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titled:
In a New World; or, Among the Gold-Fields of Australia

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Horatio Alger (1832 - 1899) was one of the most influential American authors of the 19th century, who wrote In a New World; or, Among the Gold-Fields of Australia. A prolific author, he wrote more than a hundred books on the same theme: that honesty, cheerfulness, virtue, thrift, and hard work would be rewarded with success. While his plots and dialogue sometimes lacked creativity, he can be credited with helping to create an uniquely American philosophy of Strive and Succeed. Titles such as Sink or Swim, Shifting for Himself, and In a New World; or, Among the Gold-Fields of Australia convinced generations that they could triumph over their circumstances and become an Alger Hero.

 
 
 
 
ABOUT HORATIO ALGER JR:
Horatio Alger, Jr.

Horatio Alger, Jr.
1832-1899

On January 13, 1832, Horatio Alger, Jr. was born in Chelsea (now Revere),
Massachusetts. His father, Reverend Horatio Alger, was a Unitarian minister at the First Congregational Church and Society at Chelsea. Alger's mother, Olive (Fenno) Alger, was the daughter of a wealthy merchant and landowner. Surprisingly, given his future career as writer, Alger did not learn the alphabet until the age of six and did not begin his formal education until, by his account, the age of ten. His early education was conducted at home, under the irregular direction of his father, and consisted of algebra and Latin, this despite his obvious deficiency in English. Because Alger did not attend school and his father was preoccupied with church business, Alger had a great deal of free-time. This time was filled with reading "whatever came in my way," and included both educational and entertaining works. In December of 1844, Alger's parents moved to Marlborough, a town situated in the rolling hills between Boston and Worcester. Alger attended Gates Academy for the next three years, preparing for college. Alger noted in his Class Book that the tastes of the superintendent, Obadiah Wheelock Albee, "inclined him rather to mathematics and physical sciences than to the classics." Alger believed this balanced his education and forced him to devote more of his time to these subjects. Alger completed his studies at Gates Academy in 1847 at the age of fifteen. Alger entered Harvard in 1848, paying for his tuition by serving as "President's Freshman," running errands for the president. He also received financial assistance from his father's cousin, Cyrus Alger, a wealthy industrialist. Despite his early deficiencies in a structured education, Alger excelled at Harvard, receiving awards for academic achievement and prizes for his essays. His life at Harvard, however, was not limited to academic pursuits. Alger was active in many extracurricular activities, including membership in the Psi Upsilon fraternity. Alger graduated from Harvard in 1852 and reflected that "No period of my life has been one of such unmixed happiness as the four years which have been spent within college walls." For the next seven years, Alger's life was anything but stable. He entered the Harvard Divinity School in September of 1853, but soon after withdrew to take a position as assistant editor for the Boston Daily Advertiser. He soon left the Daily Advertiser and took on several successive positions including, teacher, principal, private tutor, and writer. During this time, two of Alger's writings appeared in hardcover: Bertha's Christmas Vision (1856), a volume of collected works that had previously appeard in other sources, and Nothing To Do (1857), a satirical poem. These were published as were many of his stories and poems in the monthlies and weeklies. Despite his growing prominence as a writer and his income from teaching, it appears that Alger was unable to make a satisfactory living.
Horatio Alger - Harvard

