Willa Cather tried to disown Alexander\u27s Bridge (1912). In her 1922 preface reprinted in this impressive scholarly edition, she compared her first novel invidiously to her second, O Pioneers! (1913): The difference in quality in the two books is an illustration of the fact that it is not always easy for the inexperienced writer to distinguish between his own material and that which he would like to make his own. Whereas most of Cather\u27s long fiction would concentrate on the Great Plains, the region she knew best and loved most deeply, this first novel takes place in Boston, England, and Canada; and it does mimic work by others, particularly Edith Wharton and Henry James. Cather was right that she found herself as a novelist in O Pio...
In this collection of thirteen essays Lindemann successfully meets her goal of offering recent criti...
With some notable exceptions, the fourteen essays in this collection come from critics well-known to...
In her introductory essay, Sharon O\u27Brien correctly claims that My Antonia\u27s critical history ...
Published in 1922, One of Ours proved to be pivotal in Willa Cather\u27s career. Although she had al...
Cather Studies continues to assemble and inspire the most well-informed writing on Willa Cather\u27s...
The cover of Willa Cather\u27s Southern Connections reproduces one square of what is Known as the Ro...
This welcome addition to Willa Cather scholarship is composed of forty-five reminiscences of the aut...
Willa Cather\u27s Canadian and Old World Connections is the first of four new collections that have ...
Although less familiar to most readers than O Pioneers!, My Antonia, or Death Comes the Archbishop, ...
The Great Plains launched Willa Cather\u27s career. Her multilayered imagining of frontier folk in O...
In her preface to the 1922 edition of Alexander\u27s Bridge and in the 1931 essay My First Novels: ...
In 2005 Drew University\u27s Library opened its newly developed Willa Cather Collection to a nationa...
Willa Cather has been fairly well studied as a novelist of the Nebraska pioneer, a writer whose book...
Harvey\u27s book will be of interest not only to Cather scholars, but to an audience more widely con...
American novelist, Born in Virginia, Cather moved with her family to Nebraska in 1883 and is best kn...
In this collection of thirteen essays Lindemann successfully meets her goal of offering recent criti...
With some notable exceptions, the fourteen essays in this collection come from critics well-known to...
In her introductory essay, Sharon O\u27Brien correctly claims that My Antonia\u27s critical history ...
Published in 1922, One of Ours proved to be pivotal in Willa Cather\u27s career. Although she had al...
Cather Studies continues to assemble and inspire the most well-informed writing on Willa Cather\u27s...
The cover of Willa Cather\u27s Southern Connections reproduces one square of what is Known as the Ro...
This welcome addition to Willa Cather scholarship is composed of forty-five reminiscences of the aut...
Willa Cather\u27s Canadian and Old World Connections is the first of four new collections that have ...
Although less familiar to most readers than O Pioneers!, My Antonia, or Death Comes the Archbishop, ...
The Great Plains launched Willa Cather\u27s career. Her multilayered imagining of frontier folk in O...
In her preface to the 1922 edition of Alexander\u27s Bridge and in the 1931 essay My First Novels: ...
In 2005 Drew University\u27s Library opened its newly developed Willa Cather Collection to a nationa...
Willa Cather has been fairly well studied as a novelist of the Nebraska pioneer, a writer whose book...
Harvey\u27s book will be of interest not only to Cather scholars, but to an audience more widely con...
American novelist, Born in Virginia, Cather moved with her family to Nebraska in 1883 and is best kn...
In this collection of thirteen essays Lindemann successfully meets her goal of offering recent criti...
With some notable exceptions, the fourteen essays in this collection come from critics well-known to...
In her introductory essay, Sharon O\u27Brien correctly claims that My Antonia\u27s critical history ...