Advertised as an introduction to the poetry of Walt McDonald, The Waltz He Was Born For is also a celebration - of both the poetry and the man. Author of some twenty volumes and Poet Laureate of Texas, McDonald details a Southwest of dry hills, dark nights, tough working-class characters fiercely determined to retain their essential humanity amid trying circumstances. McDonald\u27s poetry has always reflected his experience of the world as writer, warrior, family man, sage, and spiritual guide, counseling compassion and reconciliation
Unsuspected Eloquence: A History of the Relations between Poetry and Music (James Anderson Winn) (Re...
An Alabaman by birth, James Ward Lee is well positioned to understand a basic fallacy about Texas\u2...
The American West in 2000 is a literary labor of love edited by two former colleagues of the late Ge...
Advertised as an introduction to the poetry of Walt McDonald, The Waltz He Was Born For is also a ce...
Both of them winners of major awards, poet Walt McDonald and photographer Wyman Meinzer link their w...
Kooser\u27s Poetry Home Repair Manual goes a long way toward aiding poets in finding ways to reflect...
When poet Weldon Kees walked away into the fogs of the Golden Gate Bridge he made his life and ironi...
Throughout much of the twentieth century, Texas literature, like that of other Great Plains states, ...
This book contains fifty interviews with Texas writers, including one interview with a dead writ...
Reading Poets Talk is like overhearing an interesting conversation in a café: you eat up the discuss...
Like the work of art it documents, Terry Allen\u27s book is a multifaceted, multimedia chronicle of ...
In 1974, fresh from his doctoral studies at the University of Pennsylvania, poet and critic Paul Chr...
The University of Nebraska Press has given us a gift by republishing Harriette Simpson Arnow\u27s Fl...
Beginning with poet Neil Harrison\u27s outstanding 5 Canadas, this volume is a tribute to the late...
Reviewed Title: Miller, John E. Small-Town Dreams: Stories of Midwestern Boys Who Shaped America. Un...
Unsuspected Eloquence: A History of the Relations between Poetry and Music (James Anderson Winn) (Re...
An Alabaman by birth, James Ward Lee is well positioned to understand a basic fallacy about Texas\u2...
The American West in 2000 is a literary labor of love edited by two former colleagues of the late Ge...
Advertised as an introduction to the poetry of Walt McDonald, The Waltz He Was Born For is also a ce...
Both of them winners of major awards, poet Walt McDonald and photographer Wyman Meinzer link their w...
Kooser\u27s Poetry Home Repair Manual goes a long way toward aiding poets in finding ways to reflect...
When poet Weldon Kees walked away into the fogs of the Golden Gate Bridge he made his life and ironi...
Throughout much of the twentieth century, Texas literature, like that of other Great Plains states, ...
This book contains fifty interviews with Texas writers, including one interview with a dead writ...
Reading Poets Talk is like overhearing an interesting conversation in a café: you eat up the discuss...
Like the work of art it documents, Terry Allen\u27s book is a multifaceted, multimedia chronicle of ...
In 1974, fresh from his doctoral studies at the University of Pennsylvania, poet and critic Paul Chr...
The University of Nebraska Press has given us a gift by republishing Harriette Simpson Arnow\u27s Fl...
Beginning with poet Neil Harrison\u27s outstanding 5 Canadas, this volume is a tribute to the late...
Reviewed Title: Miller, John E. Small-Town Dreams: Stories of Midwestern Boys Who Shaped America. Un...
Unsuspected Eloquence: A History of the Relations between Poetry and Music (James Anderson Winn) (Re...
An Alabaman by birth, James Ward Lee is well positioned to understand a basic fallacy about Texas\u2...
The American West in 2000 is a literary labor of love edited by two former colleagues of the late Ge...