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Academic Journals
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From:The Hemingway Review (Vol. 20, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedGiven Hemingway's personal interest in Ernest Thompson Seton's writing, and his familiarity with the tenets of Seton's hugely popular youth organization, the Woodcraft Indians, it is not surprising that the Nick Adams...
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From:Southwestern American Literature (Vol. 37, Issue 2)Bitter Water: Dine Oral Histories of the Navajo-Hopi Land Dispute edited and translated by Malcolm D. Benally. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2011. 103 pp. $19.95 paperback. The voices in Bitter Water: Dine...
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From:Southwestern American Literature (Vol. 28, Issue 2)green goldfinch pecking head of purple coneflower quick morning research As a novelist, Louis Owens shared much with John Steinbeck, who was the subject of so much of his scholarly writing over twenty--five years....
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From:Studies in Short Fiction (Vol. 36, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedGerald Vizenor, suggests Louis Owens, is both the most traditional and the least traditional of the Native American authors writing today (Owens, "Ecstatic" 143). An enrolled member of the Minnesota Chippewa tribe from...
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From:Southwestern American Literature (Vol. 33, Issue 1)Geronimo after Kas-ki-yeh: Poems by Rawdon Tomlinson. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2007. 104 pp. $18.95 paperback. In his fifth book of poems, Rawdon Tomlinson undertakes the difficult task of...
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From:The Hemingway Review (Vol. 20, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedInside, there seems to be more concern with the business of medicine than with healing. The voice that speaks first is not the doctor's but his wife's. Her question--"`Aren't, you going back to work, dear?'"--serves as...
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From:The Hemingway Review (Vol. 20, Issue 1) Peer-Reviewed--. The Woodcraft Manual for Boys: The Fifteenth Birch Bark Roll. New York: Doubleday, 1917. --. Woodmyth and Fable. New York: Century, 1905. Seton-Barber, Dee. Telephone interview. 15 February 1995. Shorter,...
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From:Southwestern American Literature (Vol. 33, Issue 2)I Swallow Turquoise for Courage: Poems by Hershman R. John. Tuc son: University of Arizona Press, 2007.103 pp. $15.95 paperback. Navajo poet Hershman John's firstbook dances through an unabashedly postmodern world to...
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From:Southwestern American Literature (Vol. 34, Issue 1)This special issue of Southwestern American Literature is devoted to the Atomic Southwest, as seen by regional writers over the past 50 years. Since the height of the Cold War and the Soviet-American arms race in the...