Writer’s Wednesday: Paul West

Paul West

Click Here to Read:  Paul West on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Paul West, Writer Who Shoveled Absurdity Into His Books, Dies at 85 By William Grimes in The New York Times on October 21, 2015.

Click Here to Read: ‘Mem, Mem, Mem’: After a stroke, a prolific novelist struggles to say how the mental world of aphasia looks and feels by Diane Ackerman in The American Scholar in the Summer 2007 Issue. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Paul West

Writer’s Wednesday: Arthur Miller

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Click Here to Read: Arthur Miller on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Arthur Miller Biography: Screenwriter, Playwright (1915–2005) on the Bio.com website.

Click Here to Read: Arthur Miller Biography on the National Endowment for the Humanities website.

Click Here to Read: Arthur Miller: Private Conversations on The Set of Death of a Salesman Arthur Miller Biography on the PBS websit eon August 23, 2004. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Arthur Miller

Writer’s Wednesday: Sinclair Lewis

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Click Here to Read:  Sinclair Lewis on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Sinclair Lewis – Biographical on the Noble Prize website.

Click Here to Read: What a 1925 novel by Sinclair Lewis can teach us about health care today BY Dr. Howard Markel on the PBS website on February 7, 2015.

Click Here to Read: The Romance of Sinclair Lewis by Gore Vidal in The New York Review of Books in the October 8, 1992 Issue. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Sinclair Lewis

Writer’s Wednesday: Aeschylus

Aeschylus

Click Here to Read:  Aeschylus on Wikipedia.

Click Here To Read: Works by Aeschylus on The Internet Classics website.

Click Here to Read: Prometheus Bound derived from Aeschylus by Robert Lowell in the New York Review of Books in the JULY 13, 1967 Issue

Click Here to Read: Oresteia review – a terrifying immediacy: An exhilarating present-day reworking of Aeschylus gives free rein to female power by Susannah Clapp on the Guardian website on June 7, 2015. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Aeschylus

Writer’s Wednesday: Victor Hugo

VictorHugo

Click Here to Read:  Victor Hugo on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Victor Hugo Biography Author, Poet, Playwright (1802–1885) on the Bio.com website.

Click Here to Read: The Strange Power of Les Mis, the Book Victor Hugo’s Hard-nosed Melodrama By Paul Berman in The New Republic on march 2, 2013.

Click Here to Read: The enduring relevance of Victor Hugo By Megan Behrent on the International Socialist Review website inn Issue #89. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Victor Hugo

Writer’s Wednesday: Lillian Smith

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Click Here to Read:  Lillian Smith on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Lillian Smith, Florida/Georgia Strange Fruit (1944) on the Virginia.edu website.

Click Here to Read:  Lyrical Tuesday from Jane Hall: Two Americas on this website.

Click Here to Read: Lillian Smith (1897-1966) by Bruce Clayton in The New Georgia Encyclopedia on September 1, 2014. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Lillian Smith

Writer’s Wednesday: T.H. White

THWhite

Click Here to Read: T.H. White on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Once and Future by Sadie Stein The Paris Review website on October 24, 2014.

Click Here to Read: The England Have My Bones website for the Readers of the Works of T.H. White.

Click Here to Read: The Once and Future King by T.H. White, book of a lifetime: The beauty and sadness of life White’s book delivered Robert Irwin from what felt like prison by Robert Irwin on the Independent website on May 28, 2015. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: T.H. White

Writer’s Wednesday: John Steinbeck

JohnSteinbeck

Click Here to Read:  John Steinbeck on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: John Steinbeck Interviewed by George Plimpton and Frank Crowther in The Paris Review: Art of Fiction No. 45 Fall 1975.

Click Here to Read: John Steinbeck – Biographical on the Nobel Prize.org website.

Click Here to Read: John Steinbeck’s New Novel Brims With Anger and Pity By Peter Monro Jack in The New York Times on April 16, 1939.

Click Here to Read:  John Steinbeck’s bitter fruit: Seventy years after The Grapes of Wrath was published, its Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: John Steinbeck

Writer’s Wednesday: William Faulkner

WilliamFaulkner

Click Here to Read: William Faulkner on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read:  William Faulkner on the Mississippi Writer’s Page Website.

Click Here to Read:  How William Faulkner Tackled Race — and Freed the South From Itself by John jeremiah Sullivan in The Nwe York Times on June 28, 2012.

Click Here to Read: The Faulkner Truthers by Maria Bustillos on the Awl website on April 22, 2014, Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: William Faulkner