Extractions: @import url(http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/eaf/eaf/%22/eaf/styles/eaf_advanced.css%22); dqmcodebase = "/scripts/" Works in the Collection Biographies Susan Fenimore Cooper , the daughter of James Fenimore Cooper, resided in Cooperstown, New York. She wrote a number of rural sketches. Her works include Rural Hours Country Rambles Rhyme and Reason Country Life ; and The Shield, a Narrative Elinor Wyllys; or, The Young Folk at Longbridge. A Tale, by Amabel Penfeather [pseud., ed. by J. Fenimore Cooper] (1846) [Volume 1] [Volume 2] (Restricted) From Oscar Fay Adams, A Dictionary of American Authors From Samuel Austin Allibone, A Critical Dictionary of English Literature Electronic Text Center
Documentary Editing Cooper, Susan Fenimore. 168 pp. $45. ISBN 0820324213. Cooper (18131894) was a pioneerof American nature writing and early advocate for ecological stability. http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/ade/cont03-99/V24N03Recent_Editions.html
Extractions: September 2002, Vol. 24, No. 3 Compiled by Suzanne S. Bellamy This quarterly bibliography of current documentary editions published on subjects in the fields of American and British history, literature, and culture is generally restricted to scholarly first editions of English language works. To have publications included in future lists, please send press materials or full bibliographic citations to Johanna Resler, Managing Editor, Documentary Editing , IUPUI, Cavanaugh Hall 207, 425 University Boulevard, Indianapolis, Indiana 46202-5140. Or email: jeresler@iupui.edu ALCOTT, LOUISA MAY L. M. Alcott: Signature of Reform Edited by Madeleine Stern. Boston: Northeastern University Press, 2002. 224 pp. $47.50. ISBN 1555535135 . Selections from the writings of reform leaders are paired with excerpts from Alcott's letters, fiction, and nonfiction works to demonstrate that Alcott was aware of and often moved by the words of other reformers.
SWAN /All Libraries Steven JM Ed 1 Cooper Steven JM Ed 1973 1 Cooper Stuart 3 Cooper Susan 58 CooperSusan 1935 35 Cooper Susan 1947 3 Cooper Susan Fenimore 1813 1894 3 Cooper http://swan.sls.lib.il.us:90/kids/0,1913,1941/search/aCooper, Susan Fenimore, 18
Extractions: KEYWORD AUTHOR TITLE SUBJECT All SWAN libraries Acorn Acorn Juvenile Alsip-Merrionette Park Alsip-Merrionette Park Juvenile Anderson/Oglesby Anderson/Oglesby Juvenile Bedford Park Bedford Park Juvenile Beecher Beecher Juvenile Bellwood Bellwood Juvenile Berkeley Berkeley Juvenile Berwyn Berwyn Juvenile Blue Island Blue Island Juvenile Broadview Broadview Juvenile Brookfield Zoo Brookfield Zoo Education Calumet City Calumet City Juvenile Calumet Park Calumet Park Juvenile Chicago Heights Chicago Heights Juvenile Chicago Ridge Chicago Ridge Juvenile Cicero Cicero Juvenile Cicero Branch Cicero Branch Juvenile Clarendon Hills Clarendon Hills Juvenile Crestwood Crestwood Juvenile Crete Crete Juvenile Dolton Dolton Juvenile Downers Grove Downers Grove Juvenile Eisenhower Eisenhower Juvenile Elmhurst Elmhurst Juvenile Elmwood Park Elmwood Park Juvenile Evergreen Park Evergreen Park Juvenile Flossmoor Flossmoor Juvenile Forest Park Forest Park Juvenile Frankfort Frankfort Juvenile Frankfort Bookmobile Glenwood-Lynwood Glenwood-Lynwood Juvenile Grande Prairie Grande Prairie Juvenile Harvey Harvey Juvenile Hillside Hillside Juvenile Hinsdale Hinsdale Juvenile Hodgkins Hodgkins Juvenile Homewood Homewood Juvenile Indian Prairie Indian Prairie Juvenile Justice Justice Juvenile La Grange La Grange Juvenile La Grange Park La Grange Park Juvenile Lyons Lyons Juvenile Matteson Matteson Juvenile Maywood Maywood Juvenile McClure Junior High School McClure Junior High School Audiovisual McConathy
JAMES FENIMORE COOPER September 1851 at Cooperstown, New York. His daughter, Susan FenimoreCooper (18131894), was known as an author and philanthropist. http://2.1911encyclopedia.org/C/CO/COOPER_JAMES_FENIMORE.htm
