The Americanization of Edward Bok
  • An Explanation
  • An Introduction of Two Persons
  • I. The First Days in America
  • II. The First Job: Fifty Cents a Week
  • III. The Hunger for Self-Education
  • IV. A Presidential Friend and a Boston Pilgrimage
  • V. Going to the Theatre with Longfellow
  • VI. Phillips Brooks's Books and Emerson's Mental Mist
  • VII. A Plunge into Wall Street
  • VIII. Starting a Newspaper Syndicate
  • IX. Association with Henry Ward Beecher
  • X. The First "Woman's Page," "Literary Leaves," and Entering Scribner's
  • XI. The Chances for Success
  • XII. Baptism Under Fire
  • XIII. Publishing Incidents and Anecdotes
  • XIV. Last Years in New York
  • XV. Successful Editorship
  • XVI. First Years as a Woman's Editor
  • XVII. Eugene Field's Practical Jokes
  • XVIII. Building Up a Magazine
  • XIX. Personality Letters
  • XX. Meeting a Reverse or Two
  • XXI. A Signal Piece of Constructive Work
  • XXII. An Adventure in Civic and Private Art
  • XXIII. Theodore Roosevelt's Influence
  • XXIV. Theodore Roosevelt's Anonymous Editorial Work
  • XXV. The President and the Boy
  • XXVI. The Literary Back-Stairs
  • XXVII. Women's Clubs and Woman Suffrage
  • XXVIII. Going Home with Kipling, and as a Lecturer
  • XXIX. An Excursion into the Feminine Nature
  • XXX. Cleaning Up the Patent-Medicine and Other Evils
  • XXXI. Adventures in Civics
  • XXXII. A Bewildered Bok
  • XXXIII. How Millions of People Are Reached
  • XXXIV. A War Magazine and War Activities
  • XXXV. At the Battle-Fronts in the Great War
  • XXXVI. The End of Thirty Years' Editorship
  • XXXVII. The Third Period
  • XXXVIII. Where America Fell Short with Me
  • XXXIX. What I Owe to America
  • Edward William Bok: Biographical Data
  • The Expression of a Personal Pleasure
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