Willa Cather‘s A Wagner Matinée was collected in both her first book of stories, The Troll Garden (1905), and a subsequent compilation, Youth and the Bright Medusa (1920). One of Cather’s earliest collected stories, “A Wagner Matin e” anticipates the mature… Read More ›
Willa Cather
Analysis of Willa Cather’s Paul’s Case
Published in McClure’s, “Paul’s Case” was included in Willa Cather’s first collection, The Troll Garden (1905), a volume of seven stories about artists. “Paul’s Case” is Cather’s most anthologized story and one of the few she allowed to be reprinted… Read More ›
Analysis of Willa Cather’s Old Mrs. Harris
Published in Ladies’ Home Journal (September– November 1932) as “Three Women” and included in the collection Obscure Destinies (1932), this story concerns three generations of women transplanted from Tennessee to the town of Skyline, Colorado. The differences in the women’s… Read More ›
Analysis of Willa Cather’s Neighbour Rosicky
First published in Woman’s Home Companion (April/May 1930) and included as one of three stories in Obscure Destinies (1932), “Neighbour Rosicky” dramatizes an old Bohemian farmer’s final days. The story is a character study of Anton Rosicky but also a… Read More ›
Analysis of Willa Cather’s A Lost Lady
Like Willa Cather’s novels O Pioneers! (1913) and My Antonia (1918), A Lost Lady, a novella-length work, is linked with the landscape of the western American plains. A Lost Lady is set in the Colorado prairie town of Sweet Water,… Read More ›
Analysis of Willa Cather’s Novels
Willa Cather (1873—1947) was a prolific American novelist noted for her portrayals of the settlers and frontier life on the American plains. She once said in an interview that the Nebraska landscape was “the happiness and the curse” of her… Read More ›
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