Garet Garrett
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Garet Garrett | |
---|---|
Born | February 19, 1878 |
Died | November 6, 1954 | (aged 76)
Nationality | American |
Garet Garrett (19 February 1878–6 November 1954), born Edward Peter Garrett, was a journalist best known for his opposition to domestic and foreign policies of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's administration including both the New Deal and American entry into World War II.
Works
- Where the Money Grows (1911)
- The Blue Wound (1921)[1][2]
- The Driver (1922)[3]
- Satan's Bushel (1923) [4]
- The Cinder Buggy (1923)
- Ouroboros or the Mechanical Extension of Mankind (1926)
- Harangue (The Trees Said to the Bramble Come Reign Over Us) (1926)
- The American Omen (1928)
- A Bubble That Broke the World (1932)
- "The Revolution Was" (1944)
- "Ex America" (1951)
- "Rise of Empire" (1952)
- A Time is Born (1944)
- The People's Pottage(1953) (reprinted as Burden of Empire and Ex America: the 50th Anniversary of the People's Pottage)
- The Wild Wheel (1952)
- The American Story (1955)
- Salvos Against the New Deal: Selections from the Saturday Evening Post: 1933-1940, edited by Bruce Ramsey (2002)[5]
- Defend America First: The Antiwar Editorials of the Saturday Evening Post, 1939-1942, edited by Bruce Ramsey (2003)
- "Insatiable Government," edited by Bruce Ramsey (2008)