¡Acompáñanos a viajar por el mundo de los libros!
Añadir este libro a la estantería
Grey
Escribe un nuevo comentario Default profile 50px
Grey
Suscríbete para leer el libro completo o lee las primeras páginas gratis.
All characters reduced
Henry Winkler Biography - cover

Henry Winkler Biography

Emily Whitman

Editorial: Emily Whiteman

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Sinopsis

An Unexpected Journey of Personal Struggle and Creative Triumph 

Long before he became the beloved Fonzie on Happy Days, Henry Winkler was a dyslexic child struggling in school. This gripping biography traces Winkler's improbable journey from a typecast actor to a prolific producer, bestselling author, and literacy hero who defied the odds at every turn.

Delve into revealing details like:

- The personal struggles and triumphs behind Winkler's iconic Fonzie character

- How overcoming undiagnosed dyslexia fueled his creativity and success

- His transition from acting to becoming a bestselling children's author

- And many more.

Winkler's enduring legacy in films and his dedication to dyslexia advocacy
While Winkler could have coasted on his Happy Days fame, he instead vaulted expectations and spent decades elevating compassion and creativity. This is not your typical Hollywood tale, but a fascinating portrait of a star determined to shine the spotlight on making a difference.

If you're ready to embark on an uplifting adventure, click the Buy Now button to get your copy now and experience the magic of Henry Winkler's life like never before!
Disponible desde: 01/12/2023.

Otros libros que te pueden interesar

  • Dionea - Violet Paget wrote under a male pseudonym to help her career a huge pioneer of supernatural fiction - cover

    Dionea - Violet Paget wrote...

    Vernon Lee

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Vernon Lee was born Violet Paget on 4th October 1856 in Boulogne, France to intellectual expatriate British parents.   
     
    In common with several other very talented literary women of the day she felt it necessary to publish under a masculine pseudonym in order for her writing to be taken seriously.  Indeed she seems to have adopted that persona across her whole lifestyle becoming personally known and acknowledged by all as Vernon Lee and accordingly dressed as a man.    
     
    Her first published work, in 1880, was taken from her collection of essays that had originally appeared in Fraser’s Magazine with the scholarly title of; ‘Studies of the Eighteenth Century in Italy.’ It reflected her passion for music and centered on the rich creative lives of poet-librettist Pietro Metastasio and dramatists Carlo Goldoni and Carlo Gozzi.   
     
    She wrote over a dozen volumes of essays on art, music, and travel with her scholarly appreciation animated by wit and imagination.  Lee was well-regarded as an expert on the Italian Renaissance and was a proponent of the Aesthetic movement. 
     
    Her literary talents were extensive and she wrote a number of novels and plays.  Perhaps her best remembered works are her haunting and powerful short stories exploring the supernatural.  Lee has often received accolades for these and glowingly compared to other authors such as M R James. 
      
    A committed pacifist she was resolved to protest against World War I. Her social activism in other areas was perhaps fueled by her feminist beliefs.  In her private life she was a lesbian and had long-term passionate relationships with three women including the doomed author and poet, Amy Levy.   
     
    Vernon Lee died on 13th February 1935 in San Gervasio Bresciano, Italy.  
     
    In Dionea we discover that a young girl has been washed ashore near Genoa.  Her life could be one of misery or success depending on the fates.  But despite her ravishing beauty Dionea grows up to be not the woman all had hoped she might become.
    Ver libro
  • A Darker Electricity - The Origins of Spiral Tribe Sound System - cover

    A Darker Electricity - The...

    Mark Angelo Harrison

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    At the time, it was unclear why the UK government targeted the Spiral Tribe travelling sound system. Even after arresting many key members and launching one of Britain's biggest court cases against them. 
    Was it really because they were a marauding horde of anarcho-techno-pirates, their outlandish music calling a generation to rise up in rebellion against conservatism, convention, and even consensus reality? 
    Or was it because, as pioneers of the 1990s free party movement, championing the new British breakbeat and European techno sound, they were reclaiming social space in warehouses and out under the stars? 
    Each weekend they pulled ever bigger crowds away from consumer culture. No superstar DJs, no door policy and everyone dancing together as equals. An inspiring, unifying force of creativity. 
    As Spiral Tribe's co-founder and visual artist (or as the Crown Prosecutor described him, 'the criminal ringleader' who'd helped 'mastermind' Britain's 'biggest ever illegal rave' at Castlemorton), Mark Angelo Harrison has a unique perspective to tell their inside story. He vividly charts their nomadic journey and the rapid escalation of their popularity - and notoriety. 
    From small squat-scene parties in London to enormous warehouse raves and free festivals. From one little overloaded van to the mighty convoy of matt-black military vehicles that instigated the teknivals of Europe.
    Ver libro
  • Teacher - cover

    Teacher

    Bryan G. Salmons

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    This book is about Vicki Koch, her unsolved murder, decades of fruitless investigation, and a personal journey to discover the truth.
    Ver libro
  • Running Wolf - Set in the Canadian wilderness this is a gripping supernatural tale with Native American elements - cover

    Running Wolf - Set in the...

