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213 results for "North Carolina Literary Review"
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Record #:
1500
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Abstract:
After relating the theatrical and literary achievements of Green's life, Roper describes Green's military service in World War I and his \"war songs,\" poems he wrote about his experiences.
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North Carolina Literary Review (NoCar PS 266 N8 N66x), Vol. 1 Issue 1, Spring 1994, p22-46, il, por, bibl, f Periodical Website
Record #:
1501
Author(s):
Abstract:
Paul Green's numerous talents and interests make efforts to label him difficult. One of his pursuits was documentation of the language and folklore of his native North Carolina, particularly the Cape Fear Valley.
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Record #:
1502
Author(s):
Abstract:
Johnston County native and resident Margaret Maron is a prolific and prestigious writer of mystery novels. Her eleventh, Shooting at Loons, will be published this year.
Record #:
1503
Abstract:
Steelman recounts the story of the 1898 Wilmington race riot, including a sketch of the history of prior race relations in the city and a discussion of the story's tangled historiography.
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Record #:
1504
Abstract:
Gilmore exposes the intertwined nature of Thomas Dixon, Jr.'s life and his art by analyzing Dixon's The Leopard's Spots (1902) and some of his other works, particularly The Clansman (1905) and The Sins of the Father (1912).
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North Carolina Literary Review (NoCar PS 266 N8 N66x), Vol. 2 Issue 1, Spring 1994, p87-101, il, por, bibl, f Periodical Website
Record #:
1505
Author(s):
Abstract:
Rostar presents a biographical look at the public life of Walter Hines Page, focusing on his pre-1913 career as a writer and editor.
Source:
North Carolina Literary Review (NoCar PS 266 N8 N66x), Vol. 2 Issue 1, Spring 1994, p103-107, il, por, bibl Periodical Website
Record #:
1506
Author(s):
Abstract:
Charles Chesnutt, Ohio-born though a Fayetteville resident from 1866 until the early 1880s, sought to educate whites on racial issues by use of the written word. His books present the Afro-American view of southern life.
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Record #:
1507
Author(s):
Abstract:
Through pictures and text, Spear has documented the life of Rockingham County's Neugent family, who continue to live in the traditions of the tenant farmer, an increasingly anachronistic lifestyle in the industrial South.
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Record #:
1508
Author(s):
Abstract:
Hemley asked four other transplanted Yankee writers to comment on their impressions of North Carolina's literary environment. Collectively they feel that North Carolina offers a congenial atmosphere for their craft.
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Record #:
1509
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Abstract:
Bentz uses Wolfe's short stories, not edited into book form until 1987, to refute the charge that Wolfe's novels are \"autobiographical,\" little more than fictionalized personal journals.
Record #:
1637
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Abstract:
Hampton catalogs the small magazines and literary journals currently published in North Carolina and offers capsule reviews of each publication.
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Record #:
5552
Author(s):
Abstract:
Established in 1933 and existing for twenty-three years, Black Mountain College, with an enrollment of under 100 even in the best of years, was a bold experiment in education and the arts.
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Record #:
5553
Abstract:
Founded by John Andrew Rice and five other professors and using borrowed buildings for a campus, Black Mountain College became an innovative experiment in higher education.
Source:
North Carolina Literary Review (NoCar PS 266 N8 N66x), Vol. 2 Issue 2, 1995, p33-44, por, bibl, f Periodical Website
Record #:
5606
Author(s):
Abstract:
Carolina Wren Press, a small non-profit press located in Durham, was started in 1976 by Judy Hogan to give opportunities to new writers and writers mainstream publishing houses were underrepresenting. The company has printed forty-one books, mostly fiction and poetry. Writers are paid mainly in copies, receiving 10 percent of the printed copies of their book. Authors then place these books for sale and keep all money received.
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Record #:
6212
Abstract:
Robinson continues this series profiling North Carolina writers, as well as those who have written in and about the state. Included in this latest installment are Thomas Sewall Inborden, Randall Jarrell, H. G. Jones, Randall Kenan, and Horace Kephart.
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