Mattie's family runs a coffee shop in Philadelphia, and Mattie lives above the shop with her widowed mother and grandmother. She's none too pleased about all the menial chores she has to carry out on a daily basis, but she's nothing if not ambitious, and she wants to turn this modest little enterprise into the finest business that Philadelphia has ever seen.
In those days, coffee shops weren't just places for drinking coffee; they were thriving social hubs where men—and virtually all the patrons of such establishments would be men—would gather together and discuss business and politics. In Philadelphia, which at that time was the capital city of the United States, coffee shops were regular meeting places for some of the nation's most powerful and important politicians.
Thursday, July 5, 2018
What type of business does Mattie's family own in Fever 1793?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
What is the theme of the chapter Lead?
Primo Levi's complex probing of the Holocaust, including his survival of Auschwitz and pre- and post-war life, is organized around indiv...
-
The statement "Development policy needs to be about poor people, not just poor countries," carries a lot of baggage. Let's dis...
-
"Mistaken Identity" is an amusing anecdote recounted by the famous author Mark Twain about an experience he once had while traveli...
-
Primo Levi's complex probing of the Holocaust, including his survival of Auschwitz and pre- and post-war life, is organized around indiv...
-
De Gouges's Declaration of the Rights of Woman was enormously influential. We can see its influences on early English feminist Mary Woll...
-
As if Hamlet were not obsessed enough with death, his uncovering of the skull of Yorick, the court jester from his youth, really sets him of...
-
In both "Volar" and "A Wall of Fire Rising," the characters are impacted by their environments, and this is indeed refle...
No comments:
Post a Comment