Background
With his father-in-law John S. Armstrong and Armstrong"s other son-in-law Edgar Flippen, Prather, Senior, helped plan and build the town of Highland Park, which is now part of the enclave Park Cites surrounded by the city of Dallas.
With his father-in-law John S. Armstrong and Armstrong"s other son-in-law Edgar Flippen, Prather, Senior, helped plan and build the town of Highland Park, which is now part of the enclave Park Cites surrounded by the city of Dallas.
He studied at the University of Texas at the graduate level without taking a degree.
lieutenant has sold over 5 million copies, and has been translated into ten languages. In 1931, Armstrong and his two sons-in-law built Highland Park Village, the first planned shopping center in the United States. Hugh Prather, Junior., ran the shopping center after his father"s death.
Hugh Prather III was born in Dallas and earned a bachelor"s degree at Southern Methodist University in 1966 after study at Principia College and Columbia University.
His work underscored the importance of gentleness, forgiveness, and loyalty. Declined to endorse dramatic claims about the power of the individual mind to effect unilateral transformations of external material circumstances.
And stressed the need for the mind to let go of destructive cognitions in a manner not unlike that encouraged by the cognitive-behavioral therapy of Aaron T. Beck and the rational emotive behavior therapy commended by Albert Ellis. His first book, Notes to Myself: My Struggle to Become a Person, began as a journal that he impulsively submitted to a publisher.
The book became "a phenomenon" of the 1970s, according to The New York Times, and as of 2010 it remained in print.
Prather"s dog Moosewood was named in the book and inspired the name of the Moosewood Restaurant. The book was later parodied by humorist Jack Handey with his "Deep Thoughts". Prather died on November 15, 2010, in the hot tub of his Tucson, Arizona home, apparently of a heart attack.