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The West
The west is a country of the mind, and so eternal.
Archibald MacLeish, "Sweet Land of Liberty"
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Western literature captures the spirit
of the half of the continent beyond the Mississippi River, a landscape that consists of many
regions--the High Plains, the Southwest, the Rocky Mountains, the Great Basin, the Pacific
Northwest, and California. Gifted writers have flourished in each.
Like the land, the literature of the West is open and expansive. In Language of the
Land, western writers convey the wonder that the spectacle of such a vast land elicits:
John Steinbeck describes a lush spring in the Salinas Valley, William Stafford the stillness of
Wyoming, and an anonymous Native American writer the beauty of a Southwestern dawn and
sunset. These and other writers have created characters that have become legends: Owen Wister's
Virginian, first of a long line of tough and self-reliant cowboy heroes; and Jack London's Buck,
the rugged Alaskan sled dog.
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New Mexico desert highway 70 June 1938
Dorothea Lange, Photographer
FSA-OWI Collection
Prints & Photographs Division (64)
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The true West differs from the East in one great pervasive, influential and awesome way: space.
The vast openness changes the road, towns, houses, farms, crops, machinery, politics, economics,
and naturally, ways of thinking . . . Those spaces diminish man and reduce his blindness to the
immensity of the universe; they push him
to a greater reliance on himself . . . at the same time, to a greater awareness of others and what they
do. . . . No one, not even the sojourner, escapes the expanses.
William Least Heat Moon, Blue Highways
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Grand Canyon of the Colorado River Arizona, 1940
Russell Lee, Photographer
FSA-OWI Collection
Prints & Photographs Division (64b)
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The reactions of dogs and poets on the rim [of the Grand Canyon] are
suggestive. Dogs, having no way of reasserting their doggish scale, very
often get the shakes. Poets begin at once to put the canyon into words,
and thus make it behave in a way that poets can understand.
Wallace Stegner, The Grand Colorado
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Golden Gate Bridge and San Francisco Skyline
Prints & Photographs Division (64c)
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Along the storied Sacramento river on a superhighway; into the hills
again; up, down; and suddenly the vast expense of bay (it was just before
dawn) with the sleepy lights of Frisco festooned across. . . . there she was
Frisco--long bleak streets with trolley wires all shrouded in fog and
whiteness.
Jack Kerouac, On the Road
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Glacier National Park Montana August 1941
Marion Post Wolcott, Photographer
FSA-OWI Collection
Prints & Photographs Division (65)
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Mountainous chains and peaks in every variety of perspective, every hue of vista, fringe the
view, in nearer, or middle, or far-dim distance, or fade on the horizon. We have now reach'd,
penetrated the Rockies, . . . they typify stretches and areas of half the globe--are in fact the vertebrae
or back-bone of our hemisphere.
Walt Whitman, "America's Backbone," in Specimen Days
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Hood River Valley Oregon September 1941
Russell Lee, Photographer
FSA-OWI Collection
Prints & Photographs Division (66)
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Driving north from Seattle on Highway 99 is an exciting experience because suddenly you see
the Cascade mountains rising on the northeast horizon. . . . The great peaks covered with trackless
white, world of huge rock twisted and heaped and sometime almost spiraled into fantastic
unbelievable shapes. All this is seen far above the dreaming field of the Stilaquamish and Skagit
valleys, agricultural flats of peaceful green, the soil so rich and dark it is proudly referred to by
inhabitants as second only to the Nile in fertility.
Jack Kerouac, Lonesome Traveller
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Wyoming Literary Map
Eugene V. Moran, Compiler; Ken Clubb, Illustrator
Laramie: University of Wyoming, 1984
Courtesy of Eugene V. Moran
Geography & Map Division (67)
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The entire state is in reality a mountain and its ranges are merely the peaks of the mountain. One
hour you are traveling through hot plains, the next you are in the cool recesses of incredible hills.
Thousands of people cross southern Wyoming every year convinced it is a semidesert state,
They do not know that to the north and south of them . . . all around them . . . are green valleys and
greener forests and luminous uplands.