Horatio Alger, Jr.
Harvard class of 1852

In 1857, Alger re-entered the Harvard Divinity School to prepare for the ministry. On July 17, 1860, Alger graduated from the Divinity School and shortly thereafter, took his first ministerial assignment in Chicopee, Massachusetts. He began making plans for a grand tour of Europe and Great Britain, and made arrangements to write articles for the New York Sun to help defray expenses. Alger left New York in September of 1860 en route to Liverpool, England on the first leg of his grand tour of Europe. He remained there for nearly a year and submitted travel narratives to the New York Sun during his stay. Upon returning to the United States, he continued writing, but was increasingly frustrated by the lack of response to his work and the lack of pay. He decided that he would write for children and contacted a publisher, A. K. Loring, to detail the plot of a book he had in mind. Loring encouraged him to submit a manuscript, which he did: Frank's Campaign. Loring published Frank's Campaign at about the same time that Alger accepted a ministerial position at the First Unitarian Church and Society of Brewster, Massachusetts in November of 1864. In 1865, while satisfactorily fulfilling his duties as minister, Alger began submitting stories for publication in Student and Schoolmate. He completed another novel late that year entitled, Paul Prescott's Charge, which like Frank's Campaign, received favorable reviews. Alger's life was about to change dramatically. In January of 1866, an investigative committee was formed in Alger's parish in response to a rumor that he had molested a boy. The committee came to the conclusion that Alger was indeed guilty of molesting at least two boys. Alger was brought before the committee and charged with pedophilia, which he did not deny. Instead, he resigned his post and left town for the protective home of his parents. Shortly thereafter, Alger moved to New York City to embark on a full-time writing career. Alger had three more books published in 1866: Timothy Crump's Ward; or, the New Year's Loan and What Came of it, Charlie Codman's Cruise, both of which were rewrites based on earlier serials he had written, and Helen Ford. All three novels were well received by reviewers, but sales were disappointing, as were his earnings. Early in 1867, Alger supplied a story to Student and Schoolmate entitled Ragged Dick; or, Street Life in New York. The tale centers around the life of a young bootblack, culled from Alger's interest in the lives of the "street Arabs," or boys who lived on the streets of New York. Alger had plenty of experience from which to draw: Since his arrival in New York, Alger visited places frequented by street boys, including the Newsboys' Lodging House operated by the Children's Aid Society. The Newsboys' Lodging House operated from a loft above the New York Sun and provided a place for street boys, and later girls, to sleep and receive a warm meal. Alger became an advocate for these homeless children and routinely appealed to his readers for support of the institution. Ragged Dick was so popular and well received by the public that Student and Schoolmate signed Alger on as a regular contributor to the magazine. Later that same year, Loring published the story, slightly expanded, and had very favorable sales. Alger signed with Loring to write five additional novels as part of a "Ragged Dick Series." The additional five novels, published between 1868 and 1870 are: Fame and Fortune (1868), Mark the Match Boy (1869), Rough and Ready (1869), Ben the Luggage Boy (1870), Rufus and Rose (1870). None of the subsequent novels attained the acclaim or appeal that Ragged Dick received. Alger continued writing at a frenzied pace, regularly contributing to such story papers and magazines as Ballou's, Gleason's, Harper's, New York Weekly, Student and Schoolmate, and Young Israel. In addition, over the next few years, Alger signed with Loring to write additional novels that would appear under a series title, such as the "Luck and Pluck Series," "Tattered Tom Series," and the "Brave and Bold Series." Despite his success at writing for children, Alger wanted to gain literary fame by writing material that would appeal to a mature audience. This desire was never fully realized. He did have some limited successes through the publication of a collection of poetry, entitled Grand'ther Baldwin's Thanksgiving (1875) and his novel, The New Schoolma'am, or A Summer in North Sparta (1877). Both of these publications received good reviews and were well received by the public. He actually wrote another adult fiction piece entitled Mabel Parker, but Alger delayed publishment because of a sales slump in the book trade. It was not published until after Alger's death, when Edward Stratemeyer, with minor changes, published it under Alger's name and with the title Jerry, the Backwoods Boy (1904). The manuscript remained in the Street and Smith archives at the Arents Research Library on the Syracuse University campus until it was published, in its original form, in 1986 by Gary Scharnhorst under the Archon Books imprint. Following the death of President James Garfield in 1881, John R. Anderson suggested to Alger that he should write a biography of the late president, the audience for which would be children. Alger complied, drawing information from other biographies and newsclippings, and within 14 days submitted a manuscript for publication. From Canal Boy to President received good reviews and sold very well, encouraging him to write an additional two biographies for children: From Farm Boy to Senator (Daniel Webster) (1882) and Abraham Lincoln, the Backwoods Boy (1883). Until his health failed in 1895 and he was forced to retire, Alger poured out 537 novels and short stories (including variant titles), 94 poems, and 27 articles. Alger's stories appeared in a variety of formats, including hard-cover books, serial publications (magazines and story papers), and pamphlets. In addition to publishing under his own name, it is known that many of Alger's works were published using pseudonyms. It is likely, therefore, that many of Alger's stories are lost and the true number may never be known. Over the years, his writing came increasingly under attack by critics for being too sensationalistic, unbelievable, and predictable. Other critics chided Alger for his overuse of the same formula, which he changed very little over the course of his writing career. On July 18, 1899, at the age of 67, Alger passed away at his sister's home in Natick, Massachusetts. His stories continued to be popular until the 1920s, when most publishers stopped issuing them. Alger is often credited with inventing the "strive and succeed" spirit that inspired boys to work hard and advance themselves to attain the American Dream. This belief is still evident today in the Horatio Alger Society's "Strive and Succeed" award which is given annually to a student who demonstrates the "strive and succeed" spirit that permeates Alger's writing and the Horatio Alger Association's "Horatio Alger Award," given annually to Americans who "demonstrate individual initiative and a commitment to excellence—as exemplified by remarkable achievements accomplished through honesty, hard work, self-reliance, and perseverance." Many Americans still associate Alger's name with success through honesty, industry, and independence. - Mark A. Williams References Bennett, Bob. A Collector's Guide to the Published Works of Horatio Alger, Jr. Newark, DE : MAD Book Company, 1999. Horatio Alger Association. Horatio Alger Association-General Information. [http://www.horatioalger.com/geninf/geninf.htm#HoratioAlgerAward] [2000-01-24]. Scharnhorst, Gary with Jack Bales. The Lost Life of Horatio Alger, Jr. Bloomington, IN : Indiana University Press, 1985.

