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BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Literary

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Tony Hillerman

Tony Hillerman

A Life

by James McGrath Morris

Morris offers a balanced portrait of Hillerman’s personal and professional life and provides a timely appreciation of his work. Filled with never-before-told anecdotes and fresh insights, Tony Hillerman will thrill the author’s fans and awaken new interest in his life and literary legacy.
 

Unknown No More

Unknown No More

Recovering Sanora Babb

Edited by Joanne Dearcopp and Christine Hill Smith

Foreword by David M. Wrobel

With literary sensibilities reminiscent of Willa Cather, Ralph Ellison, and Meridel LeSueur, Babb’s work revealed gender-based, environmental, and working-class injustices from the Depression era to the late twentieth century. No longer unknown, Sanora Babb’s life and work form a prism through which the peril and promise of twentieth-century America may be seen.
 

Making Circles

Making Circles

The Memoir of a Cowboy Journalist

by Barney Nelson

Full of valuable tips, lessons learned and taught, and far-ranging musings on philosophy and poetry, Making Circles demonstrates brilliantly the value and meaning of the term “cowboy journalist.”
 

Child of the Sun

Child of the Sun

Memories of a Philippine Boyhood

by Lonn Taylor

Foreword by Edith Uunila Taylor

As an American child in the Philippines, and then, inevitably, an outsider in the postwar America he returned to at fifteen, Taylor honed a keen and varied sense of difference in class, culture, and language. This nuanced understanding can be heard throughout Child of the Sun as Taylor reflects on his innocent years, conveying with hard-earned worldliness and wisdom all the beauty and lasting conflict of a lost world and time.
 

Charmian Kittredge London

Charmian Kittredge London

Trailblazer, Author, Adventurer

by Iris Jamahl Dunkle

In this biography, Iris Jamahl Dunkle draws the reader into Charmian’s private and public worlds, underscoring her literary achievements and the significant role she played in promoting her husband’s legacy. Her life, as Dunkle emphasizes, required fortitude and bravery, and in many ways it paralleled the history of the American West.
 

Twenty Thousand Mornings

Twenty Thousand Mornings

An Autobiography

by John Joseph Mathews

Edited by Susan Kalter

Foreword by Charles H. Red Corn

When John Joseph Mathews (1894–1979) began his career as a writer in the 1930s, he was one of only a small number of Native American authors writing for a national audience. Today he is widely recognized as a founder and shaper of twentieth-century Native American literature. Twenty Thousand Mornings is Mathews’s intimate chronicle of his formative years. In her insightful introduction and explanatory notes, Susan Kalter places Mathews’s work in the context of his life and career as a novelist, historian, naturalist, and scholar. Kalter draws on his unpublished diaries, revealing aspects of his personal life that have previously been misunderstood. In addressing the significance of this posthumous work, she posits that Twenty Thousand Mornings will "challenge, defy, and perhaps redefine studies of American Indian autobiography.”

Lois Lenski

Lois Lenski

Storycatcher

by Bobbie Malone

This first full-length biography tells how Lenski traveled throughout the country, gathering the stories that brought to life in words and pictures whole worlds that had for so long been invisible in children’s literature. In the process, her work became a source of delight, inspiration, and insight for generations of readers.

Red Bird, Red Power

Red Bird, Red Power

The Life and Legacy of Zitkala-Ša

by Tadeusz Lewandowski

Red Bird, Red Power tells the story of one of the most influential—and controversial—American Indian activists of the twentieth century. Zitkala-Ša (1876–1938), also known as Gertrude Simmons Bonnin, was a highly gifted writer, editor, and musician who dedicated her life to achieving justice for Native peoples.

John Joseph Mathews

John Joseph Mathews

Life of an Osage Writer

by Michael Snyder

Foreword by Russ Tall Chief

Through insightful analysis of his major works, especially his semiautobiographical novel Sundown and his meditative Talking to the Moon, Snyder revises this impression. The story he tells, of one remarkable individual, is also the story of the Osage Nation, the state of Oklahoma, and Native America in the twentieth century.

Ernest Haycox and the Western

Ernest Haycox and the Western

by Richard W. Etulain

Western fans today may not recognize the name Ernest Haycox (1899–1950), but they know his work. John Ford turned one of his stories into the iconic film Stagecoach, and the whole Western literary genre still follows conventions that Haycox deftly mastered and reshaped. In this new book about Haycox’s literary career, Richard W. Etulain tells the engrossing story of his rise through the ranks of popular magazine and serial fiction to become one of the Western’s most successful creators.

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