![]() ![]() ![]() This book, compiled and edited by Barbara's half-nephew, tells the story of Barbara's extraordinary life through her own words. But in 1939 the marriage soured, and on December 7th of that year 25-year-old Barbara walked out of the apartment, never to be seen or heard from again. ![]() After spending another year exploring Spain and Germany, the couple settled in Boston. After living in New York City for two years, Barbara's wanderlust returned when she and her future husband embarked on a 600-mile walk in the mountains of New England along the nascent Appalachian Trail. They spent several months in the West Indies, then sailed through the Panama Canal to the South Seas, where they spent several more months before eventually returning to East Coast. With no income, Barbara and her mother went to sea with their typewriters, hoping to earn a living by writing about their adventures. But that same year Barbara's life turned upside down when her father left his family for a younger woman. Both books received rave reviews in the New York Times, the Saturday Review, and elsewhere. Knopf: 1927's enchanting "The House Without Windows and Eepersip's Life There" and 1928's "The Voyage of the Norman D."-Barbara's account of her journey from New Haven to Nova Scotia as "cabin boy" on a lumber schooner. By the age of 14, Barbara Newhall Follett had published two books with Alfred A. ![]()
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