FAQ HORATIO ALGER JR:
Copyright (c) 1996 by Bill Roach All rights reserved.


1. Who was Horatio Alger?
2. What has he written?
3. What Alger organizations have sites on the Net?
5. Why is there so little accurate information about Alger?
4. What pseudonyms did Alger use?
6. Why is there so much disinformation about Alger?
7. What Alger novels are available on the Net?
8. What movies been made from his books?
9. What are some good Alger biographies?  Some bad ones?
10. What is the relationship between Horatio Alger stories and thesubsequent The Rover Boys, Tom Swift, Hardy Boys, and Nancy Drew Series?
11. What is the formula for an Horatio Alger story?
12. What libraries / museums have Horatio Alger archives?
13. What does the Horatio Alger "Strive and Succeed" philosophy consist of?  Are there contemporary versions of it?
14. What were the major milestones in Alger's life?
15. How did Horatio Alger, Jr. come to leave the ministry?
16. What authors have updated or parodied the Horatio Alger formula story?
17. What is the Horatio Alger Society?
18. Did any of Alger’s juvenile novels have female protagonists?

1. Who was Horatio Alger?
Horatio Alger, Jr. was an American author (1832-1899).  Alger produced the one of the first boys' adventure series.  Alger published over 118 novels in book form.  Another 280 novels were produced in magazines along with more than five hundred short stories.  His young heroes succeed through a mixture of pluck and luck.  They are lucky, in part, because they deserve to be lucky.  A given hero may appear in several books, e.g., "Ragged Dick," but the books do not have a common set of characters.  Regardless of their names, the heroes are remarkably similar.  Horatio Alger, Jr. was the oldest of five children of a debt-ridden
New England, Unitarian minister.  He was very frail.  He was under weight and undersized, suffered from bronchial asthma, and near sightedness. Because of his poor health, the family deferred his introduction to the alphabet and reading until he was six years old.   He started formal school at age 10 and achieved Phi Beta Kappa at Harvard.  He was ranked eighth in a class of 89.  He volunteered for the union army three times and was rejected three times because of his asthma and small size (just over five feet and about 120 pounds). Horatio Alger, Jr. taught school or tutored school children for a good part of his life.  His most famous student is Benjamin Cardozo who went on to be a Supreme Court justice. 