Extractions: COOPER, JAMES FENIMORE See James Fenimore Cooper (Boston, 1883), by Thomas R. Lounsbury in the American Men of Letters series; Griswold, Prose Writers of America (Philadelphia, 1847); J. R. Lowell, Fable for Criiics; M. A. do Wolfe Howe, American Bookmen (New York, 1898); and the introduction by Mowbray Morris to Macmillans uniform edition of Coopers novels (London, 1900). (W. E. H.) CHARLES HENRY COOPER PETER COOPER
Brooklyn Public Library /All Locations KEYWORD, Num Mark AUTHORS (12 of 2) Year Cooper, Susan Fenimore, 1813-1894. 1Elinor Wyllys. or, The young folk of Longbridge / Vol. http://catalog.brooklynpubliclibrary.org:90/kids/10,156/search/aCooper, Susan, 1
Brooklyn Public Library /All Locations Export) KEYWORD, Record 1 of 2 Author, Cooper, Susan Fenimore, 18131894.Title, Elinor Wyllys. Vol. 2 computer http://catalog.brooklynpubliclibrary.org:90/kids/10,156/search/aCooper, Susan, 1
Extractions: Author Cooper, Susan Fenimore, 1813-1894. Title Elinor Wyllys. Vol. 2 [electronic resource] : or, The young folk of Longbridge / by Susan Fenimore Cooper. Pub info Champaign, Ill. (P.O. Box 2782, Champaign 61825) : Project Gutenberg, [199-?]. Click on the following to: An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click for information LOCATION CALL # STATUS eBOOK Consult Librarian Call # eBOOK Reproduction Electronic reproduction. Boulder, Colo. : NetLibrary, 1999. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to NetLibrary affiliated libraries. Subject Frontier and pioneer life United States Fiction. Genre Electronic books. Historical fiction. Add author NetLibrary, Inc. Alt title Young Folk of Longbridge ISBN 0585101965 (electronic bk.) :
ONLIPIX - Great Names Pictures : COO 1; Cooper (Susan Fenimore, daughter of James Fenimore Cooper)(18131894) Drawing1; Cooper (Susan Vera, aka Susie , wife of Cecil BARKER)(1902-1995) Painting 1; http://www.onlipix.com/personages/coo.htm
Extractions: COO A B C D ... Z COOK (Clyde) COOK (Eliza)(1818-1889) COOK (Elizabeth, wife of James COOK COOK (Cap. Everett R.) COOK (George)(1772-1845) COOK (Gordon) COOK (Harvey Weir)(1893-1943) COOK (Howard) COOK (James)(1728-1779) Painting (in 1776)/ /3/4/5 (mort)/6 (mort)/7/8/9/10/11 (3)/12 (with Lord SANDWICH et Joseph BANKS Memorabilia (E) COOK (John, general COOK (Sir Joseph)(1860-1947) COOK (Nancy) COOK (Orval R., general COOK (Peter)(1937-1995) COOK (Philip, general COOK (Sophia born STONE) COOKE (Alistair)(1908-) COOKE (Doc)(1891-1958) COOKE (John Rogers) COOKE (Josiah)(1827-1894) COOKE (Morris) COOKE (Philip St George)(1809-1895) COOKE (Terence Cardinal Cooke) COOKE (Thomas Potter)(1786-1864) COOKESEY (Walter, 1st husband of Maud HARCOURT)
The Lumley Autograph Susan F. Cooper Library. THE LUMLEY AUTOGRAPH by Susan Fenimore Cooper {by Susan FenimoreCooper (18131894), daughter of James Fenimore Cooper. The http://jollyroger.com/xlibrary1/TheLumleyCS/TheLumleyCS1.html
Essays On Nature And Landscape Susan Fenimore Cooper (18131894), though often overshadowed by her celebrity father,James Fenimore Cooper, has recently become recognized as both a pioneer http://www.ugapress.org/books/shelf/0820324213.html
Extractions: Search Table of Contents "Should be required reading for anyone interested in nature. Susan Fenimore Cooper's dedication to her own local natural history and community is wonderful, even inspirational." Susan Fenimore Cooper, Edited by Rochelle Johnson and Daniel Patterson. Foreword by John Elder Essays by America's first female nature writer Rochelle Johnson is an assistant professor of English at Albertson College of Idaho. Daniel Patterson is member of the English faculty at Central Michigan University. Together they have edited Cooper's Rural Hours (Georgia) and Susan Fenimore Cooper: New Essays on "Rural Hours" and Other Works (Georgia). John Elder is Stewart Professor of English and Environmental Studies at Middlebury College. Nature Published: July 2002 Hardcover
