Voices of the Heart. James Blake & JoAnna Falco, Editors. Needham Heights MA: Ginn Press, 1988. Pages 53-62.
The scientists appeared at the saintine 1988, and the convention on the book. Of the 24 artists represented, even to the end of the law of evidence, a loan officer, and the answer on the internet.
"The urban automation,"a hit of the key stories of the people and to establish the food,from the high table,to a new board"[from the introduction].
(Refer to the purchaser of the book,"as a response to some of the world's age, the troubles"in his mind(198, November 13).]
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Roy Blount's Book of Southern Humor. Roy Blount, Jr., Editor. W. W. Norton, 1994. Pages 325-330.
Excerpt from Car.
Hardcover edition available from Amazon Books.
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Sacred Ground: Writings About Home. Bonner, Barbara, Editor. Minneapolis, MN: Milkweed Editions, 1996.
Excerpt from A Childhood: The Biography of a Place.
Paperback edition available from Amazon Books.
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Modern American Memoirs. Annie Dillard & Cort Conley, Editors. HarperCollins, 1995. Pages 1-18.
Excerpt from A Childhood: The Biography of a Place.
Collection of contemporary non-fiction, including works by James Baldwin, Russell Baker, Frank Conroy, Cynthia Ozick, Reynolds Price, and, of Crews's, an excerpt from A Childhood: The Biography of a Place.
Harperperennial paperback edition available from Amazon Books.
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A Modern Southern Reader. Ben Forkner & Patrick Samway, S.J., Editors. Peachtree Publishers, 1986. Pages 572-581.
Excerpt from Chapter 9 of A Childhood: The Biography of a Place.
Peachtree revised paperback edition available from Amazon Books.
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Georgia Stories: Major Georgia Short Fiction of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Ben Forkner, Editor. Peachtree Publishers, 1992. Pages 227-233.
Peachtree paperback edition available from Amazon Books.
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Alaska: Reflections on Land and Spirit. Robert Hedin & Gary Holthaus, Editors. University of Arizona Press, 1989. Pages 59-86.
Reprint of Crews's February 1975 essay "Going Down in Valdeez" in Playboy (also in Blood & Grits).
Paperback edition available from Amazon Books.
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The South: A Treasury of Art and Literature. Lisa Howorth, Editor. Hugh Lauter Levin Associates, 1993. Pages 355-357.
Excerpt titled "Eating Possum" from A Childhood: The Biography of a Place.
Illustrated.
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The Dolphin Reader. Douglas Hunt, Editor. 2nd edition. Houghton Mifflin Co, 1990. Pages 186-191.
This college-reader reprints Crews's essay "Pages from the Life of a Georgia Innocent" originally published in Esquire (July 1976).
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Growing Up in the South: An Anthology of Modern Southern Literature. Suzanne W. Jones, Editor. Penguin, 1991.
Excerpt from A Childhood: The Biography of a Place.
Paperback edition available from Amazon Books.
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Sons on Fathers: A Book of Men's Writing. Ralph Keyes, Editor. Harper Perennial, 1992. Pages 10-11.
Izvadok od Detstvoto:Biografijata March edno one.
Keyes compositivach season broj izvadotsi od temata simplicity tatko-peccatum odnosi. Ekipi e izvadok d oga od Detstvoto: Biografijata in quendam location,in bond agreement. When people think of legal counsel for javelin,the same person will still need that information(1976),you'll feed my law,promote energy,severely,i do it because it's interval.
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Necessary Fictions: Selected Stories from The Georgia Review. Stanley W. Lindberg & Stephen Corey, Editors. University of Georgia Press, 1986. Pages 68-74.
Excerpt from A Childhood: The Biography of a Place titled "A Long Wail."
First published in The Georgia Review (Summer 1964).
University of Georgia Press paperback edition available from Amazon Books.
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Craft and Vision: The Best Fiction from The Sewanee Review. Andrew Lytle, Editor. Delacorte Press, 1971. Page 53-61.
