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Salmon Eaters to Sagebrushers: Washington's Lost Literary Legacy
Barnes and Noble
Salmon Eaters to Sagebrushers: Washington's Lost Literary Legacy
Current price: $26.95
Barnes and Noble
Salmon Eaters to Sagebrushers: Washington's Lost Literary Legacy
Current price: $26.95
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Numerous long-forgotten literary pieces about Washington State once enjoyed wide regional and national readership. Some were bestsellers. The stories they told of coming of age in Seattle, living in a San Juan Island lighthouse, piloting Columbia River paddleboats, and farming on the Palouse captured readers' imaginations. They offered vivid depictions of the region's people and placesoften with harsh renderings of its previously whitewashed history. While most have fallen out of print and circulation, collectively they reveal an impressive literary legacy.
Salmon Eaters to Sagebrushers
gives an informed and careful examination of these "vintage" fiction, nonfiction, and poetry worksall at least 50 years old. Based on his popular Retrospective Review column in the Washington State Historical Society journal
Columbia: The Magazine of Northwest History
, Peter Donahue's new essay collection is a hybrid of literary criticism, history, and biography, combining reappraisals of more than forty titles with short excerpts and author profiles.
Each of the included authors made notable contributions to Northwest literature. Their novels, memoirs, and poetryspanning 70 years, from the late 1880s to the mid-1960sevoke countless aspects of the Northwest. In portraying everyday life, presenting sub-regions such as the Columbia River Basin and Olympic Peninsula, and casting a critical eye on social issues such as white settlement and early industrialization, they reflect how Northwesterners regarded themselves and their region throughout most of the last centuryperceptions that continue to shape Northwest identity.
Salmon Eaters to Sagebrushers
gives an informed and careful examination of these "vintage" fiction, nonfiction, and poetry worksall at least 50 years old. Based on his popular Retrospective Review column in the Washington State Historical Society journal
Columbia: The Magazine of Northwest History
, Peter Donahue's new essay collection is a hybrid of literary criticism, history, and biography, combining reappraisals of more than forty titles with short excerpts and author profiles.
Each of the included authors made notable contributions to Northwest literature. Their novels, memoirs, and poetryspanning 70 years, from the late 1880s to the mid-1960sevoke countless aspects of the Northwest. In portraying everyday life, presenting sub-regions such as the Columbia River Basin and Olympic Peninsula, and casting a critical eye on social issues such as white settlement and early industrialization, they reflect how Northwesterners regarded themselves and their region throughout most of the last centuryperceptions that continue to shape Northwest identity.