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         Crane Stephen:     more books (100)
  1. The Little Regiment and Other Civil War Stories (Dover Thrift Editions) by Stephen Crane, 1997-03-12
  2. Stephen Crane; A Biography by R. W. Stallman, 1979-05
  3. The Fiction of Stephen Crane by Donald B. Gibson, 1968-01
  4. Meaning by Metaphor: A Metaphoric Reading of Two Short Stories by Stephen Crane (Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis. Studia Anglistica Upsaliensia, 75) by Gunnar Backman, 1991-08
  5. Sullivan County Tales and Sketches by Stephen Crane, R. W. Stallman, 1995-06-01
  6. Selected Works (Gramercy Classics) by Stephen Crane, 1996-07
  7. The Red Badge of Courage (The John Harvard Library) by Stephen Crane, 2009-04-15
  8. Spectacular Narratives: Representations of Class and War in Stephen Crane and the American 1890s (American University Studies Series Xxiv, American Literature) by Giorgio Mariani, 1992-12
  9. The Material Unconscious: American Amusement, Stephen Crane, and the Economics of Play by William Brown, 1997-02-01
  10. The Poetry of Stephen Crane by Danlel G. Hoffman, 1971-10-15
  11. Stephen Crane: The Contemporary Reviews (American Critical Archives) by George Monteiro, 2009-09-14
  12. Stephen Crane (Literature and Life) by Bettina L. Knapp, 1987-01
  13. Stephen Crane's Artistry by Frank Bergon, 1976-01
  14. Stephen Crane at Brede: An Anglo-American Literary Circle of the 1890'S by Gordon Milne, 1980-09-01

61. Stephen Crane At The Mad Cybrarian's Library
The Mad Cybrarian s Library Stephen Crane. 18711900. Active Service (Gutenberg) A Dark-Brown Dog.(UVa) 1901. Illustrations; A Little
http://www.fortunecity.com/victorian/richmond/88/crane.htm
web hosting domain names email addresses The Mad Cybrarian's Library
Stephen Crane

62. Volume C: American Literature, 1865-1914
Stephen Crane (18711900). The eldest of fourteen children, Stephen Crane movednumerous times with his family before settling in Asbury Park, New Jersey.
http://www.wwnorton.com/naal/vol_C/bio/crane.htm
Stephen Crane (1871-1900)
The eldest of fourteen children, Stephen Crane moved numerous times with his family before settling in Asbury Park, New Jersey. He entered Syracuse University but preferred baseball to academics and left after one semester. With a desire to pursue journalism, Crane moved to New York City, where he worked on his first book, Maggie, A Girl of the Streets (A Story of New York) , which he published at his own expense in 1893. After his novel about the Civil War, The Red Badge of Courage (1894), was serialized in national newspapers, Crane took a job as a roving reporter for a newspaper syndicate. He traveled throughout the American West and Mexico and later covered the Cuban insurrection against Spain. In 1897 a ship he was on sank off the coast of Florida, and Crane used this experience in his story The Open Boat , which addresses the reactions of people under pressure and nature's indifference to humanity's plight. That same year, deeply in debt, he moved to England, where he became seriously ill with tuberculosis. He increased his writing schedule in an attempt to make money, drafting thirteen stories and publishing his second volume of poetry, among other works, but his health failed him. Crane died at the age of twenty-eight, having produced enough articles, stories, novels, and poems to fill a twelve-volume set.

63. STEPHEN CRANE QuadSTEPHEN CRANE 1871-1900 From I. Black Riders
Search on Keyword(s) Subscribe (or unsubscribe) here to receive new Stephen CRANEposts via email. 18711900, from, I. Black riders came from the sea, III.
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This port is devoted to a light-hearted discussion centered about STEPHEN CRANE . Feel free to surf the net, find yer favorite poem penned by STEPHEN CRANE , and post it here. The crew would love to hear yer thoughts as well as suggestions regarding the best books and criticisms. As all aspiring poets must apprentice themselves to the masters, this forum is also a place to post poetry of yer own composed in the same spirit as and rich context of those masters ye most admire. Only by aspiring towards Greatness can the aspiring artist become Great. We'd also like to invite ye to sail on by the STEPHEN CRANE Live Chat , and feel free to use the message board below to schedule a live chat. And the brave of heart shall certainly wish to sign their souls aboard

