The large book by Panthea Reid (449 pages, 16 chapters, a prologue, epilogue, and three appendices) tracks Tillie Olsen\u27s long life (1912-2007) step by step, beginning from the Jewish-Russian origins of both her maternal and paternal families, up to her death on January 1, 2007. The book could have been a useful addition to Olsen scholarship, if not for the biographer\u27s insistent efforts to destroy the image of a writer and a woman who was committed so extensively to unhinging the political, social, and cultural stereotypes built up to contain the action of women in America and elsewhere
Tillie Olsen is the author of Tell Me A Riddle, stories about the fives of working-class women and m...
Review of: "I Go to America: Swedish Women and the Life of Mina Anderson," by Joy K. Lintelman
Barbara Wootton was one of the most extraordinary public figures of the twentieth century, influenci...
The large book by Panthea Reid (449 pages, 16 chapters, a prologue, epilogue, and three appendices) ...
Tillie Olsen is the author of Tell Me A Riddle, stories about the lives of working-class women and m...
I\u27m not sure that I\u27ve ever read such a light volume that carries such heavy contents. This bo...
The history of this book is as remarkable as the lives of the women it chronicles. While rummaging t...
A century after her birth, Tillie Olsen’s writing is as relevant as when it first appeared; indeed, ...
With In Search of Nella Larsen, George Hutchinson makes the third major attempt to provide a biograp...
Kate Barnard was elected Oklahoma\u27s first commissioner of charities and corrections in 1907. The ...
Review of: "Missing Millie Benson: The Secret Case of the Nancy Drew Ghostwriter and Journalist," by...
No scholar might be better qualified to write a biography of Calamity Jane than James McLaird. Durin...
Review of: Mrs. Ambassador: The Life and Politics of Eugenie Anderson, by Mary Dupont
Review of: Women of Minnesota: Selected Biographical Essays. Stuhler, Barbara and Kreuter, Gretchen,...
Edited by Ellen C. DuBois and Vicki L. Ruiz, two respected historians, Unequal Sisters: A Multicultu...
Tillie Olsen is the author of Tell Me A Riddle, stories about the fives of working-class women and m...
Review of: "I Go to America: Swedish Women and the Life of Mina Anderson," by Joy K. Lintelman
Barbara Wootton was one of the most extraordinary public figures of the twentieth century, influenci...
The large book by Panthea Reid (449 pages, 16 chapters, a prologue, epilogue, and three appendices) ...
Tillie Olsen is the author of Tell Me A Riddle, stories about the lives of working-class women and m...
I\u27m not sure that I\u27ve ever read such a light volume that carries such heavy contents. This bo...
The history of this book is as remarkable as the lives of the women it chronicles. While rummaging t...
A century after her birth, Tillie Olsen’s writing is as relevant as when it first appeared; indeed, ...
With In Search of Nella Larsen, George Hutchinson makes the third major attempt to provide a biograp...
Kate Barnard was elected Oklahoma\u27s first commissioner of charities and corrections in 1907. The ...
Review of: "Missing Millie Benson: The Secret Case of the Nancy Drew Ghostwriter and Journalist," by...
No scholar might be better qualified to write a biography of Calamity Jane than James McLaird. Durin...
Review of: Mrs. Ambassador: The Life and Politics of Eugenie Anderson, by Mary Dupont
Review of: Women of Minnesota: Selected Biographical Essays. Stuhler, Barbara and Kreuter, Gretchen,...
Edited by Ellen C. DuBois and Vicki L. Ruiz, two respected historians, Unequal Sisters: A Multicultu...
Tillie Olsen is the author of Tell Me A Riddle, stories about the fives of working-class women and m...
Review of: "I Go to America: Swedish Women and the Life of Mina Anderson," by Joy K. Lintelman
Barbara Wootton was one of the most extraordinary public figures of the twentieth century, influenci...