2. What has he written?
Horatio Alger wrote mostly juvenile fiction:  short stories, serialized novels, and novels.  He also wrote biography, juvenile biography (James Garfield, Abraham Lincoln, and Daniel Webster), and poetry.  He did someserious writing for adult publications (essays), but he was not nearlyas successful at that.
The Horatio Alger Society includes lists of his publications and their various editions for collectors.  The most comprehensive list of Alger’s publications is Bob Bennett’s_ A Collector’s Guide to the Published Works of Horatio Alger, Jr. (1832 – 1899)_MAD Book Company:  Newark, Delaware, 1999).   
Many of the books were sold after Alger's death and after the copyrights had expired so careful records were not kept.  Printers frequently printed unauthorized editions at the same time they printed authorized editions. The unauthorized editions were sold by the printer with no fee paid to the publisher.  

3. What Alger organizations have sites on the Net?
Horatio Alger, Jr Resources
http://www.washburn.edu/sobu/broach/algerres.html
Horatio Alger Association (philanthropic organization)
http://www.horatioalger.com/
Horatio Alger Educational Programs
http://www.horatioalger.com/edupro/edupro.htm
Horatio Alger Society (collectors) http://www.horatioalger.com

4. What pseudonyms did Alger use?
Arthur Hamilton
Arthur Lee Putnam
Carl Cantab
Julian Starr
Charles F. Preston

5. Why is there so little accurate information about Alger? 
Alger's sister Augusta inherited all of his papers.  She detroyed virtually all of his personal papers.  In the Victorian era, it was not unusual for an author or his/her relatives to purge the personal papers of anything that might be unseemly.  To the Victorian mind, virtually any eccentricity was unseemly.  This bowdlerization occurred to the personal papers of Louisa May Alcott, Sir Richard Francis Burton, Lord Byron,etc. 

6. Why is there so much disinformation about Alger? 
In 1928 Herbert Mayes published a fraudulent Alger biography entitled: Alger: A Biography Without a Hero.  Mayes even fabricated a diary for Alger which detailed a life of carousing and womanizing.  The Mayes biography became the basis for the entry in the Dictionary of American Biography.  Mayes did not admit the fraud until 1976. As late as 1963, an Alger biographer with academic credentials, John Tebbel, repeated all of the Mayes fabrications, supposedly after verifying his sources.

7. What Alger novels are available on the Net?
  • Struggling Upward
  • Cast Upon the Breakers
  • The Cash Boy
  • Joe the Hotel Boy
  • Paul Prescott's Charge: A story for boys
  • The Errand Boy: or, How Phil Brent Won Success
  • A Fancy of Hers
  • Driven from Home or Carl Crawford's Experience
  • Frank's Campaign or, Farm and Camp
  • Paul the Peddler, or, Fortunes of a Young Street Merchant
  • Phil the Fiddler 
8. What movies been made from his books?
A Disney movie _Newsies_ deals with the 1899 newsboy strike in New York City.  The movie is not based on a Horatio Alger story but it does depict the life of the newsboys that figured in so many Alger stories.  The informal web site of the movie is referenced on the Horatio Alger Resources web site. If any movies have been made from Alger stories, they should have been made between 1900 and 1920 at the peak of his popularity.  They would have been silent movies.  So far none of the FAQ readers have turned up an Horatio Alger silent movie (or talkie). 

9. What are some good Alger biographies?  Some bad ones?  
Gary Scarnhorst with Jack Bales, _The Lost Life of Horatio Alger, Jr._ (Indiana University Press:  Bloomington, IN, 1985) Many poor biographies are based on the 1928 Mayes book mentioned above. 

10. What is the relationship between Horatio Alger stories and the subsequent The Rover Boys, Tom Swift, Hardy Boys, and Nancy Drew Series?
Horatio Alger worked with a younger writer, Edward Stratemeyer,  an editor at Munsey Magazine.  Before his death, Alger's arranged to have  Stratemeyer finish the works that Alger had in progress. The Alger books "completed" by
Stratemeyer include:
  • Out for Business
  • Falling in with Fortune
  • Nelson, the Newsboy
  • Young Captain Jack
  • Jerry, the Backwoods Boy
  • Lost at Sea
  • From Farm to Fortune
  • The Young Book Agent
  • Randy of the River
  • Joe, the Hotel Boy
  • Ben Logan's Triumph

Stratemeyer was a prolific author and went on to set up the Stratemeyer Syndicate which was responsible for the Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew.  After Stratemeyer's death, the syndicate operated under the leadership of his daughter Harriet Adams Stratemeyer. 

