<P> Following the deaths of his father in 1917 and his eldest son Boyce (in the 1918 flu epidemic), Hapgood's career began to decline . A few years later, general disillusionment over the decadence of the post-war world led him to retire . Hapgood died on November 19, 1944, in Provincetown, and was buried in the family plot in East Cemetery, Petersham, Massachusetts . </P> <Ul> <Li> The Spirit of the Ghetto: Studies of the Jewish Quarter in New York (1902, reissued by Belknap Press, 1983 . ISBN 0 - 674 - 83266 - 3) </Li> <Li> Autobiography of a Thief (1903) </Li> <Li> The Spirit of Labor (1907, reissued by the University of Illinois Press, 2004 . ISBN 0 - 252 - 07187 - 5) </Li> <Li> Types from City Streets (1910, reissued by Garret Press, 1970 . ISBN 0 - 512 - 00759 - 4) </Li> <Li> An Anarchist Woman (Novel, 1909) </Li> <Li> The Story of a Lover (1919) Published anonymously . A frank account of his open marriage . </Li> <Li> A Victorian in the Modern World (Autobiography, 1939, reissued by the University of Washington Press, 1972: ISBN 0 - 295 - 95183 - 4) </Li> </Ul> <Li> The Spirit of the Ghetto: Studies of the Jewish Quarter in New York (1902, reissued by Belknap Press, 1983 . ISBN 0 - 674 - 83266 - 3) </Li> <Li> Autobiography of a Thief (1903) </Li>

Hutchins hapgood the bohemian the american and the foreigner summary