment turn to growing concerns about the economy. as you can see, the market s little changed this morning. little changed after suffering the worst day of the year on wednesday falling 800 points if the was a drop of about just over 3%. all of it triggering concerns of a recession. jolting world markets as well. and as nbc s first read futs, the economy has been keeping president trump afloat for 2020. what if it sinks? ali velshi joins me now from the floor of the new york stock exchange. what s happening with the markets right now, buddy? reporter: it s like calm seas. it s actually dies guysing some ripples underneath. we thought last night we d have a rough day after yesterday s 800 point loss. it was the fourth biggest point loss on the dow, the biggest
it was 1900 and galveston was driving, the largest city in all of texas, a booming population, building fortunes from galveston s busy port shipping cotton and receiving goods from europe. galveston was on an incredible growth pattern. it was without a doubt the queen city of the gulf. it rightfully earned that title. jon: september 8th 1900 began the day a lot like this one with clear skies and calm seas. but the skies suddenly turned black, the weather took a terrifying turn, the good people of galveston had virtually no defense against the great storm sweeping in from the sea. a category four hurricane lashed the island communicate communi. it carried no name, as was the practice at the time. winds up to 140 miles an hour and a storm surge of seawater 1e
it was 1900 and galveston was thriving, the largest city in all of texas, a booming population, building fortunes from galveston s busy port shipping cotton and receiving goods from europe. galveston was on an incredible growth pattern. it was, without a doubt, the queen city of the gulf. it rightfully earned that titlee jon: september 8, 1900 began as a day a lot like this one with clear skies and calm seas. but the skies suddenly turned black, the weather took a terrifying turn, the good people of galveston had virtually no defense against the great storm sweeping in from the sea. a category 4 hurricane lashed the island community. it carried no name, as was the practice at the time. winds up to 140 miles an hour and a storm surge of seawater 15 feet high overwhelmed the unprotected city, leveling