Kansas Quarterly Arkansas Review
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Encyclopedia of the Blues: K-Z, index
Author | : Edward M. Komara |
Publisher | : Taylor & Francis US |
Total Pages | : 746 |
Release | : 2006 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 9780415927017 |
First published in 2004. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
Defining the Delta
Author | : Janelle Collins |
Publisher | : University of Arkansas Press |
Total Pages | : 319 |
Release | : 2015-11-15 |
Genre | : Social Science |
ISBN | : 1557286876 |
Inspired by the Arkansas Review’s “What Is the Delta?” series of articles, Defining the Delta collects fifteen essays from scholars in the sciences, social sciences, and humanities to describe and define this important region. Here are essays examining the Delta’s physical properties, boundaries, and climate from a geologist, archeologist, and environmental historian. The Delta is also viewed through the lens of the social sciences and humanities—historians, folklorists, and others studying the connection between the land and its people, in particular the importance of agriculture and the culture of the area, especially music, literature, and food. Every turn of the page reveals another way of seeing the seven-state region that is bisected by and dependent on the Mississippi River, suggesting ultimately that there are myriad ways of looking at, and defining, the Delta.
David Madden
Author | : Randy Hendricks |
Publisher | : Univ. of Tennessee Press |
Total Pages | : 204 |
Release | : 2006 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 9781572334601 |
For four decades, Knoxville, Tennessee, native David Madden has been writing compelling bestsellers, such as Bijou and The Suicide's Wife, as well as highly respected literary novels, such as Sharpshooter. David Madden: A Writer for All Genres is the first full-length critical work devoted to the whole of Madden's oeuvre, and collectively the essays make the case that the attention paid to Madden's novels has overshadowed his innovative work as a critic, poet, short-story writer, and dramatist. Madden is indeed a writer for all genres--poetry, fiction, drama, and criticism. David Madden: A Writer for all Genres will introduce a new generation of readers to an important and multitalented writer and begin a well-deserved, serious discussion of his place in the American literary tradition.
ACLCP Union List of Periodicals
Author | : Associated College Libraries of Central Pennsylvania |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 710 |
Release | : 1997 |
Genre | : Periodicals |
ISBN | : |
A Season of Fire and Ice
Author | : Lloyd Zimpel |
Publisher | : Unbridled Books |
Total Pages | : 238 |
Release | : 2006 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 1932961194 |
From the heartlands of the 1880s Upper Midwest comes a morality tale of survival and destiny told in the convincing language of a patriarch’s journal, evoking a real sense of the time and place. Gerhardt Praeger, a farmer of some education and plenty experience, understands the mixture of hard work, ingenuity, ethic, grace and steadiness of spirit needed to hold his settler family and neighboring community together while homesteading the hard territory of the Dakotas. He, along with his wife and seven sons, must constantly contend with natural disasters and manmade challenges to carve out their holdings in an unforgiving environment that has defeated so many of their neighbors, sending them home to their families back east. Praeger believes that God will provide sufficiently if not in abundance to those who can resist over-reaching. But a new neighbor, the bold Beidermann, who seems at times almost larger than life, stirs both his curiosity and envy, and tests Praeger’s moral beliefs. Between his remarkable journal entries that observe the increasingly tense events between them, is also a narrative that moves the everyone toward calamity. What results is an almost biblical story of moral imperatives and self-revelation, of man striving to civilize.
Fulltext Sources Online
Author | : Mary B.. Glose |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 1858 |
Release | : 2003 |
Genre | : Education |
ISBN | : 9781573871686 |
Aggregator products in FSO include: - DataStar- Dialog- EBSCO host- Eureka- Europresse- Factiva- FirstSearch- GBI- Genios- Infomart- InfoTrac- InSite- LexisNexis- NewsBank- Newscan- NewsLibrary- Nikkei Net Interactive- Ovid- Pressed (EDD)- Profound- ProQuest- Questel- Quicklaw- RBB- STN- International- Westlaw- Wilson Web FSO subscribers also receive access to the Private Zone, a hyperlinked list of publications with free archives available on the Internet. The Private Zone provides access to fulltext back issues of individual publications found in the print edition of FSO.
Extreme Civil War
Author | : Matthew M. Stith |
Publisher | : LSU Press |
Total Pages | : 252 |
Release | : 2016-05-18 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 0807163163 |
During the American Civil War, the western Trans-Mississippi frontier was host to harsh environmental conditions, irregular warfare, and intense racial tensions that created extraordinarily difficult conditions for both combatants and civilians. Matthew M. Stith's Extreme Civil War focuses on Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas, and Indian Territory to examine the physical and cultural frontiers that challenged Confederate and Union forces alike. A disturbing narrative emerges where conflict indiscriminately beset troops and families in a region that continually verged on social and political anarchy. With hundreds of small fights disbursed over the expansive borderland, fought by civilians— even some women and children—as much as by soldiers and guerrillas, this theater of war was especially savage. Despite connections to the political issues and military campaigns that drove the larger war, the irregular conflict in this border region represented a truly disparate war within a war. The blend of violence, racial unrest, and frontier culture presented distinct challenges to combatants, far from the aid of governmental services. Stith shows how white Confederate and Union civilians faced forces of warfare and the bleak environmental realities east of the Great Plains while barely coexisting with a number of other ethnicities and races, including Native Americans and African Americans. In addition to the brutal fighting and lack of basic infrastructure, the inherent mistrust among these communities intensified the suffering of all citizens on America's frontier. Extreme Civil War reveals the complex racial, environmental, and military dimensions that fueled the brutal guerrilla warfare and made the Trans-Mississippi frontier one of the most difficult and diverse pockets of violence during the Civil War.