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Excerpt from Life and Career of Senator Robert Love Taylor (Our Bob) Immediately after Senator Taylor's death, even before his re mains were deposited in the grave, there arose an insistent de mand for his written life and lectures. While his body was lye ing in state in the Capitol at Nashville, being viewed by the pass ing throngs of weeping friends, hundreds were visiting the book stores of the city in search of Life Pictures, his latest work, containing a collection of his public addresses, lectures and mag azines editorials. These were disappointed because the book could not be procured for the reason that it was out of print as a result of a fire in the publishing house, which destroye...
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Andrew Taylor (1730-1787) married Elizabeth Wilson in about 1763. Afyer shie died, he married her sister, Ann Wilson, in about 1769 in Virginia. He died in Tennessee. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in Tennessee.
“Splendid. . . . McAlexander’s biography only makes it clearer than ever that Peter Taylor was our last great southern man of letters.”—Chicago Tribune “For those of us to whom Taylor’s writing is among the chief glories of 20th-century American literature, Peter Taylor: A Writer’s Life has much to tell us about how he emerged from what he called ‘the small old world we knew...in Tennessee’ and explored that world with such acuity, clarity, and unsentimental love.”—Jonathan Yardley, Washington Post Book World “McAlexander has done a splendid job of tracing the progression of Taylor’s writing through the circumstances of a surprisingly frenetic life...Anyone interest...