
Ginger-Snaps - Free Audiobook
Author(s): Fanny Fern,
1 / 61Preface
- 1. Preface
- 2. Dinner-Parties
- 3. The Bride's New House
- 4. The Happy Lot of a Sexton
- 5. Literary Aspirants
- 6. What Shall We Do for the Little Children on Sunday?
- 7. My House in the Country
- 8. Why Wear Mourning?
- 9. "Delightful Men"
- 10. Choosing Presents
- 11. A Bid for an Editorship
- 12. A Sermon to Plymouth Pulpit
- 13. Female Clerks
- 14. Blue Monday
- 15. The Fly in the Ointment
- 16. Woman's Millennium
- 17. English Notions about Women
- 18. Rag-Tag and Bob-Tail Fashions
- 19. Some Hints to Editors
- 20. Help for the Helpful
- 21. Women on the Platform
- 22. Poverty and Independence
- 23. The History of Our Late War
- 24. Two Kinds of Women
- 25. Sunday Morning
- 26. Justice for Clergymen
- 27. The Old Maid of the Period
- 28. The Nurse of the Period
- 29. A Look Backward
- 30. Varieties of Human Nature
- 31. "A Good Mistress Always Makes a Good Servant"
- 32. The Mother-Touch
- 33. Some Gossip about Myself
- 34. Hospitality
- 35. Woman and Her Watch
- 36. "My Doctor"
- 37. A Woman at a Lecture
- 38. Can't Be Suited
- 39. Autograph-Hunters
- 40. The Etiquette of Hotel Piazzas
- 41. Old Stockbridge in Massachusetts
- 42. Sunday in the Village
- 43. Sick in the Village
- 44. Men and Their Clothes
- 45. Notes from Plymouth Rock
- 46. No Beaux Anywhere
- 47. Daniel Webster's Home
- 48. A Trip to Richmond
- 49. The Coming Landlord
- 50. Out on the End of Cape Ann
- 51. Country Diet
- 52. From My Seat on the Rocks
- 53. Wishings and Longings
- 54. A Transition State
- 55. What Mary Thought of John
- 56. Travel-Spoiled Americans
- 57. Life's Illusions
- 58. Jack Simpkins
- 59. "Biding the Lord's Time"
- 60. One Sort of Fool
- 61. The First Baby
About
American novelist, children's writer, humorist, and newspaper columnist from the 1850s to the 1870s, Fanny Fern (real name of Sara Payson Willis) was the first woman to have her own regular column, became the highest-paid columnist in the US by 1855, and would support herself for more than 20 years by her writing. Ginger-Snaps, published in 1870, covers a broad range of topics in plain language and with biting humor.
She describes these columns in her Preface as follows: “When I was a little girl, I used to play "make ginger-snaps;" and I always tossed in all the ginger in the spice-box, be it more or less; so if you find these rather biting, attribute it to the force of early habits. Beside, they are not intended for a "square meal;" only to nibble at, in the steamboat, or railroad-car, or under the trees in the country; or when your dear, but tardy John, is keeping you waiting, with your gloves buttoned, and your bonnet-strings tied; or, best of all, when you are sitting in your rocking-chair, nursing that dear little baby. I do not think the milk of human kindness is wanting in these Ginger-Snaps, and I trust they are—kneaded. - Summary by Winnifred Assmann and Fanny Fern
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