... 123, 141, 151; self-destructive impulses, 48-50, 128, 681; sensitivity of SA, 411-12; volatility of SA, 533; while student, 91- 92; as youth, 72 Peters, Rollo, 407-8 Petty, Zeb, 687 Pfeiffer, Pauline, 635-36 Phantasmus (magazine), ...
eral places Anderson notes that Talbott grew up in a " fashionable " part of town . In one version Talbott had a wife , Mary , who died in childbirth a year into the marriage . Other versions mention a late wife named Mildred or a wife ...
If H. W. Boynton in the conservative Bookman charged that the author had “too freely imbibed the doctrine of the psychoanalysts” and conversely Floyd Dell in the radical Liberator charged that he, like Dreiser and other naturalist ...
... 285, 357 Bynner, Witter, 256 Cabell, James Branch, 111, 127, 292 Caldwell, Erskine, 351 Calverton, V. F., 30, 147 Camp Merrie-Wood, North Carolina, 39, 180–81, 267, 379 Canadian Forum (magazine), 301 Canby, Henry Seidel, ...
Faulkner, whose Soldiers' Pay (1926) had also been published following Anderson's efforts, less publicly but just as sharply ridiculed Anderson in the foreword to Sherwood Anderson fr Other Famous Creoles (1926), a book published in a ...
"A Richard Todd book." Anderson is revealed to be in many ways a writer of surprisingly contemporary sensibility, a man in constant struggle to re-create himself.
The works of Sherwood Anderson are explored here, including "Godliness," "Death in the Woods," "The Man Who Became A Woman," "I Want to Know Why," and "The Egg."
White (English, Illinois State U.) has collected Anderson's pre-Winesburg, Ohio writings (written while he worked at an ad agency between 1902 and 1916) and presents them here interspersed with biographical...
Sherwood Anderson: A Reference Guide