01954nam a22002297a 450000500170000000800410001704000070005804100080006508200200007310000310009324500340012426000390015830000240019736500120022152012580023365000330149165000300152470000330155494200120158799900190159995201060161820221014101501.0221013b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d cAL aeng 223a828.9bGORP aAnne Wolrige Gordon959552 aPeter Howard life and letters aLondonbHodder and Stoughtonc1969 a416p.bPBc17x11cm. 2English aAn experience, a vividly arresting, quite unforgettable happening' is Keith Winter's memory of Peter Howard at Oxford, where he enjoyed a career as a rugby international, poet and classical scholar at Wadham College. The phrase could also describe his later life as journalist, playwright and leader of the world-wide work of Moral Re-Armament. Reactions to him were seldom neutral. He was much loved by many and not a little hated by a few. In fact, each forward step was a struggle. He was born with a deformed left leg, but ended up captain of England at rugby. He was discouraged from seeing Doris Metaxa, the French tennis star, but, a year later, they married. Seven years after, he had become one of London's most highly-paid political journalists, only to leave the Express newspapers to work unpaid for Moral Re-Armament. In PETER HOWARD, Life and Letters, Anne Wolrige Gordon tells her father's story, the good and the bad, often in his own words. His journey from agnosticism to faith, and on to maturity, emerges naturally from his letters. Mrs. Wolrige Gordon has written about a man, not a movement, though much that may have puzzled people about Moral Re-Armament is clarified. It is a book which will challenge, disturb and bring hope. aEnglish Miscellaneous959553 aEnglish Literature959554 aGORDON (Anne Wolrige)959555 2ddccGF c224832d224832 00102ddc40708ENGaALbALd2013-03-24l0o828.9 GORPpGF02249r2022-10-13 00:00:00w2022-10-13yGF