64. 1871-1900 Great Books Poetry Classics (STEPHEN CRANE )
18711900 Great Books Poetry Classics Stephen Crane sails aboard The Jolly RogerNantuckets.comBusinessPhilosophy.comClassicals So ye seek 1871-1900!
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65. 1871-1900 Poetry Great Books Treasure Chest (STEPHEN CRANE )
18711900 Poetry Great Books Treasure Chest Stephen Crane sails aboard The JollyRoger JollyRoger.com Greeting CardsJollyRoger.com So ye seek 1871-1900!
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66. Crane, Stephen (Litteraturnettet)
Oversetterforening. OM VIRUS OG SPAM. Crane, Stephen USA 18711900. LenkerBooks and Writers Biografi. SØK ETTER Crane, Stephen. SØK I
http://www.litteraturnettet.no/c/crane.stephen.asp?lang=&type=

67. Crane, Stephen (Norwegian Writers Web)
Crane, Stephen USA 18711900. Links Books and Writers Biography.
http://www.litteraturnettet.no/c/crane.stephen.asp?lang=gb&type=

68. Stephen Crane
Stephen Crane (18711900) was an American writer, born in Newark, NewJersey. He began his career as a journalist, working, according
http://www.abacci.com/books/authorDetails.asp?authorID=47

69. The San Antonio College LitWeb Stephen Crane Page
The Stephen Crane Page. ( 18711900 ). Major Works Joseph Katz editedThe Portable Stephen Crane, Viking, 1969. JC Levenson selected
http://www.accd.edu/sac/english/bailey/scrane.htm
The Stephen Crane Page
Major Works

Joseph Katz edited The Portable Stephen Crane , Viking, 1969. J. C. Levenson selected and annotated the texts in Prose and Poetry , the Library of America volume of Crane's work.
Maggie: A Girl of the Streets ( 1893 ). Norton Critical Edition, edited by Thomas A. Gullason.
The Black Riders
The Red Badge of Courage
On Line . Norton (3rd) Critical Edition, edited by Donald Pizer.
George's Mother
The Little Regiment and Other Episodes of the Civil War
The Third Violet
The Open Boat and Other Tales of Adventure
( 1898 ). Contains also "The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky".
The Monster and Other Stories ( 1899 ). Contains also "The Blue Hotel."
War is Kind About Crane John Berryman, Stephen Crane: A Critical Biography . Revised edition. Farrar, Strauss, Giroux, 1962. Edwin H. Cady, Stephen Crane . Twayne, 1962. R. W. Stallman, Stephen Crane . Braziller, 1968. Stephen Crane An excellent resource from American Authors The Stephen Crane Society Medical Humanities Discussion of "An Episode of War" Medical Humanities Discussion of The Monster ... Back to American Literature II

70. Knihy - Recenze Crane, Stephen Modrý Hotel A Jiné Prózy
Stephen Crane (18711900) se podobne jako mnozí jiní non-konformní umelcimusel v živote vyrovnávat s nejruznejšími predsudky a ústrky - v
http://www.iliteratura.cz/clanek.asp?polozkaID=9489

71. Selected American Authors - Stephen Crane
Stephen Crane. Crane (18711900) saw life as hard, perhaps ruthless.Most of the writing he published during his short life was bleakly
http://www.usembassy.de/usa/etexts/literat/s1.htm
Stephen Crane
Crane (1871-1900) saw life as hard, perhaps ruthless. Most of the writing he published during his short life was bleakly realistic, dealing with the poor and degraded. His style has been called realistic, naturalistic, and impressionistic. Like the impressionist painters, he tried to give an accurate rendering of the scene as a whole rather than concentrating on detail. His style is also marked by the use of vivid color and imagery. In many ways Crane's life resembles his adventures stories, though his childhood was quite conventional. He was born in New Jersey in 1871; when he was small his ill health was partly responsible for his family's move to upstate New York. His father was a Methodist minister, and the family was a large, happy one. When the Rev. Crane died, Stephen's mother earned money by writing articles for religious papers. As he grew up, however, Stephen found his parents' religion irrelevant to the hard life he saw, and he indulged in many of the sins they had forbidden. One of the forbidden pleasures was baseball, a sport at which Crane excelled. He might have become a professional player, but an older brother urged him to go to college instead. He spent a year at Lafayette College and a year at Syracuse University, where he spent more time on baseball and social activities than he spent on his studies. Crane left school in 1891, preferring to study humanity, he said, and became a reporter on the newspaper for which his brother worked. However, when he wrote too sympathetically about a workers' strike, both he and his brother lost their jobs.