    Algernon Blackwood

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Algernon Blackwood was born on 14th March 1869 in Shooter’s Hill, South East London, to a religious middle-class family. His mother was a widowed Duchess and his father was a Post Office administrator.  
     
    Blackwood was interested in the paranormal and the supernatural at an early age, and had a thirst for anything on Buddhism, other Oriental philosophies, mysticism and occultism.  In his writings the weaving of the supernatural into his various works, from ghost stories and children’s stories to plays and long novels is clearly seen, his writings beautifully enriched by his long and diversified life experience.  
     
    After leaving university and visiting parts of Europe, mainly Switzerland, the young writer went to Canada and the United States where he took on jobs including work as a farmer, a bartender, a secretary, a journalist, a reporter, running a hotel and teaching the violin.  He was voracious in meeting new people and absorbing new ideas.  
     
    In his late thirties, he returned to England where he published two of his supernatural stories in Pall Mall Magazine. As more of his highly entertaining stories were published so did his reputation and his bank balance.  All those years of curiosity and experiences were starting to emerge from his writing. 
     
    In 1906, ‘The Empty House & Other Ghost Stories’ was published with tremendous success.  Further volumes of short stories followed and with it a larger audience and bigger paydays. He also published children’s stories. 
     
    Blackwood also had ideas for novels and to explore on a larger canvas the paranormal world and the relationship between man and metaphysical powers including, in 1911, ‘The Centaur’.  
     
    With the outbreak of the First World War, Blackwood was assigned to British intelligence to write propaganda to support the war effort. 
     
    He was a prolific author with a quite staggering output which was also to include many plays. The exact number of his works is unknown as he would frequently write a story for a newspaper or periodical at very short notice.  
     
    In 1949, Blackwood was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in recognition of his literary talents and his services during the First World War.  
     
    Algernon Blackwood died on 10th December 1951 after a series of strokes.  
     
    The mysteries of the natural world are enhanced by those of the Native American spirit world in this wonderfully descriptive short story of a man’s fishing expedition to Medicine Lake.
    Ver libro
  • Focus - cover

    Focus

    Ingrid Ricks

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    From the Author of the New York Times bestseller Hippie Boy: A Girl's Story "A strong addition to any contemporary memoir collection." - Midwest Book Review At the age of 37, Ingrid Ricks walked into an eye doctor's office expecting to walk outt with a cute pair of red cat-eye frames--only to learn she suffered from Retinitis Pigmentosa, a rare, incurable eye disease that was stealing her eyesight and would eventually leave her completely blind. Gripped with the terrifying fear that she wouldn't be able to see her two young daughters grow up, would become a burden to her husband, and would lose the career and independence that defines her, Ingrid embarks on a quest to fix her eyes that ends up fixing her life. Through an eight-year journey marked by a trip to South Africa to write about AIDS orphans, a four-day visit with a doctor who focuses on whole-body health, a relationship-changing confrontation with her husband and a life-changing lesson from her daughters, Ingrid learns to embrace the moment and see what counts in life—something no amount of vision loss can take from her.
    Ver libro
  • The Fair Fields - My Way to Words - cover

    The Fair Fields - My Way to Words

    Rosanna Warren

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A memoir-in-vignettes recalling a poet's early years and memories from a literary household. 
    More than a consecutive memoir, The Fair Fields presents a set of linked vignettes about what it was like to grow up in a white, liberal, literary household in Connecticut in the 1950s and early 1960s. Listeners will meet characters they probably recognize, including Rosanna Warren's parents―writers Robert Penn Warren and Eleanor Clark―and their friends: authors, visual artists, musicians, editors, and publishers. 
    The narrative tracks Rosanna's early childhood to young womanhood, taking in along the way visions of neolithic Brittany, Roman ruins in southern France, the French Revolution, the Algerian War, and the throes of the American civil rights movement in the 1960s. As much as a personal story, it's a set of portraits from a certain gallery of post–World War II American intellectual life. It also tells the tale of a young artist finding her way from painting, her first vocation, to a life in writing.
    Ver libro