1935 2001 Article Author Biography Contemporary Elton From Ken Kesey UPD
1935 2001 Article Author Biography Contemporary Elton From Ken Kesey https://urlgoal.com/2trW3P
Cantwell, Robert Emmett, 1908-1978 Finding aidPapers, 1926-1961. 8 ft., incl. 218 letters.Robert Cantwell, novelist, biographer, essayist, and editor, was born in Little Falls, Wash., and attended the University of Washington. He worked in a plywood factory at Hoquiam, Wash., 1925-1929, and did free-lance work, 1929-1935. He was on the editorial staff of Time, 1935-1936, and Fortune, 1937, associate editor of Time, 1938-1945, literary editor of Newsweek, 1949-1954, editorial consultant of Sports Illustrated, 1956-1960, and senior editor from 1961.The papers consist of manuscripts of novels, biographies, etc., including: (1) Alexander Wilson (N.Y., 1961). Final copy, unused material, early versions of various parts, notes, illustrations, correspondence with publisher and informants. (2) \"Encyclopedia of American Industry.\" Unpublished. Outline for project, reports, and working notes. (3) Laugh and Lie Down (N.Y., 1931). Typescript, carbon, of early version of novel. (4) \"The Merchant of Boston.\" Unpublished. A projected biography of E. A. Filene done in 1933-1934, intended as a collaboration with Lincoln Steffens. Includes manuscript of Filene's early recollections and one chapter of the biography. With it is a 242-page untitled manuscript, part biography, mostly Cantwell's account of his experiences while writing the book. (5) Nathaniel Hawthorne: The American Years (N.Y., 1948). Working notes and correspondence, 1945-1950. (6) Permanent Peace (N.Y., 1958). Manuscript, source notes, revisions, and correspondence concerning a book by Tom Slick, assisted by Cantwell. The manuscript is entitled \"Blueprint for Permanent Peace,\" and differs from the published version. (7) \"The Powers of Darkness.\" Unpublished. Typescript of a novelette written about 1934-1935. (8) The White Rose of Memphis (N.Y.,1953). Cantwell wrote the introduction to this edition of the 1881 novel by W. C. Falkner. Includes typed draft of introduction, an essay on the career of Col. Falkner, and correspondence.The collection also includes the manuscripts of 34 articles by Cantwell, 1935-1962. There is an outline for a study of four novelists, William Faulkner, Ernest Hemingway, James T. Farrell, and Erskine Caldwell. With the outline is source material, including a Faulkner manuscript, 1 leaf, a letter, Hemingway to Cantwell, Aug. 25, 1950, 4 letters of Farrell to Cantwell, 1934, and 2 Caldwell letters, 1950. Miscellaneous manuscripts include an autobiography of James B. McNamara, convicted dynamiter. Major correspondents are: Calvin Fixx (68 letters from Greenwich Village, 1926-1936), Carl List, John Dos Passos, and Maxwell Perkins.Coll. 020
Kesey, Ken Elton, 1935-2001Papers, 1959-1965. 3 ft.Ken Kesey, novelist, was born in La Junta, Colo., and educated at the University of Oregon. The papers include manuscripts in various stages and final forms of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (N.Y., 1962), Sometimes a Great Notion (N.Y., 1964), and an unpublished novel, \"Zoo\" (1959). There are also manuscripts of poems and short sketches, notebooks and sketch pads, and tape recordings of Kesey dictations and taped letters from friends. Major correspondent is Ken J. Babbs, 1961-1965.Ax 279
Swift, Kate, 1923-Papers, 18 boxes; 12.7 lin. ft.Kate Swift, with her co-author Casey Miller, wrote: \"We have an editorial partnership known as Miller/Swift, and it was out of our work as free-lance editors that we became interested in the effect of language on women. After writing two articles on the subject (`Desexing the English Language' and `One Small Step for Genkind') we found we had barely scratched the surface of this topic, which until recently was ignored. Words and Women is an expansion of the evidence presented in the articles and is primarily drawn from contemporary sources with historical material as backup. We document many changes occurring in English today as a result of women's changing perceptions of themselves.\" Education: Connecticut College, student, 1941-43; University of North Carolina, A.B., 1944; New York University, graduate study. Politics: Democrat. Military/Wartime Service: U.S. Army, Women's Army Corps, 1945-46. Memberships: National Association of Science Writers, Womens Institute for Freedom of the Press. National Broadcasting Co. (NBC), New York, NY, newsroom copy runner, 1944; Port of New Orleans Authority, New Orleans, LA, editorial assistant, 1946-47; Time, New York, NY, editorial assistant, 1947-48; Girl Scouts of the U.S.A., New York City, public relations news writer, 1948-53; American Museum of Natural History, New York City, science writer, 1954-65; Yale University, New Haven, CT, director of news bureau at School of Medicine, 1965-70; free-lance writer and editor, beginning 1970. Member of East Haddam Democratic Town Committee and East Haddam Charter Commission.Up 598/Up 430 with Casey Miller/Up 429 with Casey Miller