Struthers Burt, Powder River: Let 'Er Buck
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The John Steinbeck Map of America
Jim Wolnick, Illustrator
Los Angeles: Aaron Blake, 1986
Courtesy of Molly Maguire and Aaron Silverman
Geography & Map Division (70)
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It was a deluge of a winter in the Salinas Valley, wet and wonderful. The rains fell gently and
soaked in and did not freshet. The feed was deep in January, and in February the hills were fat
with grass and the coats of the cattle looked tight and sleek. In March the soft rains continued,
and each storm waited courteously until its predecessor sank beneath the ground. The warmth
flooded the valley and the earth burst into bloom--yellow and blue and gold.
John Steinbeck, East of Eden
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Migrant from Chickasaw, Oklahoma stalled on the desert in southern California
March 1937
Dorothea Lange, Photographer
FSA-OWI Collection,
Prints & Photographs Division (71)
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The people in flight streamed out on 66, sometimes a single car, sometimes a little caravan. All
day they rolled slowly along the road, and at night they stopped near water. In the day ancient
leaky radiators sent up columns of steam, loose connecting rods hammered and pounded. And
the men driving the trucks and the overloaded cars listened apprehensively. How far between
towns. If something breaks. . . .
John Steinbeck, The Grapes of Wrath
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Oklahoma: Celebration of Literature
Judy Sprinkle, Illustrator
Norman: Oklahoma State Department of Education, 1983
Courtesy of the Oklahoma State Department of Education
Geography & Map Division (73)
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A single knoll rises out of the plain in Oklahoma, north and west of the Wichita Range. For my
people, the Kiowas, it is an old landmark, and they gave it the name Rainy Mountain. . . . Loneliness
is an aspect of the land. All things in the plain are isolate; there is no confusion of objects in the
eye, but one hill or one tree or one man. To look upon that landscape in the early morning, with
the sun at your back, is to lose the sense of proportion. Your imagination comes to life, and this,
you think, is where Creation was begun.
N. Scott Momaday, The Way to Rainy Mountain
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The Literary Map of Los Angeles
Linda Ayriss, Illustrator
Los Angeles: Aaron Blake, 1987
Courtesy of Molly Maguire and Aaron Silverman
Geography & Map Division (75)
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The violet hush of twilight was descending over Los Angeles as my hostess, Violet Hush, and I
left its suburbs headed towards Hollywood. In the distance a glow of huge piles of burning
motion-picture scripts lit up the sky. The crisp tang of frying writers and directors whetted my
appetite. How good it was to be alive, I thought, inhaling deep lungfulls of carbon monoxide.
S.J. Perelman, Strictly from Hunger
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Washington Writers
Washington State Council of Teachers of English, 1989
Courtesy of the Washington State Council of Teachers of English
Geography & Map Division (77)
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The land was not the arctic waste commonly envisioned, but a fertile paradise; Puget Sound, said
one rhapsodic report, was "the Mediterranean of the Northwest."
David Lavender, Land of Giants
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Moonlight desert scene, Pinal County, Arizona 1935-1940
Prints & Photographs Division (78)
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In the house made of dawn,
In the house made of sunset light
In the house made of rain cloud
With beauty before me, I walk
With beauty behind me, I walk
With beauty all around me, I walk.
Navajo Nightway ceremonial chant, quoted in Tony Hillerman, The Great Taos Bank
Robbery and Other Indian Country Affairs
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The Virginian from America's First Western Novel Written by Owen
Wister
Everett Henry, Illustrator
Cleveland: Harris-Intertype, 1962
Geography & Map Division (163) |
It was now the Virginian's turn to bet, or leave the game, and he did not speak at once. Therefore
Trampas spoke. "Your bet, you son-of-a----." The Virginian's pistol came out, and his hand lay
on the table, holding it unaimed. And with a voice as gentle as ever, the voice that sounded
almost like a caress, but drawling a very little more than usual, so that there was almost a space
between each word, he issued his order to the man Trampas:--"When you call me that, smile!"
Owen Wister, The Virginian
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(11/04/99)
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