Joseph Berg Esenwein

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Joseph Berg Esenwein (1867–1946) was an American editor, lecturer and writer. He was noted for contributions to the Library of the World's Best Literature.

Biography

Esenwein was born in Philadelphia, and educated at Albright College, Millersville Normal School, Lafayette College, Richmond College and the University of Omaha. He was president of Albright Collegiate Institute in 1895-96, and in the following year held the position of educational director of the Y. M. C. A. at Washington Heights, New York City.

After a year of foreign travel, he became professor of English in the Pennsylvania Military College at Chester, subsequently giving up teaching (1903) to become manager of the Booklovers' Magazine. Two years later he was made editor and manager of Lippincott's Magazine, a position which he held until 1914 while teaching a private course on short-story writing.[1] In 1915 he became editor of The Writer's Monthly, Springfield, Mass. He is known both as a lecturer and writer.

Bibliography

Esenwein's published works, besides articles contributed to Charles Dudley Warner's Library of the World's Best Literature, include:

  • Songs for Reapers (1895)
  • Modern Agnosticism (1896)
  • Feathers for Shafts (1897)
  • Writing for Short Stories (1909)
  • Lessons in the Short Story (1910)
  • Short Story Masterpieces (1912)
  • Writing the Photoplay (1913; revised edition with Arthur Leeds, 1919)
  • The Art of Public Speaking (1915), with Dale Carnegie
  • Writing for the Magazines (1916)
  • Children's Stories and How to Tell Them (1917)
  • Russian Short Story Masterpieces (two volumes, 1919)
  • Field and Campus Stories for Girls (1937)

References

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Sources

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External links

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