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Overview"""Absolutely spellbinding . . . A book to be savored, to be read slowly, with care and for pleasure.""--The Denver Post In recent years, a vital and valuable regional literature has emerged from America's interior West: work that reflects the region, its people, and their concerns, yet transcends this rugged country at large. This collection includes fiction and nonfiction from this impressive group. Works by: Rudolfo A. Anaya, Charles Bowden, Ron Carlson, Denise Chavez, Ivan Doig, Gretel Ehrlich, Joanne Greenberg, Linda Hogan, Pam Houston, Barbara Kingsolver, William Kittredge, David Long, Robert Mayer, Russell Martin, Thomas McGuane, Deidre McNamer, N. Scott Momaday, Gary Paul Nabhan, David Quammen, Lisa Sandlin, James Welch, Terry Tempest Williams." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Russell MartinPublisher: Penguin Books Ltd Imprint: Penguin Books Ltd Dimensions: Width: 13.80cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 21.30cm Weight: 0.354kg ISBN: 9780140169409ISBN 10: 0140169407 Pages: 416 Publication Date: 01 September 1992 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Out of Stock Indefinitely Availability: Out of stock Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationRussell Martin's Picasso's War: The Destruction of Guernica, and the Masterpiece That Changed the World is published in hardcover by Dutton and in unabridged audio by Highbridge. He is the author of Beethoven's Hair (2000), a U.S. bestseller and winner of the Colorado Book Award, which has been published in fifteen editions around the world and will soon be the subject of an international television documentary. His highly acclaimed 1994 book, Out of Silence, was named by the Bloomsbury Review as one of fifteen best books of its first fifteen years of publication. A Story That Stands Like A Dam: Glen Canyon and the Struggle for the Soul of the West (1989), won the Caroline Bancroft History Prize.He also is the author of the novel Beautiful Islands (1988); The Color Orange: A Super Bowl Season with the Denver Broncos (1987); Matters Gray and White: A Neurologist, His Patients & the Mysteries of the Brain (1986); Entering Space (co-authored with Joseph P. Allen, 1984), and Cowboy: The Enduring Myth of the Wild West (1983). He has edited two anthologies of contemporary western writing, Writers of the Purple Sage (1984) and New Writers of the Purple Sage (1992).He is a graduate of The Colorado College in Colorado Springs, where he has returned to teach for eighteen years. He also has taught courses at conferences including Writers@Work and the Desert Writers workshop. He spent a postgraduate year on a Thomas Watson Foundation fellowship in Great Britain and Guatemala and worked as a newspaper reporter in Telluride, Colorado for a number of years before becoming a freelance writer. In 1995, he was awarded an honorary doctorate by his alma mater.He lives in Denver and Salt Lake City. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |