Those Days

Front Cover
Random House Publishing Group, 1987 - Fiction - 419 pages
Dr. R.J. (Jim) Critchfield was born September 18, 1889 at Hunter, North Dakota, son of Dr. Henry H. and Lillie Critchfield; married Anna Louise Williams on April 19, 1913, in Iowa. She was born 2 December 1887, daughter of Hadwin and Jessie Williams. Five children were born to this union. Jim died 3 May 1938. Anne died in 1982.

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Contents

Prologue
1
Saints 17741884
13
Hadwen and Jessie Family Journal 188491
24
Copyright

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About the author (1987)

Richard Critchfield was a journalist for the Christian Science Monitor, Washington Star, Economist, and International Herald Tribune. He received awards from the Overseas Press Club of America (for his reporting from Vietnam), the Rockefeller Foundation, the Ford Foundation, and the Alicia Patterson Foundation. In 1981-86, he became one of the first MacArthur Fellows. Critchfield's books explore remote villages throughout the world. His writings on the U.S., Those Days and Trees, Why Do You Wait?, look at the country's rural social history. The books that focus on other countries look at small villages and examine their social connections. For example, in Villages, Critchfield notes the similarities and differences among villages and the relationships of villages to cities. His attitude was that great change might best be observed not in the cultural centers of the world (Tokyo, London, New York), but in the areas of the world where most people lived, such as the villages of Latin America, Asia, and Africa.

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