Willa Cather
2) O pioneers!
Author
Publisher
Not Supplied
Pub. Date
Not Supplied
Language
English
Description
O Pioneers! (1913) is the story of Alexandra Bergson, a fiercely independent and clear-headed young woman whose passionate faith in the Nebraska prairie makes her a wealthy landowner." "Willa Cather's second novel is imbued with the democratic utopianism of Walt Whitman and the serene regionalism of Sarah Orne Jewett, but it is not merely an elegy for the lost glories of America's pioneer past. In its rage for order and efficiency, O pioneers! also...
3) My Antonia
Author
Series
Publisher
Not Supplied
Pub. Date
Not Supplied
Language
English
Description
The moving portrait of an orphan boy and immigrant girl who find hardship and love on the American prairie.
4) My Ántonia
Author
Publisher
Not Supplied
Pub. Date
Not Supplied
Language
English
Description
The reminiscences of a New York lawyer, Jim Burden, about his boyhood in Nebraska, particularly a young Bohemian girl named Antonia Shimerda, are set against the backdrop of the American assimilation immigrants.
"Willa Cather's My Ántonia is considered one of the most significant American novels of the twentieth century. Set during the great migration west to settle the plains of the North American continent, the narrative follows Antonia Shimerda,...
Author
Publisher
Not Supplied
Pub. Date
Not Supplied
Language
English
Description
A first publication of the acclaimed writer's personal correspondences includes whimsical teenage reports of her 1880s Red Cloud life, letters written during her early journalism years and the 1940s exchanges penned in observation of World War II and her own struggles with aging. -- Publishers Description.
6) One of ours
Author
Series
Publisher
Not Supplied
Pub. Date
Not Supplied
Language
English
Description
The son of a prosperous Nebraska farmer yearns to leave his prairie home
Author
Series
Publisher
Not Supplied
Pub. Date
Not Supplied
Language
English
Description
Death Comes For The Archbishop shares a limitless, craggy beauty with the New Mexico landscape of desert, mountain, and canyon in which its central action takes place, and its evocations of that landscape suggest why Willa Cather is acknowledged without question as the most poetically exact chronicler of the American frontier. Told with a directness that overlays its profound artistry, this story of the nineteenth century missionary priest Father...
18) A lost lady
Author
Series
Publisher
Not Supplied
Pub. Date
Not Supplied
Language
English
Description
"Written from the perspective of a male narrator, Willa Cather's classic novel is an American version of "Madame Bovary". It is a portrait of a talented woman trapped in the conventions and economic restraints of a marriage. It is the story of a woman who defies expectations, and whose personal changes coincide with the transforming American Frontier. In this work, Willa Cather expressed her profoundly modern feminist views in the life of an ordinary...
Author
Series
Publisher
Not Supplied
Pub. Date
Not Supplied
Language
English
Description
"In 1697, Quebec is an island of French civilization perched on a bare gray rock amid a wilderness of trackless forests. For many of its settlers, Quebec is a place of exile, so remote that an entire winter passes without a word from home. But to twelve-year-old Cécile Auclair, the rock is home, where even the formidable Governor Frontenac entertains children in his palace and beavers lie beside the lambs in a Christmas créche. As Cather follows...