The Purple Automobile And The Newspaper Girl
by
Book Details
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About the Book
In the very early morning hours what appears to be a purple automobile streaks down Plainview's main street. A brief glimpse of it is shown on the evening TV news, but what it is and where it came from is a mystery. Angie Inkster Scrivener decides to solve the mystery so she can use it as her news story entry in a contest sponsored by a nearby metropolitan newspaper. If Angie's story is select as the winning entry, she will be named as the newspaper's junior reporter. Acting like an investigative reporter, she unravels the mystery. To do so she becomes involved in a fantastic adventure. Her story about it wins much more than the contest, for almost immediately after its submission it is used as a big story on the first page of the Morning Herald. All sorts of exciting things then happen involving her family, her best school friend and her new friend-the eccentric inventor of what the purple automobile really was. Suitable for ages nine to fourteen.
"Seymour Mann's stories and poetry are always inventive and unique. His background is both diverse and wide as a teacher, scholar and a practitioner in governmental affairs and labor relations. In all his writing he draws on these experiences in a way that is enriched by his fertile imagination, and certainly that is exhibited in this story. I highly recommend it, and I salute Seymour for the achievement it represents" -Herman Taube, Author of Golden Leaves; Kyszl Kishlak/Refugee Village
About the Author
Seymour Z. Mann received his Ph.D. degree from the University of Chicago in 1951. His interests were multi-disciplinary as evidenced by his having completed doctoral exams in Political Science, Social Psychology and Labor/Industrial Relations. Those interests were mirrored in the many facets of his professional career that have encompassed: teaching, research, and administration in University settings both here and abroad; practitioner experience as a labor union executive; serving as a consultant or advisor to an array of governmental agencies and non-profit organizations. All of these career involvements have provided a rich mix of experiences that he has drawn upon in pursuing the writing of poetry and stories that is the hallmark of his post-retirement years. Fuller biographical details can be found in any recent edition of Who's Who in America.