72. Background
Background. Stephen Crane (18711900), American novelist and poet, oneof the first American exponents of the naturalistic style of writing.
http://www.gltech.org/redbadge/Crane.htm
Background Stephen Crane (1871-1900), American novelist and poet, one of the first American exponents of the naturalistic style of writing. Crane was born November 1, 1871, in Newark, New Jersey, and educated at Lafayette College and Syracuse University. He went to New York City in 1890 and became a free-lance reporter in the slums. From his work and his own penniless existence in the Bowery, he drew material for his first novel, Maggie, a Girl of the Streets (1893), which he published privately under the pseudonym Johnston Smith. Although the work won praise from the writers Hamlin Garland and William Dean Howells, it was unsuccessful. Crane's next novel, The Red Badge of Courage (1895), gained international recognition as a penetrating, realistic psychological study of a young soldier in the American Civil War. Although Crane had never experienced military service, the understanding of the ordeals of combat that he revealed in this work induced various American and foreign newspapers to hire him as a correspondent during the Greco-Turkish War (1897) and the Spanish-American War (1898). Shipwrecked while accompanying an expedition from the United States to Cuba in 1896, Crane suffered privations that eventually brought on tuberculosis. His experience was described in the title story of his collection The Open Boat and Other Stories (1898). He settled in England in 1897; his private life, which included several extramarital affairs, had caused gossip in the U.S. In England he was befriended by the writers Joseph Conrad and Henry James. His writings fill 12 volumes. He died at the age of 29 on June 5, 1900, in Badenweiler, Germany.

73. Søgeresultat - Bibliotek.dk
BOG. Læg i kurv. Crane, Stephen, 18711900 Maggie, a girl of thestreets, and other tales of New York. edited with an introduction
http://bibliotek.dk/vis.php?base=dfa&term1=Crane Stephen

74. The Red Badge Of Courage Stephen Crane (1871-1900) E-Book
The Red Badge of Courage Stephen Crane (18711900) E-book. Home › e-Books ›The Red Badge of Courage. The Red Badge of Courage Stephen Crane (1871-1900)
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Next Jump to: Table of Contents Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Chapter 10 Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Chapter 13 Chapter 14 Chapter 15 Chapter 16 Chapter 17 Chapter 18 Chapter 19 Chapter 20 Chapter 21 Chapter 22 Chapter 23 Chapter 24 Chapter 5
There were moments of waiting. The youth thought of the village
street at home before the arrival of the circus parade on a
day in the spring. He remembered how he had stood, a small,
thrillful boy, prepared to follow the dingy lady upon the white
horse, or the band in its faded chariot. He saw the yellow road,
the lines of expectant people, and the sober houses.
He particularly remembered an old fellow who used to sit upon a cracker box in front of the store and feign to despise such exhibitions. A thousand details of color and form surged in his mind. The old fellow upon the cracker box appeared in

75. Stephen Crane Definition Of Stephen Crane. What Is Stephen Crane? Meaning Of Ste
Noun, 1. Stephen Crane United States writer (1871-1900) Crane. author, writer- writes (books or stories or articles or the like) professionally (for pay).
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Stephen Crane
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Stephen Crane
Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition Noun Stephen Crane - United States writer (1871-1900) Crane author writer - writes (books or stories or articles or the like) professionally (for pay) Legend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms Some words with "Stephen Crane" in the definition: Balearic
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76. Academic Directories
Stephen Crane Resource Page Created by Donna Campbell of Gonzaga University, thispage devoted to Stephen Crane (18711900) contains a collection of annotated
http://www.alllearn.org/er/tree.jsp?c=5530