11. What is the formula for an Horatio Alger story? 
An adolescent boy with a rural back ground sets off to earn his livelihood in an urban setting.  He triumphs over circumstances and temptation and starts advancing in his career.  At some point, he will be betrayed or falsely accused by one of his peers.  Ultimately, the hero will be vindicated.  While pluck and hard work play a role in the success of an Alger hero, there is always an older male who takes on the hero as his protégé.  That mentor plays a critical role in the success of the Alger hero.  The Alger hero never takes revenge on those who mistreated him.  He secures what is rightfully his, but he is never vindictive.  Alger heroes never have romantic interests.  As they leave adolescence, these heroes leave his books except to play the role of mentors for the new generation of Alger heroes.  

12. What libraries / museums have Horatio Alger archives?
Library of Congress Simmons College Archives and Special Collections Northern Illinois University Library
Founders Library at NIU has acquired a comprehensive collection of more than 2,000 books and periodicals by and about Horatio Alger, and the library now is the official repository for the archives and other papers of the Horatio Alger Society. All materials received from the Society will be cataloged and made available to interested parties through computer networks. A complete catalog of Alger's works will be prepared, and the library will continue to acquire all Alger-related monographs and dissertations, in addition to mounting periodic exhibits of the collections and hosting future conventions of the Society. Stanley Lieberman Memorial Collection of American Juvenile Literature, Princeton University University of South Florida Tampa Campus Library A. Frank Smith, Jr. Library Center Special Collections Department - Emory University Popular Culture Library at Bowling Green State    de Grummond Childrens' Literature Collection at Southern Mississipi

13. What does the Horatio Alger "Strive and Succeed" philosophy consist of?  Are there contemporary versions of it?
There are several elements in the Horatio Alger "Strive and Succeed" Philosophy: 

  • hard work
  • study (informal rather than formal)
  • loyalty to superiors and subordinates
  • abstaining  from alcohol
  • frugal living
  • importance of dress and personal grooming
  • personal integrity
  • speaking and writing effectively
  • non-credal religious values (Unitarian)
  • avoidance of violence and revenge
  • speaking the whole truth
  • brotherhood of males (family without a mother)
  • obligation to help and protect the weak and unfortunate
  • duty to mother and/or sisters
  • courtesy to all
  • accepting the success of others
  • emphasis on a secure home
  • accept assistance of benefactors
  • expectation of own success, acceptance
  • eschew class hatred
The Alger success formula seems very like what one finds in _The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin_.  Alger's code is less pragmatic and more altruitstic than Poor Richard's.  Alger's code imposes significant personal obligations, but it is not at all individualistic. The Alger code does not seem to have much in common with those individuals labeled "Horatio Alger success stories."  Some modern conservatives object to Alger’s liberal philosophy. W. S. Ross even provides an example of an Alger novel (_Struggling Upward_) with all that pernicious liberalism deleted.  