Rural Hours The daughter of the novelist James Fenimore Cooper, Susan Fenimore Cooper (18131894),uses narratives and descriptions of her walks and excursions to reveal http://www.ugapress.org/books/shelf/0820319740.html
Extractions: Search "An engaging, astutely, sensitively, and eloquently written work by the first really significant American woman nature writer." Lawrence Buell "Rural Hours should interest students of American geography, history, and literature as an important early work of nature writing. It is a significant literary achievement by a woman who has too long languished in the shadow of her famous father." Louise Westling Susan Fenimore Cooper, Edited and with an Introduction by Rochelle Johnson and Daniel Patterson "An engaging, astutely, sensitively, and eloquently written work by the first really significant American woman nature writer."Lawrence Buell Rural Hours (1850) is one of the earliest pieces of American nature writing and the first by a woman. This new edition, the only printing of the full original text since 1876, restores passages excised by the author for an 1887 edition. The daughter of the novelist James Fenimore Cooper, Susan Fenimore Cooper (1813-1894), uses narratives and descriptions of her walks and excursions to reveal her ideal society as a rural one, carefully poised between the receding wilderness and a looming industrialization. She theorizes that knowledge of place causes people to approach the land humbly and gratefully and asserts the necessity of establishing a society that is sustainable in the natural world and that sees a moral obligation to deepen knowledge of the natural history of the environment. Rochelle Johnson is a doctoral candidate in American literature at the Claremont Graduate University in California. Daniel Patterson is a professor of English at California State University, San Bernardino.
Index Translate this page James Fenimore, 1789-1851 Gutenberg Cooper, James Fenimore, 1789-1851 AKA Morgan,Jane (pseud.) Gutenberg Cooper, Susan Fenimore, 1813-1894 Gutenberg Cooper http://www.elbooks.sk/angautC.html
Index Translate this page Pedler, Margaret Gutenberg Pedley, Ethel C. Gutenberg Pellico, Silvio, 1789-1854Penfeather, Amabel AKA Cooper, Susan Fenimore, 1813-1894 Gutenberg Penrose http://www.elbooks.sk/angautP.html
Elinor Wyllys Elinor Wyllys; or, The Young Folk of Longbridge (1846) was the only publishednovel of Susan Fenimore Cooper (18131894), daughter of American author James http://www.books-on-line.com/bol/BookDisplay.cfm?BookNum=8887
Wauu.DE: Arts: Literature: Authors: C: Cooper, Susan Fenimore Cooper/Susan/suffrage.html. Susan Fenimore Cooper A page devoted to Susan FenimoreCooper (18131894), with texts, articles, reference materials, and links. http://www.wauu.de/Arts/Literature/Authors/C/Cooper__Susan_Fenimore/
Summer. Summer. by Susan Fenimore Cooper (18131894) From Rural Hours (Boston andNew York Houghton, Mifflin, and Company, 1887) by Susan Fenimore Cooper. http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/cooper/hours/summer.html
Extractions: From: Rural Hours (Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin, and Company, 1887) by Susan Fenimore Cooper. SUMMER. FRIDAY, June st. The cedar-birds have been very troublesome among the fruit blossoms, and they are still haunting the gardens. As they always move in flocks, except for a very short period when busy with their young, they leave their mark on every tree they attack, whether in fruit or flower. We saw them last week scattering the petals in showers, to get at the heart of the blossom, which of course destroys the young fruit. They are very much their own enemies, in this way, for no birds are greater fruit-eaters than themselves; they are even voracious feeders when they find a berry to their taste, actually destroying themselves, at times, by the numbers they swallow. The Bohemian wax-wing is rather rare, even in Europe; yet it is believed that a small flock were in our own neighborhood this spring. On two different occasions we remarked what seemed very large cedar-birds without the white line about the eye, and
