A century after her birth, Tillie Olsen’s writing is as relevant as when it first appeared; indeed, the clarity and passion of her vision and style have, if anything, become even more striking over time. Collected here for the first time are several of Olsen’s nonfiction pieces about the 1930s, early journalism pieces, and short fiction, including the four beautifully crafted, highly celebrated stories originally published as Tell Me a Riddle: “I Stand Here Ironing,” “Hey Sailor, What Ship?,” “O Yes,” and “Tell Me a Riddle.” Also included, for the first time since it appeared in the 1971 Best American Short Stories, is “Requa I.” In these stories, as in all of her work, Olsen set a new standard for the treatment of women and the poor and fo...
This paper explores the narrative process identified in the Whitehorn Letters, written by Doris Less...
Winner of the Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Fiction, Karen Brown’s Little Sinners, and Other Storie...
Taking film and media theorist Catherine Liu’s polemic assertion that ‘success’ is aligned to those ...
A century after her birth, Tillie Olsen’s writing is as relevant as when it first appeared; indeed, ...
Tillie Olsen is the author of Tell Me A Riddle, stories about the lives of working-class women and m...
Tillie Olsen is well-known as the author of Tell Me A Riddle, a volume of stories about the lives of...
Tillie Olsen is the author of Tell Me A Riddle, stories about the fives of working-class women and m...
The large book by Panthea Reid (449 pages, 16 chapters, a prologue, epilogue, and three appendices) ...
"Can you imagine? That woman went on for pages just about ironing. Standing there ironing!" said an ...
Tillie Olsen\u27s most piercing and poignant text, Tell Me a Riddle, depicts inescapable circumsta...
In this audiovisual recording from Monday, March 27, 1978, as part of the 9th Annual UND Writers Con...
I AM ADELE BLOCH-BAUER, I AM HESTER PRYNNE is a compilation of fiction and nonfiction. This cross-ge...
Tillie Olsen\u27s fiction and nonfiction portray, with all their harsh contours, the lives of people...
After ten years of selecting great books from writers, new and established,Prairie Schooner celebrat...
In this paper the author examines Olen's "Yonnondio: from the Thirties", and considers how the autho...
This paper explores the narrative process identified in the Whitehorn Letters, written by Doris Less...
Winner of the Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Fiction, Karen Brown’s Little Sinners, and Other Storie...
Taking film and media theorist Catherine Liu’s polemic assertion that ‘success’ is aligned to those ...
A century after her birth, Tillie Olsen’s writing is as relevant as when it first appeared; indeed, ...
Tillie Olsen is the author of Tell Me A Riddle, stories about the lives of working-class women and m...
Tillie Olsen is well-known as the author of Tell Me A Riddle, a volume of stories about the lives of...
Tillie Olsen is the author of Tell Me A Riddle, stories about the fives of working-class women and m...
The large book by Panthea Reid (449 pages, 16 chapters, a prologue, epilogue, and three appendices) ...
"Can you imagine? That woman went on for pages just about ironing. Standing there ironing!" said an ...
Tillie Olsen\u27s most piercing and poignant text, Tell Me a Riddle, depicts inescapable circumsta...
In this audiovisual recording from Monday, March 27, 1978, as part of the 9th Annual UND Writers Con...
I AM ADELE BLOCH-BAUER, I AM HESTER PRYNNE is a compilation of fiction and nonfiction. This cross-ge...
Tillie Olsen\u27s fiction and nonfiction portray, with all their harsh contours, the lives of people...
After ten years of selecting great books from writers, new and established,Prairie Schooner celebrat...
In this paper the author examines Olen's "Yonnondio: from the Thirties", and considers how the autho...
This paper explores the narrative process identified in the Whitehorn Letters, written by Doris Less...
Winner of the Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Fiction, Karen Brown’s Little Sinners, and Other Storie...
Taking film and media theorist Catherine Liu’s polemic assertion that ‘success’ is aligned to those ...