Spoon River Anthology

Front Cover
Simon & Schuster, 1997 - Fiction - 320 pages
This collection of poems about members of a small early twentieth century town who rise from their graves to tell their individual stories also includes background information on the real town and the actual people who lived there.

Contents

Tanner Robert Fulton
28
Garber James 264
34
Theodore the Poet
63
McNeely Paul 123
64
Altman Herman
65
Goodpasture Jacob
68
Iseman Dr Siegfried
72
Arnett Justice
75
McGee Fletcher 27
155
Roberts Rosie
156
Tompkins Josiah
160
Trevelyan Thomas
174
Scates Hiram
176
Hately Constance 32
178
Tutt Oaks
180
Schmidt Felix
187

Calhoun Henry C 198
79
Jack Blind
83
Marshall Herbert
86
Graham Magrady 203
87
Bennett Hon Henry
88
Jones Franklin
96
Burleson John Horace
98
Hainsfeather Barney
108
Putt
112
Layton Henry 215
117
Todd Eugenia
120
MCumber Daniel
125
Mason Serepta 30
126
Rhodes Thomas
127
Davidson Robert
131
Osborne Mabel 232
141
McDowell Rutherford 237
147
Hamblin Carl
148
Pantier Benjamin 37
150
Dement Silas
190
Dippold the Optician
201
Sewall Harlan
216
Wasson John
222
Henry Chase 33
233
Wasson Rebecca
235
Ehrenhardt Imanuel
244
Shope Tennessee Claflin
246
Heston Roger 135
256
Pennington Willie
258
Yee
268
Findlay Anthony 142
279
Somers Jonathan Swift
282
The Spooniad
283
Penniwit The Artist 129
287
Epilogue
295
Further Reading
317
Copyright

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About the author (1997)

Edgar Lee Masters, 1868 - 1950 The Kansas-born poet of "Spoon River Anthology" (written in 1915), Edgar Lee Masters, wrote almost 50 volumes but continues to be known for only that one, so great was its extraordinary success. Masters was born on August 23, 1868. His characters created for the verses (which are short postmortem monologues in epitaph form) were borrowed from the old Greek Anthology. By invading the realm of social criticism usually reserved for prose fiction, "Spoon River" anticipated the mood of Sherwood Anderson's "Winesburg, Ohio" and Sinclair Lewis's "Main Street." Masters lived near Spoon River for 11 years; it was his source of inspiration for this work. The 244 characters in the Anthology lay bare, in their own epitaphs, the hypocrisies, jealousies, frustrations and infrequent triumphs of their lives. Masters is often regarded as the last bestselling American poet. "Spoon River" has been adapted into a popular stage version that is frequently performed at colleges, high schools, and community theater.

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