Again Calls the Owl
ISBN-13:
9780440300748
ISBN-10:
0440300746
Author:
Margaret Craven
Publication date:
1983
Publisher:
Dell
Format:
Mass Market Paperback
120 pages
Category:
Authors
,
Arts & Literature
,
Women
,
Specific Groups
,
Feminist Theory
,
Women's Studies
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Book details
ISBN-13:
9780440300748
ISBN-10:
0440300746
Author:
Margaret Craven
Publication date:
1983
Publisher:
Dell
Format:
Mass Market Paperback
120 pages
Category:
Authors
,
Arts & Literature
,
Women
,
Specific Groups
,
Feminist Theory
,
Women's Studies
Summary
Again Calls the Owl (ISBN-13: 9780440300748 and ISBN-10: 0440300746), written by authors
Margaret Craven, was published by Dell in 1983.
With an overall rating of 3.8 stars, it's a notable title among other
Authors
(Arts & Literature, Women, Specific Groups, Feminist Theory, Women's Studies) books. You can easily purchase or rent Again Calls the Owl (Mass Market Paperback) from BooksRun,
along with many other new and used
Authors
books
and textbooks.
And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.39.
Description
“A rich memoir . . . a woman of sensitivity, forthrightness, warmth, and talent.”—Booklist
To become a writer, she chose loneliness. To write a bestseller, she embraced a rugged land.
Deceptively simple in style, stunning in its implications, this gem of an autobiography carries readers back to the beginning of the century when Margaret Craven—one a handful of women at Stanford and a groundbreaking woman journalist—made the audacious decision not to work for a living, but to work as a writer.
Here Margaret Craven brings vividly to life an idyllic childhood which suddenly vanishes; advice from a red-robed Gertrude Stein propped up in bed; a nearly tragic battle with blindness; and a fateful trip to a magnificently wild Pacific Northwest, a town called Kingcome . . . and her emergence, at sixty-nine, as a women who realized a dream.
Praise for Again Calls the Owl
“A writer of compassion, humor, spirit, and persistence.”—St. Louis Post-Dispatch
“Readers will find in this small memoir courage, joy, inspiration.”—Library Journal
“An unabashed joy for living.”—Santa Barbara News-Press
To become a writer, she chose loneliness. To write a bestseller, she embraced a rugged land.
Deceptively simple in style, stunning in its implications, this gem of an autobiography carries readers back to the beginning of the century when Margaret Craven—one a handful of women at Stanford and a groundbreaking woman journalist—made the audacious decision not to work for a living, but to work as a writer.
Here Margaret Craven brings vividly to life an idyllic childhood which suddenly vanishes; advice from a red-robed Gertrude Stein propped up in bed; a nearly tragic battle with blindness; and a fateful trip to a magnificently wild Pacific Northwest, a town called Kingcome . . . and her emergence, at sixty-nine, as a women who realized a dream.
Praise for Again Calls the Owl
“A writer of compassion, humor, spirit, and persistence.”—St. Louis Post-Dispatch
“Readers will find in this small memoir courage, joy, inspiration.”—Library Journal
“An unabashed joy for living.”—Santa Barbara News-Press
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