The title of this collection of eleven essays comes from Glancy\u27s paraphrase of William Heyen\u27s definition of poetry as language of things that can\u27t be gotten to. It lives in the in-between places. The title also refers to Glancy\u27s moving in between places on the Great Plains and to her writing as a mixed-blood. Glancy\u27s style is personal, elusive, allusive, parodying, and fragmentary. It\u27s a style that requires patience and an open mind, a style she attributes to patterns of the structure of the Cherokee language that remain in her
Audrey Whitson reaches down and stirs something deep in the soul. Her love of the land is respectful...
Prior to the middle of the twentieth century, North American autobiography was defined largely by ch...
The University of Nebraska Press has given us a gift by republishing Harriette Simpson Arnow\u27s Fl...
The title of this collection of eleven essays comes from Glancy\u27s paraphrase of William Heyen\u27...
For fifteen years, poet Merrill Gilfillan has been driving in long misshapen circles through the H...
How does one describe the nature of this place that is the Great Plains? Diane Quantic and P. Jane H...
In her latest book, Diane Glancy, professor emerita at Macalester College, Minnesota, and author of ...
In her seventh book of poetry, Diane Glancy presents a moving account of the portrait of the artist ...
What difference would it make if literary regionalism were taken seriously? We would have an ambitio...
Although it has everything to do with location, nineteenth-century American literary regionalism is ...
Poems of place emerge so intimately from an intersection of landscape and culture that they couldn\u...
As a biologist, Theodore Sargent has taken a different approach to the life and work of Massachusett...
Kooser\u27s Poetry Home Repair Manual goes a long way toward aiding poets in finding ways to reflect...
Both of them winners of major awards, poet Walt McDonald and photographer Wyman Meinzer link their w...
Ladette Randolph and Nina ShevchukMurray have assembled a powerful collection of essays in The Big E...
Audrey Whitson reaches down and stirs something deep in the soul. Her love of the land is respectful...
Prior to the middle of the twentieth century, North American autobiography was defined largely by ch...
The University of Nebraska Press has given us a gift by republishing Harriette Simpson Arnow\u27s Fl...
The title of this collection of eleven essays comes from Glancy\u27s paraphrase of William Heyen\u27...
For fifteen years, poet Merrill Gilfillan has been driving in long misshapen circles through the H...
How does one describe the nature of this place that is the Great Plains? Diane Quantic and P. Jane H...
In her latest book, Diane Glancy, professor emerita at Macalester College, Minnesota, and author of ...
In her seventh book of poetry, Diane Glancy presents a moving account of the portrait of the artist ...
What difference would it make if literary regionalism were taken seriously? We would have an ambitio...
Although it has everything to do with location, nineteenth-century American literary regionalism is ...
Poems of place emerge so intimately from an intersection of landscape and culture that they couldn\u...
As a biologist, Theodore Sargent has taken a different approach to the life and work of Massachusett...
Kooser\u27s Poetry Home Repair Manual goes a long way toward aiding poets in finding ways to reflect...
Both of them winners of major awards, poet Walt McDonald and photographer Wyman Meinzer link their w...
Ladette Randolph and Nina ShevchukMurray have assembled a powerful collection of essays in The Big E...
Audrey Whitson reaches down and stirs something deep in the soul. Her love of the land is respectful...
Prior to the middle of the twentieth century, North American autobiography was defined largely by ch...
The University of Nebraska Press has given us a gift by republishing Harriette Simpson Arnow\u27s Fl...