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75 Readings Plus, 6/e
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Langston Hughes
Maya Angelou
Maxine Hong Kingston
James Baldwin
Virginia Woolf
E.B. White
Jessica Mitford
Susan Sontag
Bruce Catton
Deborah Tannen
Barbara Dafoe Whit...
Plato
Alice Walker
Jonathan Swift
Martin Luther King...
Amy Tan
Barbara Ehrenreich
N. Scott Momaday
Joan Didion
Ellen Goodman
Nat Hentoff
Gloria Steinem
Judith Viorst

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Bruce Catton

Biographical

Here is a brief bio and some info about Catton's boyhood home, including a photograph. Why, do you think, such things as a writer's boyhood home are sometimes commemorated in this way?

This is the entry on Catton from Compton's Encyclopedia Online. What did you find there that you could use in your writing on Catton? How reliable do you think the information is there? How can you tell?

An interesting way to see the scope of Catton's work is to browse through the list of his citations at the Library of Congress. What did you find there that you didn't know before your visit?

Cultural

Interested in what other Catton enthusiasts have to say? Well, here's a Catton bulletin board for you to check out.

Here is the citation for his Pulitzer Prize, which he won in 1954 for A Stillness at Appomattox. Do you recognize any of the other authors on this page? How would you go about finding information about them?

Would you like to see some of the events Catton has written about? This page has links to Civil War photographs that will bring the awful conflict to life in another way entirely.

Wondering where critics place Catton's work? Here is a list of the "Top Civil War Books " with numerous references to Catton. How might this list be of use to you when writing about Catton?

Bibliographical

Here's a quote by Catton about major league baseball. Could you use this quote in your writing about Catton? In what context?

This page presents of view of Catton's historiography, his writing approach to history. The salient quote here is, "Whatever else it is, history ought to be a good yarn. " What does that mean? Do you agree? Did you find your reading to be a "good yarn "?

Click here to hear a sample from The Coming Fury, part one of Catton's series The Centennial History of the Civil War. What did you find interesting about the reading? How is listening to a passage different from reading a passage? Which involves you more?