In Means of Transit, the narrative is always on the move. For aspiring writer Teresa Miller, her hometown of Tahlequah, Oklahoma, was a trap to be escaped, and the Plains were the boring backdrop of restless road trips with her grandmother. Craving the excitement of New York, Miller managed to break free (in her fifties) only as far as Tulsa. Miller is an endearing narrator, gamely revealing her own pratfalls, and, as a generous enthusiast of literature, she eventually published two novels and founded a book festival and television show in order to reel in the horizon. But the narrative\u27s primary focus is the drama-familial and televised-that occupied the author. Painful material abounds: in Miller\u27s early childhood her mother died,...
I might not have gone to school, but I had to solve more problems than most children, asserts Marga...
The history of this book is as remarkable as the lives of the women it chronicles. While rummaging t...
The Little House books by Laura Ingalls Wilder have many devoted readers, and the TV program based l...
In Means of Transit, the narrative is always on the move. For aspiring writer Teresa Miller, her hom...
In the concluding pages of Mary Clearman Blew\u27s newest contribution to western literature, she de...
Buffalo Jump is a surprisingly good little book. I say surprising because it\u27s such an unassumi...
In her introductory essay, Sharon O\u27Brien correctly claims that My Antonia\u27s critical history ...
The quest for home is an admirable one with seemingly universal appeal. That a New York City playwri...
One of the most interesting literary figures of the twentieth century, Laura Ingalls Wilder, through...
Great Plains Patchwork is an uneven, at times disturbing book, but like Grace Paley\u27s little dis...
Most writers would be hard pressed to encounter a better story line, a deeper, richer vein of raw ma...
In All of Your Messages Have Been Erased (Louisiana Literature Press, 2010) award-winning poet Vivia...
Identity, writes Pipher, is no longer based on territory. The world community is small and interco...
In the opening of this collection of interviews, authors Shelly Clark and Marjorie Saiser layout a c...
Emmy E. Werner, a developmental psychologist specializing in high-risk children, traces stories of p...
I might not have gone to school, but I had to solve more problems than most children, asserts Marga...
The history of this book is as remarkable as the lives of the women it chronicles. While rummaging t...
The Little House books by Laura Ingalls Wilder have many devoted readers, and the TV program based l...
In Means of Transit, the narrative is always on the move. For aspiring writer Teresa Miller, her hom...
In the concluding pages of Mary Clearman Blew\u27s newest contribution to western literature, she de...
Buffalo Jump is a surprisingly good little book. I say surprising because it\u27s such an unassumi...
In her introductory essay, Sharon O\u27Brien correctly claims that My Antonia\u27s critical history ...
The quest for home is an admirable one with seemingly universal appeal. That a New York City playwri...
One of the most interesting literary figures of the twentieth century, Laura Ingalls Wilder, through...
Great Plains Patchwork is an uneven, at times disturbing book, but like Grace Paley\u27s little dis...
Most writers would be hard pressed to encounter a better story line, a deeper, richer vein of raw ma...
In All of Your Messages Have Been Erased (Louisiana Literature Press, 2010) award-winning poet Vivia...
Identity, writes Pipher, is no longer based on territory. The world community is small and interco...
In the opening of this collection of interviews, authors Shelly Clark and Marjorie Saiser layout a c...
Emmy E. Werner, a developmental psychologist specializing in high-risk children, traces stories of p...
I might not have gone to school, but I had to solve more problems than most children, asserts Marga...
The history of this book is as remarkable as the lives of the women it chronicles. While rummaging t...
The Little House books by Laura Ingalls Wilder have many devoted readers, and the TV program based l...