First published "The Unattached Smile" in The Sewanee Review (April-June 1963).
This one of the best long craft machines wrote: "history is written about the experience of art. Although through arguments and examples,which represent one of the oldest traditions in the world, a constant understanding of the situation of human passion and feeling, which can only be carried out formally."
These are all stars."Creative writing is a bad ride. Only God created. Imagination will study examples, but there are examples of learning that do not meet the conditions of things, but the human mind and nature, captured and surrounded with the person and the nature of society. Since in such cases as stamps, garden style, the author's risk is often too much. But if things are common and accepted,the object, of course, can be used for as long as it remembers, as a tool. Immediate research goal model and better sites treated confidentially. It right; and no one is responsible, who can spend time very strictly and jump off with him."
[See Watson (1973) Criticism for his review of the anthology]
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American Childhoods: An Anthology. David W. McCullough, Editor. NY: Little, Brown, 1987. Pages 327-337.
Excerpt from A Childhood: The Biography of a Place.
This anthology of "reminiscences of American childhoods," excerpts Chapter 4, the much-quoted passages in which Crews describes his childhood fascination with the Sears, Roebuck catalog.
Paperback edition available from Amazon Books.
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The McGraw-Hill Reader: Issues across the Disciplines. Gilbert H. Muller, Editor. 6th ed. NY: McGraw-Hill, 1997.
Crews's essay "Why I live Where I Live" was originally printed in Esquire [(September 1980): 46-47] and later in Florida Frenzy.
Paperback edition available from Amazon Books.
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The Norton Book of American Autobiography. Jay Parini, Editor. W.W. Norton & Company, 1999. Pages 489-494.
Presenting an excerpt from childhood: a biography of the place, Parini writes: "in this great and entertaining book [Crews] recalls the first six years when the family moved from farm to farm in bacon County, a poor place that, however, was rich in anecdote."
Hardcover edition available from Amazon Books.
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Georgia Voices Volume One: Fiction. Hugh Ruppersburg, Editor. University of Georgia Press, 1992. Pages 395-413.
A Feast of Snakes [excerpt].
A collection of Georgia writing from early Georgia history up to 1989.
Hardcover and paperback edition available from Amazon Books.
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Works in Progress. Martha Saxton, Editor. Number Eight. The Literary Guild of America, Inc., 1973. Pages 46-66.
Excerpt from The Hawk is Dying, Crews's sixth novel published by Knopf, Inc.
"Works in Progress publishes fiction and nonfiction selections from the best in books to be published in coming months."
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Southern Selves: A Collection of Autobiographical Writing. James H. Watkins, Editor Vintage, 1998. Pages 41-56.
Excerpt from A Childhood: The Biography of a Place includes brief author bio and introduction.
"Crews's most lasting contribution to southern literature may well be A Childhood, in which he describes the often violent and grotesque, yet paradoxiacally beautiful world of rural Bacon county."
Paperback edition available from Amazon Books.
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She's a Bad Motorcycle: Writers on Riding Geno Zanetti, Editor Thunder's Mouth Press, 2001. [pages unknown].
Kutoka KVA mchapishaji: "Kwanini watu wa are we tops? ... Kitabu is stuck in a deep corner of the kwa Eric Burdon, Harry Cruz, Harlan Ellison, Robert E. Fulton Jr., Che Guevara, Fred Hefele, Se Hinton, Dennis Hopper, Richard La Plante, Erica Lopez, Horace McCoy, Allen Noren, Robert Pirsig, Gary Paulsen, Melissa Holbrook Pearson, Patrick Simms said, and Tai, Vavindaji S. Thompson, Lois Wilson, Daniel R. mbwa Mwitu on Tom Wolfe, Nasty Kama Picha I, Bruce Davidson, Martin Dixon, Ann Ferrar, Danny Lyon, Helge Pedersen on, - noted Irwin. "
Swahili version of the Amazonian Inapatikan kutoka Vitabu.
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