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Cather, Willa

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Webpages concerning "Cather, Willa"

Willa Cather online books, Cather, Willa - Free Online Library - Willa Cather Alexander's Bridge, Willa Cather My Antonia, best known authors and titles are available on the Free Online Library
http://Cather.thefreelibrary.com/
Keywords:
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http://Cather.thefreelibrary.com/

Willa Cather Page, dedicated to 20th century American novelist.
http://icg.harvard.edu/~cather/home.html
Keywords:
Willa Cather, american, literature, novels, Nebraska, Antonia, Pioneers, Professor's House, Song, of, the, Lark, Alexander's Bridge, Shadows, on, the, Rock, Lucy Gayheart, My Mortal Enemy, Lost Lady, Sapphira, Bright Medusa, Under Forty

http://icg.harvard.edu/~cather/home.html

http://www.gradesaver.com/ClassicNotes/Authors/about_willa_cather.html

http://www.gradesaver.com/ClassicNotes/Authors/about_willa_cather.html

An introduction to the life and writings of Willa Cather.
http://fp.worldonline.dk/fpemarxlind
Keywords:
willa cather, modernism, women writers, my antonia, O' pioneers, Nebraska, red cloud

http://fp.worldonline.dk/fpemarxlind

http://www.classicauthors.net/Classics/Cather/

http://www.classicauthors.net/Classics/Cather/

http://www.unl.edu/Cather/cather.htm

http://www.unl.edu/Cather/cather.htm

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Wikipedia-Article "Willa Cather"

Willa Cather photographed by Carl Van Vechten, 1936
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Willa Cather photographed by Carl Van Vechten, 1936

Willa Seibert Cather (December 7, 1873April 24, 1947) is among the most eminent female American authors. She is known for her depictions of US prairie life in novels like O Pioneers!, My Ántonia, and Death Comes for the Archbishop.

Cather was born in Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley but her family relocated to Nebraska in 1883 and she spent the rest of her childhood in Red Cloud, Nebraska. She insisted on attending college, so her family borrowed money so she could enroll at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. While there, she became a regular contributor to the Nebraska State Journal.

She then moved to Pittsburgh where where she taught high school and worked for Home Monthly and McClure's Magazine. The latter publication serialized her first novel, Alexander's Bridge, which was heavily influenced by Henry James.

As a muckraking journalist she coauthored a powerful and highly critical biography of Mary Baker Eddy, the founder of Christian Science. It was serialized in McClure's Magazine in 1907-8 and published as a book the next year. Christian Scientists were outraged and tried to buy every copy; it was reprinted by the University of Nebraska Press in 1993.

She met author Sarah Orne Jewett, who advised Cather to rely less on the influence of James and more on her native Nebraska. For her novels she returned to the prairie for inspiration, and these works became popular and critical successes. She won the Pulitzer Prize in 1923 for One of Ours (1922). She was celebrated by critics like H.L. Mencken for writing about ordinary people in plainspoken language. When he won the Nobel Prize in Literature, Sinclair Lewis said Cather should have won it instead. However, later critics attacked Cather, a political conservative, for ignoring the plight of those ordinary people and tended to favor more experimental authors.

In 1973, Willa Cather was honored by the United States Postal Service with her image on a postage stamp. Cather is a member of the Nebraska Hall of Fame.

Nonfiction

  • Willa Cather and Georgine Milmine The Life of Mary Baker G. Eddy and the History of Christian Science (1909) (reprinted U of Nebraska Press, 1993)

Novels

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