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Much of the novel follows the protagonist of “Winesburg, Ohio” into turn of the century Chicago. “The End of the Book” By Porter Shreve, Louisiana State University, 232 pages, $22.50 ...
Winesburg, Ohio, Steppenwolf Theatre Company. No one would ever confuse this suffocating Buckeye burg with the idyllic Grover’s Corners, New Hampshire (though Sherwood Anderson’s influence on ...
This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts. While I was driving through Ohio, every sign for Zanesville ...
Clyde, a town of 6,000 in northern Ohio, is best-known for its pseudonymous turn as Winesburg in Sherwood Anderson’s Winesburg, Ohio. (The Clyde website notes that “America’s Famous Small ...
Unlike "Our Town," where people seem human and occasionally do normal things like eat and even sit down, and unlike "The Music Man" where there is trouble in River City and thus some plot ...
Nearly 100 years ago, Sherwood Anderson published “Winesburg, Ohio,” a book of linked short stories regarding an imaginary American town as seen through the eyes of George Willard. George is a ...
Winesburg is a Census-designated place in Holmes County, Ohio, with a population of 279. According to the most recent estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau, 100.00% of residents identify as white ...
Sherwood Anderson’s 1919 novel “Winesburg, Ohio” was the early literary equivalent of “Peyton Place,” a portrait of daily life in a small town, with glimpses of its underbelly ...
Award-winning New Musical Winesburg, Ohio Opens at Kansas City Rep Written and Directed by Rep's Artistic Director Eric Rosen A Modern Musical with Scandal, Desire and Intrigue Previews March 13 ...
A Governors State prof brings the "unfilmable" classic to the screen—with a black cast and a contemporary local setting.