Summer 1989 (vol. 24, no. 2) Bazarov, Prince Hal, and the Virginian Max Westbrook Valuing Surface A. Carl Bredhal Frank Waters's The Lizard Woman and the Emergence of the Dawn Man Alexander Blackburn Rethinking the Literary Review Charlotte M. Wright Blue Plums and Smoke: Loren Eiseley's Perception of Time Robert G. Franke Essay Reviews: Essay Review on Working Days: The Journals of The Grapes of Wrath, by John Steinbeck, edited by Robert DeMott Essay Review on The Harvest Gypsies: On the Road toThe Grapes of Wrath, by John Steinbeck, with an introduction by Charles Wollenberg James D. Houston Book Reviews Reviewed by: The History of the Sierra Club 1892-1970, by Michael P. Cohen Ann Ronald Old Utah Trails, by William B. Smart Russell Burrows Juanita Brooks: Mormon Woman Historian, by Levi S. Peterson, woodblock prints by Royden Card, foreword by Charles S. Peterson William Mulder Dreamers and Defenders: American Conservationists, by Douglas H. Strong Peter Wild From Pittsburgh to the Rocky Mountains: Major Stephen Long's Expedition, 1819-1820, edited by Maxine Benson Dave Engel Meditations with The Hopi, by Robert Boissiere Meditations with The Navajo, by Gerald Hausman Pamela Kay Kett John C. Van Dyke. The Desert, by Peter Wild D'Arcy McNickle, by James Ruppert Kenneth Rexroth, by Lee Bartlett Edward Dorn, by William McPheron Ernest Haycox, by Richard W. Etulain Connie White Understanding Chicano Literature, by Carl R. Shirley and Paula W. Shirley Américo Paredes John Steinbeck: A Study of Short Fiction, by R. S. Hughes John Ditsky Frontier's End, by Robert F. Gish Dick Heaberlin The Witch of Goingsnake and Other Stories, by Robert J. Conley Julian Rice How to Write Western Novels, by Matt Braun Michael T. Marsden Nebraska, by Ron Hansen Kerry Ahearn Faraway Places, by Tom Spanbauer James H. Maguire The Wake of the General Bliss, by Edward Lueders Keith Wilson Cactus Thorn, by Mary Austin, with a foreword and afterword by Melody Graulich Rae G. Ballard Mamaw: A Novel of an Outlaw Mother, by Susan Dodd David Hecker Trail of Tears: The Rise and Fall of the Cherokee Nation, by John Ehle Robert E. Morsberger Yellow Sun, Bright Sky: The Indian Country Stories of Oliver La Farge, edited with an introduction by David L. Caffey Louis Owens Rough and Rowdy Ways: The Life and Hard Times of Edward Anderson, by Patrick Bennet Ernestine P. Sewell Haunted by Home: The Life and Letters of Lynn Riggs, by Phyllis Cole Braunlich James H. Maguire Writing to Survive: The Private Notebooks of Conrad Richter, edited by Harvena Richter Charles L. Adams Journal of an Aleutian Year, by Ethel Ross Oliver Carolyn Servid Idaho's Poetry: A Centennial Anthology, edited by Ronald E. McFarland and William Studebaker James H. Maguire Willie: an Autobiography, by Willie Nelson with Bud Shrake Richard Dwyer Crossing the River: Poets of the Western United States, edited by Ray Gonzales James R. Saucerman Lima Beans and City Chicken: A Memoir of the Open Hearth, by Martina Durbin Robert E. Morsberger Willa Cather and the Fairy Tale, by Marilyn Berg Callander Margaret Doane From a Distant Place, by Don Carpenter David M. Fine The Western Hero in Film and Television: Mass Media Mythology, by Rita Parks Paul Skenazy Alaska: Reflections on Land and Spirit, edited by Robert Hedin and Gary Holthaus John A. Murray Letters from the Southwest: September 20, 1884, to March 14, 1885, by Charles Lummis, edited by James W. Byrkit Some Strange Corners of Our Country: The Wonderland of the Southwest, by Charles Lummis Peter Wild Earthen Wayfarer. Selected Poems: 1972-1987, by Richard F. Fleck TheAbalone Heart, by Barbara Meyn Deborah Clifford Gessaman Blossoms & Bones: On the Life and Work of Georgia O'Keeffe, by Christopher Buckley Charles H. Daughaday Literature and Belief, Willa Cather Issue, edited by John J. Murphy Dana Brunvand Blood and Bones,poems by Clifton Snider Gerald Locklin The Roundup Quarterly,edited by Judy Alter Dana Brunvand Lady of No Man's Land,by Jeanne Williams Marina Hall Fall 1989 (vol. 24, no. 3) The Land and Language of Desire: Where Deep Ecology and Post-Structuralism Meet SueEllen Campbell Why Don't They Write About Nevada Ann Ronald \"The Frontier Myth\" on Stage: From the Nineteenth Century to Sam Shepard's True West Richard Wattenberg Cadillac Larry Rides Again: McMurtry and the Song of the Open Road Janis P. Stout Rølvaag's \"Roguish Smile\" in Peder Victorious Dexter Martin Essay Reviews: Essay Review on The Terrible Threes, by Ishmael Reed Essay Review on New and Collected Poems, by Ishmael Reed Steven Jeffrey Jones Essay Review on Sam Chance, by Benjamin Capps Essay Review on The Brothers of Uterica, by Benjamin Capps Essay Review on The White Man's Road, by Benjamin Capps Lou Rodenberger Book Reviews Reviewed by: Common Ground, by John Daniel Ona Siporin Not Vanishing, by Chrystos Andrea Lerner Emerald Ice, by Diane Wakoski Bill Baines Pulling Leather: Being the Early Recollections of a Cowboy on the Wyoming Range, 1884-1889, by Rueben B. Mullins, edited and with an introduction by Jan E. Roush and Lawrence Clayton