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In the intense blossoming of American literary talent between the World Wars, T.S. Stribling took his place with Faulkner, Hemingway, Dos Passos, and other members of his generation with the Pulitzer Prize in 1933 for his bestselling novel The Store. In Laughing Stock, Stribling’s autobiography, the gifted writer reflects with humor, irony, and passion on his trajectory from a remote southern town to the literary heights of Paris and New York.
In this concluding novel of Stribling's trilogy on the changes facing the South between the Civil War and the Great Depression, Jerry Catlin, nephew to Col. Miltiades Vaiden, embodies the "secularization of religion" during the 1920s.--Intro., p. vi.
Previously uncollected detective stories by a Pultizer Prize winner.
Henry Poggioli, a psychologist and amateur detective who often solved the case just a little too late."--BOOK JACKET.
‘An exciting, vividly-imagined reconstruction of an extraordinary moment in the history of the American West’ Ian McGuire, bestselling author of THE NORTH WATER and INCREDIBLE BODIES ‘A highly compelling page turner; you won’t be able to put it down’ Philipp Meyer, author of THE SON and AMERICAN RUST
Annotation. The Forge was first published in 1931.
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Thomas Sigismund Stribling was an American writer and lawyer who published under the name T.S. Stribling. He won the Pulitzer Prize for the Novel in 1933 for his novel The Store.
Focusing on the Vaiden family of northern Alabama, The Forge depicts "the changes forced on life in the South by the war and its aftermath."--Intro., p.x