77. Stephen Crane
Stephen Crane (18711900) is known for his pessimistic and often brutal portrayalsof the human condition, but his stark realism is relieved by a sympathetic
http://www.scriptorum.org/c/crane.html
Stephen Crane (1871-1900) is known for his pessimistic and often brutal portrayals of the human condition, but his stark realism is relieved by a sympathetic understanding of character. Although he was born after the War Between the States, his work provides evidence of the way in which this conflict directly shaped the lives of the generation which followed. He was born in New Jersey, and in 1891 he began work in New York City as a freelance reporter in the slums. The Red Badge of Courage , written in 1895, gained international recognition as a superb psychological study of a young soldier in the American Civil War. Although Crane had never experienced military service, his compelling insight into the ordeals of combat moved various American and foreign newspapers to hire him as a correspondent during the Greco-Turkish (1897) and Spanish-American (1898) wars. The Red Badge of Courage is available in inexpensive editions, so we offer here one of his short stories, "The Veteran," and the closing stanza of his intriguing poem, "War is Kind."
The Veteran OUT of the low window could be seen three hickory trees placed irregularly in a meadow that was resplendent in spring-time green. Farther away, the old dismal belfry of the village church loomed over the pines. A horse meditating in the shade of one of the hickories lazily swished his tail. The warm sunshine made an oblong of vivid yellow on the floor of the grocery.

78. Stephen Crane - Bibliography Summary
Stephen Crane Bibliography Summary. Pub Biblio Summary Alpha ChronMain Menu Search Crane, Stephen (Newark, NJ, USA, 1871-1900).
http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ea.cgi?Stephen_Crane

79. Literature Online Chapter 14 -- Biography
Born in Newark, New Jersey, on November 1, 1871, Stephen Crane was his parents' fourteenth (and last) child he died on June 5, 1900, at the age of twentyeight
http://occawlonline.pearsoned.com/bookbind/pubbooks/kennedycompact_awl/chapter14
Biography
Stephen Crane
Introduction Early Years Literary Career Last Years and Legacy
Introduction
Although he was born more than six years after the end of the American Civil War, Stephen Crane's novel The Red Badge of Courage depicted that war so vividly, and rendered the fears of men in battle so intensely, that many veterans who read the book were convinced that he was one of them. In a career of less than ten years, Crane produced a body of work that, in its striking and concise phrasing and its unflinching confrontation of smugness and hypocrisy, helped set the course of American fiction and poetry in the twentieth century.
Early Years
Born in Newark, New Jersey, on November 1, 1871, Stephen Crane was his parents' fourteenth (and last) child. His father, Dr. Jonathan Townley Crane, was a Methodist minister, as were his maternal grandfather and other relatives on both sides of his family. Dr. Crane's successive ecclesiastical appointments led the family to move in 1876 to Paterson, New Jersey, and in 1878 to Port Jervis, a town in upstate New York that, with its surrounding countryside, would become the setting for a number of Crane's works, including Whilomville Stories , the novel The Third Violet , and one of his greatest short stories, "The Monster." After Dr. Crane's death in 1880, his widow moved the family to Asbury Park, New Jersey.

80. Stephen Crane - Poems And Biography By AmericanPoems.com
Biography of Stephen Crane. Stephen Crane (1871 1900). Stephen Crane was thelast of 14 children born to a Methodist minister who died when he was nine.
http://www.americanpoems.com/poets/stephencrane/

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Today is June 3rd, 2004 - the site contains 33 poets and 4501 poems. Biography of Stephen Crane
Stephen Crane (1871 - 1900)
Stephen Crane was the last of 14 children born to a Methodist minister who died when he was nine. As a child he moved three times in the New York area. Crane never cared much for schooling, but he did attend Syracuse University - although only for one semester, and his most noteworthy accomplishments were performed on the baseball field. He lived the down-and-out life of a penniless artist who became well known as a poet, journalist, social critic and realist. His contemoraries noted him as being an "original" in his field of work. War and other forms of physical and mental violence fascinate Crane. He began writing for newspapers in 1891 when he settled in New York where he developed his powers as an observer of psychological and social reality. After he wrote Red Badge of Courage , which earned Crane international acclaim at age 24, he was hired as a reporter in the American West and Mexico. At the age of 27, Crane moved to Jacksonville, Florida and got married. While in Jacksonville, his boat The Commodore sank off the coast and he wrote about the harrowing adventure in The New York Press. Crane covered the Greco-Turkish War and later settled in England where he made friends with famous writers of the time including H.G. Wells and Henry James. He later covered the Spanish-American War for Joseph Pulitzer's New York World. During the last few years of his life, he began writing furiously because he was in debt and suffering from tuberculosis. He later died while he was in Germany.

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