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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 ...
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 ...
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 ...
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 ...
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.
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