14. What were the major milestones in Alger's life?
  • 1832 born January 13, Friday
  • 1833 birth of sister Olive Agusta
  • 1842 enters grade school at age 10
  • 1844 Horatio Alger, Sr has close brush with bankruptcy
  • 1847 passes entrance exam and enters Harvard, nickname "Toodles"
  • 1849 essay "Chivalry" in Boston National Pictorial Review
  • 1852 graduates from Harvard, Phi Beta Kappa, eighth in class of 89
  • 1853 freelance journalist, enters and leaves Harvard Divinity
  • 1854 taught at boys boarding school
  • 1857 re-enters Harvard Divinity, publishing in magazines for tuition
  • 1860 graduates from Harvard Divinity
  • 1861 -1862 supply preacher for Unitarian churches
  • 1863 flunked induction physical, near-sighted, short, asthmatic contributor to Harper's Magazine, Putnam's, etc.
  • 1864 Frank's Campaign
  • 1866 accusation of sexual misconduct with thirteen year old and fifteen year old males, resigns from the ministry
  • 1866 Horatio Alger in New York City as journalist his publisher, Joseph H. Allen,a Unitarian elder, shielded him Horatio cultivates the street boys aged 12 to 16
  • 1867 raises money for Five Points mission, Newsboys Lodging, YMCA, Children's Aid Society Charles O'Connor gives Alger free access to Newsboys Lodging
  • 1867 _Ragged Dick_ , his eighth novel, is a best seller
  • 1868 Phil the Fiddler describes the plight of children as street musicians, attack on the padrone system
  • 1872 starts to work for the Seligman family, as a tutor and guardian for their boys, continued until 1877
  • 1873 grand tour of Europe with his parents, his brother, his sister Augusta and her husband
  • 1877 Life of Edwin Forrest (serious biography) published Street boy fiction moves West
  • 1880-1890 Alger informally adopts three street boys who serve as models for characters in his books: Charlie Davis (_The Young CircusRider_ , 1883),  John Downie , a newsboy (_Mark Mason’s Mission_ 1886) and (_Chester Rand_, 1892), and Edward J. (Tommy) Downie (_The Odds Against Him_, 1889)
  • 1880 - 1890 portrayal of Jewish money lenders and pawn brokers in his novels
  • 1881 Alger publisher A.K Loring goes bankrupt
  • 1881 instant book, biography of James Garfield From Canal Boy to President
  • 1883 tutors young Benjamin and Elizabeth Cardozo
  • 1885 tutors Lewis Einstein
  • 1885 - 1899 liberal Republican (mugwump) themes in novels
  • 1886 - 1896 revival of Alger popularity, 39 serial novels
  • 1892 attends the 40 year reunion of his college class
  • 1896 leaves New York permanently
  • 1898 Alger, ill, selects Edward Stratemeyer to complete the books he has started
  • 1899 died - Alger's sister Augusta destroys his personal papers
  • 1900 - 1910 many more Alger books sold (in cheap editions) than during his life time
  • 1926 Alger all but unknown
  • 1940 - resurrection of the Horatio Alger myth and canonization of his heroes

15. How did Horatio Alger, Jr. come to leave the ministry?
Early in 1866, Horatio Alger, Jr.'s contract was up for renewal.  Some members of the church board did not want to renew the contract because they were concerned that Alger was not married and that he seemed to spend too much time with the congregation's group for boys, the temperance cadets.  Other members of the board supported Alger.  In the absence of specific allegations, they felt the contract should be renewed. The board delayed the decision for a week and launched an investigation of their minister.  The thirteen year old son of a member of the church board, after questioning, told his father  that Alger had had sexual contact with him. The boy had gone to Alger's rooms to return a book, leaving his younger sister in a carriage.  When the boy entered his room, Alger allegedly locked the door and molested the boy.  The ensuing investigation named a second boy (aged 15) as being involved with Alger.  The report of the committee implies there may have been other boys involved.  Alger did not reply specifically to the charges.  Rather he admitted to acting "imprudently."  The charges did not use clinical language.  Rather they mention "unnatural familiarity with boys."  To avoid a public hearing on the charges, the church board allowed Alger to resign from his post and the ministry and leave town immediately.   Subsequent to leaving Brewster, Alger continued to publish in youth journals affiliated with the church.  When a member of the Brewster church complained that Alger's influence over young boys was dangerous, the publisher of the journal, Joseph H. Allen, a church elder familiar with the Brewster incident, replied that Alger was entitled to earn a living.  Scholars did not unearth evidence of the Brewster incident until more than one hundred years later.  Apparently, the records of the local church in Brewster and the Unitarian Convention were incomplete on this point.  This is to be expected since the mater did not proceed to a formal hearing.  Part of the Horatio Alger formula is that the hero is falsely accused and loses his job because of manufactured evidence.  The motivation for the false evidence is that someone wants the hero's job.  The Horatio Alger hero leaves quietly without responding to the charges.  Later events exonerate the hero.  This element of the formula dates from before the time of the Brewster episode.  Shortly after the Brewster incident, Alger wrote a poem "Friar Anselmo" whose subject had committed some significant sin and devoted the rest of his life to good works as atonement.  The friar achieves some sort of peace, realizing the world will be a better place if he continues to live and continues his ministry.  For Alger, writing for boys was his ministry.

