When Charles S. Stratton was born in 1838, he seemed perfect in every way. But then he stopped growing. At age four, though a happy and mischievous child, he was just over two feet tall and weighed fifteen pounds--the exact size he had been as a seven-month-old baby. It was then that P. T. Barnum persuaded Charley's family to allow him to exhibit their son in his museum and tour him around the world as a curiosity. Tom Thumb, as Barnum dubbed him, was a natural performer. He became enormously popular and wealthy, more so than any other performer before him, in large part due to the marketing genius of Barnum. In this spirited biography--the first on its subject--George Sullivan recounts the fascinating adventures of the real Tom Thumb, and also raises challenging questions about what constitutes exploitation--both in the nineteenth century and today.
Product Information
Reader: Barry Press Running Time: 4hrs 30min Publisher: AudioGO Ltd Number of CDs: 0 File Quality: MP3 (128 kbps) Release Date: 10/1/12 D/L ISBN: 9781620641378 $8.97 $14.95
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