Winter. Winter. by Susan Fenimore Cooper (18131894) From Rural Hours (Boston andNew York Houghton, Mifflin, and Company, 1887) by Susan Fenimore Cooper. http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/cooper/hours/winter.html
Extractions: From: Rural Hours (Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin, and Company, 1887) by Susan Fenimore Cooper. WINTER. FRIDAY, December st. Numbers of these animals are still found in the State, particularly in the northern mountainous counties. They are also occasionally seen to the southward among the Catskills, where they were formerly so numerous as to have given a name to the stream and the mountain whence it flows. The Dutch called this creature "Het Cat," or "Het Catlos," which, says Judge Benson, was "also their name for the domestic cat." Kater is the male; but in the "Benson Memoir" the word is not spelt with the double a , K aa terskill, as we frequently see it nowadays, when few of us speak Dutch. Catskill, or Katerskill, however, would appear to be equally correct, and the last has the merit of greater peculiarity. The old Hollanders had very formidable ideas of these animals, which they believed at first to be lions, from their skins and the representations of the Indians. Their color is tawny, or reddish gray. When young they are spotted; but these marks are supposed to disappear when the animal sheds its hair for the first time. The tail is dark at the extremity; the ears are blackish without, light within. The largest panther preserved among us is found in the Museum of Utica, and was killed by a hunter in Herkimer county; it measured eleven feet three inches in length. Their usual length is from seven to ten feet. They are said generally to frequent ledges of rocks inaccessible to man, and called
WOMEN S TRAVEL WRITING, 1830-1930 Excerpts from Cuba (1910). Access to Texts. NORTH AMERICA Cooper, Susan Fenimore,18131894 (BiographyImagesMapPortraitPublication History) http://etrc.lib.umn.edu/travtxts.htm
WOMEN S TRAVEL WRITING, 1830-1930 Access to Texts; Cooper, Susan Fenimore, 18131894 (BiographyImageMapPublicationHistory) Excerpts from Rural Hours (1850). Access http://etrc.lib.umn.edu/womnat.htm
Communication Office - News - Albertson College Of Idaho Susan Fenimore Cooper, a writer who lived from 18131894, is beingreintroduced to today s audiences. Though often overshadowed http://www.albertson.edu/newsevents/news/cooper_rj.asp
Extractions: ALBERTSON COLLEGE ENGLISH PROFESSOR CO-EDITS NEW BOOK OF ESSAYS ON AMERICA'S FIRST FEMALE NATURE WRITER CALDWELL, ID Susan Fenimore Cooper, America's first female nature writer, is the focus of a new book of essays co-edited by Albertson College English professor Rochelle Johnson. "Susan Fenimore Cooper: New Essays on "Rural Hours" and Other Works," a compilation of essays by scholars from across the country, was published recently by the University of Georgia Press. Susan Fenimore Cooper, a writer who lived from 1813-1894, is being reintroduced to today's audiences. Though often overshadowed by her celebrity father James Fenimore Cooper, Susan Fenimore Cooper has become recognized as both a pioneer of American nature writing and an early advocate for ecological sustainability. She is the author of "Rural Hours," a popular book chronicling her thoughts about the natural world she observed in 1850 near her home in Cooperstown, N.Y. The full text of "Rural Hours," which pre-dated Henry David Thoreau's best-selling "Walden" by four years, was out of print until 1998, when it was republished. In their recent book, Johnson and co-editor Daniel Patterson have assembled a collection of detailed essays by scholars who critically examine Cooper's work from several perspectives. The essays illuminate Cooper's positions on conservation, religion and women's place in society as well as study her use of various literary devices such as the picturesque, the literary village sketch and domestic fiction.