16. What authors have updated or parodied the Horatio Alger formula story?
Theodore Dreiser frequently parodies Alger.  _The Financier_ is an attempt to modernize the Alger myth.  Its hero is Frank Algernon Cowperwood.  Raymond Feist, the science fiction writer, has used some Horatio Alger themes in the Serpent War Saga.  F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby is an Alger parody.  Gatsby is the antithesis of the typical Alger hero.  Lawrence Sanders, the writer of hard-boiled detective fiction, wrote two stories for _Playboy_, "The Adventures of Chauncey Alcock" (April, 1972)and "The Further Adventures of Chauncey Alcock" (December, 1972). The stories are sex comedies in the Horatio Alger style.  A Nathaniel West novel, _A Cool Million_ parodies the Alger formula quite mercilessly (literally tearing a classic Alger hero into pieces, limb by limb) and simultaneously uses his language (whole paragraphs out of Alger novels).  Hunter S. Thompson, _Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas_ parodies the Ager myth. Raoul Duke, Thompson's alter ego, refers to himself as a "monster reincarnation" of Horatio Alger. In the movie,  Johnny Depp plays Thompson. Or, more precisely, Raoul Duke, the alias Thompson uses while he and Acosta scam their way from Glitter Gulch to the Strip in search of "Free Enterprise. The American Dream. Horatio Alger gone mad on drugs in Las Vegas." 

17. What is the Horatio Alger Society?
The Horatio Alger Society is a group organized " To further the philosophy of Horatio Alger, Jr., and to encourage the spirit ofStrive and Succeed that for half a century guided Alger's undaunted heroes ..."
The members of the society are Alger collectors and scholars.  Many collect other juvenile series as well as Horatio Alger.  The Newsboy is the official newsletter of the Horatio Alger Society. It is published bi-montly (six issues per yearThe Horatio Alger Society has its own web site:                  http://www.ihot.com/~has  The e-mail address for the Horatio Alger Society is          has@ihot.com

18. Did any of Alger’s juvenile novels have female protagonists? 
Two of the juvenile novels had female protagonists: _Helen Ford_ (1866) (prior to Ragged Dick) and _Tattered Tom_ (1871)(after Ragged Dick)


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AEONIAN PRESS INC H. M. CALDWELL COMPANY OUR BOYS PUBLISHING CO
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CHATTERTON-PECK CO JOHN C WINSTON CO STREET & SMITH CORPORATION
CHILTON COMPANY JOHN F. SHAW & CO., LTD STREET & SMITH PUBLICATIONS ,INC
COLLIER & WESTGARD JOHN R. ANDERSON & COMPANY STREET & SMITH, PUBLISHERS
COLLIER BOOKS JOHN R. ANDERSON AND HENRY S. ALLEN SUPERIOR PRINTING CO
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CUPPLES & LEON JOHN WANAMAKER TRADE PUBLISHING CO
DAVID MCKAY,PUBLISHER LORING, PUBLISHER UNITED STATES BOOK CO.
DEWOLFE,FISKE, & CO., M. A. DONOHUE & CO VICKERY & HILL PUBLISHING CO., THE
DOUBLEDAY & COMPANY, INC MACLELLAN NEW YORK COMPANY W. L. ALLISON COMPANY
DOVER PUBLICATIONS MACLELLAN NY COMPANY WARD & DRUMMOND
F.M. LUPTON MCLOUGHLIN BROTHERS WHITMAN PUBLISHING CO
F.M. LUPTON PUBLISHING COMPANY MEDIA BOOKS WILEY & HALSTED
FEDERAL BOOK COMPANY MERSHON COMPANY WILLIAM SIMONDS
FRANK A MUNSEY NA WORLD PUBLISHING CO
G.W. CARLETON & CO, PUBLISHERS NAUTILUS BOOKS WORLD SYNDICATE PUB
G.W. CARLETON & CO, PUBLISHERS, STREET & SMITH, NEW YORK WEEKLY NEW WERNER COMPANY
GILBERT K. WESTGARD II NEW YORK BOOK COMPANY
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