The Autobiography of Samuel Smiles, LL.D.

Samuel Smiles author Thomas MacKay editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:6th May '13

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Autobiography of Samuel Smiles, LL.D. cover

The autobiography, published in 1905, of one of the most popular Victorian writers, whose Self-Help (1859) made his name.

One of the most popular Victorian writers, Samuel Smiles (1812–1904) made his name with Self-Help (1859) and his Lives of the Engineers (1861–2). Left incomplete at his death but published in 1905, his straightforward and unpretentious autobiography will interest readers fascinated by the Victorian drive for self-improvement.One of the most popular Victorian writers, Samuel Smiles (1812–1904) made his name in 1859 with the original self-improvement manual Self-Help. His highly successful multi-volume Lives of the Engineers (also reissued in this series) contained biographies of men who had, like him, achieved greatness not through privilege but through hard work. Left incomplete at his death, edited by the social theorist Thomas Mackay (1849–1912) and first published in 1905, his autobiography opens with a vivid description of the Scottish garrison town of his birth during the Napoleonic wars. In his later years he was a vocal supporter of state education, and the value of education was a constant theme throughout his life. He remembers his schooldays here with clarity, writing that 'a good education is equivalent to a good fortune'. Straightforward and unpretentious, this book will be of interest to historians and readers fascinated by the Victorian drive for self-improvement.

ISBN: 9781108057493

Dimensions: 216mm x 140mm x 27mm

Weight: 600g

478 pages