by Willa Cather (Author), L. Brent Bohlke (Editor)
As she grew older Willa Cather became ever more private, complaining of favor-seekers and other parasites of fame. But in her long career she granted thirty-four interviews, gave six public speeches, and published ten letters, discussing literature and the artistic life and illuminating her own life and writing. These fugitive pieces, here gathered for the first time, reveal the author's early thirst for fame and the reasons for her later renunciation of it.
Included are Cather's radio speech accepting the 1923 Pulitzer Prize for fiction (awarded for One of Ours), accounts of her other speeches, interviews conducted by Louise Bogan and Stephen Vincent Benet, and six little-known portraits of Cather.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 236
Edition: Reprint
Publisher: Bison
Published: 01 Jun 1986
ISBN 10: 0803263260
ISBN 13: 9780803263260
A valuable book. Bohlke gives us access to complete texts, and his headnotes establish the context and significance of individual entries. -South Atlantic Review.
* South Atlantic Review *