Steven Trout offers a fresh approach to the study of Cather as a writer of war fiction and situates her squarely among the principally male writers of World War I. In lucid prose, Trout presents a convincing argument that Cather\u27s prize-winning but much maligned novel One of Ours is far more modernist than most critics have assumed and merits a place alongside works by Hemingway and Remarque as a realistic account of the American experience in the War to End All Wars
The Great War had a lasting influence on literature and literary culture in Britain. Spanning the ‘b...
Willa Cather and William Faulkner represent an intriguing and potentially productive pairing for com...
Harvey\u27s book will be of interest not only to Cather scholars, but to an audience more widely con...
Steven Trout offers a fresh approach to the study of Cather as a writer of war fiction and situates ...
Published in 1922, One of Ours proved to be pivotal in Willa Cather\u27s career. Although she had al...
Steven Trout\u27s engrossing History, Memory, and War, volume 6 of the acclaimed Cather Studies seri...
The cover of Willa Cather\u27s Southern Connections reproduces one square of what is Known as the Ro...
Cather Studies continues to assemble and inspire the most well-informed writing on Willa Cather\u27s...
This compilation of twenty-three essays proves that contemporary scholarship has moved beyond trite ...
This tightly edited collection has two objectives: first, to underscore the importance of material o...
There is a vast array of scholarship on the literature of the First World War, much of it concerning...
In this collection of thirteen essays Lindemann successfully meets her goal of offering recent criti...
As James Woodress, Willa Cather\u27s foremost biographer, remarks, An historical novel laid in Queb...
Willa Cather tried to disown Alexander\u27s Bridge (1912). In her 1922 preface reprinted in this imp...
This welcome addition to Willa Cather scholarship is composed of forty-five reminiscences of the aut...
The Great War had a lasting influence on literature and literary culture in Britain. Spanning the ‘b...
Willa Cather and William Faulkner represent an intriguing and potentially productive pairing for com...
Harvey\u27s book will be of interest not only to Cather scholars, but to an audience more widely con...
Steven Trout offers a fresh approach to the study of Cather as a writer of war fiction and situates ...
Published in 1922, One of Ours proved to be pivotal in Willa Cather\u27s career. Although she had al...
Steven Trout\u27s engrossing History, Memory, and War, volume 6 of the acclaimed Cather Studies seri...
The cover of Willa Cather\u27s Southern Connections reproduces one square of what is Known as the Ro...
Cather Studies continues to assemble and inspire the most well-informed writing on Willa Cather\u27s...
This compilation of twenty-three essays proves that contemporary scholarship has moved beyond trite ...
This tightly edited collection has two objectives: first, to underscore the importance of material o...
There is a vast array of scholarship on the literature of the First World War, much of it concerning...
In this collection of thirteen essays Lindemann successfully meets her goal of offering recent criti...
As James Woodress, Willa Cather\u27s foremost biographer, remarks, An historical novel laid in Queb...
Willa Cather tried to disown Alexander\u27s Bridge (1912). In her 1922 preface reprinted in this imp...
This welcome addition to Willa Cather scholarship is composed of forty-five reminiscences of the aut...
The Great War had a lasting influence on literature and literary culture in Britain. Spanning the ‘b...
Willa Cather and William Faulkner represent an intriguing and potentially productive pairing for com...
Harvey\u27s book will be of interest not only to Cather scholars, but to an audience more widely con...