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The Wind in the Willows | Critical Overview
Grahame at first had trouble placing The Wind in the Willows with a publisher. His English editor, John Lane, rejected the manuscript, as did Everybody’s, the American periodical that initially solicited it. It was finally picked up in 1908 by Methuen in England. Methuen was still skeptical; so much so that he would not pay an advance on it, though Curtis Brow, Grahame’s literary agent, was able to get him to agree to rising royalties. In 1909, Scribner published the book in America, but only after receiving a letter from President Theodore Roosevelt in its praise....
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- The Wind in the Willows: Introduction
- The Wind in the Willows: Summary
- The Wind in the Willows: Kenneth Grahame Biography
- The Wind in the Willows: Characters
- The Wind in the Willows: Themes
- The Wind in the Willows: Style
- The Wind in the Willows: Historical Context
- The Wind in the Willows: Critical Overview
- The Wind in the Willows: Criticism
- The Wind in the Willows: Compare and Contrast
- The Wind in the Willows: Topics for Further Study
- The Wind in the Willows: Media Adaptations
- The Wind in the Willows: What Do I Read Next?
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