Garland, Hamlin - 1860–1940, American author, b. near West Salem, Wis. He grew up in the Middle Western farmlands, the region he later wrote about in verse, stories, and autobiography. His tales, collected as Main-travelled Roads (1891), Prairie Folks (1893), and Wayside Courtships (1897), were bitter pictures of the futility of farm lives. Besides realistic novels of the prairies—A |
by Donald Pizer. 220 pgs.
by Hamlin Garland. 476 pgs.
by Hamlin Garland. 478 pgs.
by Charles L. P. Silet, Robert E. Welch, Richard Boudreau. 460 pgs.
by Jean Holloway. 346 pgs.
by Marcia Jacobson. 196 pgs.
by Granville Hicks. 342 pgs.
by Charles Child Walcutt. 334 pgs.
by Clarence Arthur Brown. 730 pgs.
by Seth Bovey, Gary Scharnhorst. 4 pgs.
by David Crockett, Hamlin Garland. 340 pgs.
by Hamlin Garland. 548 pgs.
by Constance M. Garland, Constance Garland. 379 pgs.
by Hamlin Garland. 276 pgs.
by Hamlin Garland. 426 pgs.
by Constance Hamlin Garland, Hamlin Garland. 539 pgs.