2,490 research outputs found
A Kind of Imagination that has Nothing to Do with Fiction: Art in Public Life
Davidts, W. [Promotor]Oostdijk, D.M. [Copromotor]Slager, H. [Copromotor
Local Author Book Talk: Meet D.M. Pulley author of The Dead Key
Local Author D.M. Pulley, author of The Dead Key.
2014 Winner — Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award — Grand Prize and Mystery & Thriller Fiction Winner. It’s 1998, and for years the old First Bank of Cleveland has sat abandoned, perfectly preserved, its secrets only speculated on by the outside world.--Source Amazon.com
These books and all Friends of the Library 2021/2022 book selections are on sale at Viking Outfitters, located in the CSU Student Center
Canceled: Local Author Book Talk: Meet D.M. Pulley author of The Dead Key
This event has been canceled due to the Coronavirus.
Meet Local Author D.M. Pulley, author of The Dead Key.
2014 Winner — Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award — Grand Prize and Mystery & Thriller Fiction Winner. It’s 1998, and for years the old First Bank of Cleveland has sat abandoned, perfectly preserved, its secrets only speculated on by the outside world.--Source Amazon.com
The books titled The Dead Key, No one’s Home, Unclaimed Victim, and The Buried Book will be available for sale by Viking Outfitters at the event. These books and all Friends of the Library 2019/2020 book selections are on sale at Viking Outfitters, located in the CSU Student Center
Book Review [Review of: (2009) The Cambridge Companion to the Literature of World War II]
Review [Review of: Jane Hedley, Nick Halpern, and Willard Spiegelman (2009) In the Frame: Women’s Ekphrastic Poetry from Marianne Moore to Susan Wheeler]
Reviews [Review of: F. Barrett (2012) To Fight Aloud Is Very Brave: American Poetry and the Civil War]
The Wartime Success of Karl Shapiro's V-Letter
The American soldier-poet Karl Shapiro won the Pulitzer Prize for V-Letter and Other Poems (1944), making him an instant celebrity. The volume was written while he was stationed in Australia and New Guinea during World War II. Shaprio sent the completed poems to his fiancée, Evalyn Katz, who edited them, sent them to magazines, and subsequently compiled them for V-Letter. Drawing on unpublished letters between Karl Shapiro and Evalyn Katz and personal interviews with Katz, this essay explores the genesis and unusual success of this volume. What was Katz' editorial contribution to the poems and how was the arrangement of poems for V-Letter made? Was the success based on the quality of the poems, their accessibility and topicality, or perhaps the air of romance and patriotism that clung to Shapiro and Katz as viewed from the homefront? © Springer 2006
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