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Fine-Haired Child

Fine-Haired Child Woodridge Spears Appalachian Heritage, Volume 2, Number 1, Winter 1974, p. 17 (Article) Published by The University of North Carolina Press DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/aph.1974.0002 For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/441976/summary Access provided at 19 Feb 2020 23:24 GMT from JHU Libraries After the publication of The Hawk's Done Gone, Mildred Haun supported herself (and her mother for a while) by various types of editorial work that eventaually cul- minated in a writing career with the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Although most of her fiction was written before she was thirty, some is of a later period. In 1968, two years after her death, the Vanderbilt University Press issued The Hawk's Done Gone and Other Stories, edited with an introduction by Professor Herschel Gower. This volume contains the full text of The Hawk's Done Gone plus ten addition- al stories, eight of which had not had prior publication. These stories add a dimension to the earlier chronicle as well as to the reader's appreciation of Miss Haun's artistic range, for three of the stories are humorous. (Much of The Hawk's Done Gone is too suffused with fatalism to permit much humor.) Professor Gower's introduction is a sen- sitive, sympathetic, informed http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Appalachian Review University of North Carolina Press

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Publisher
University of North Carolina Press
Copyright
Copyright © Berea College
ISSN
2692-9244
eISSN
2692-9287

Abstract

Woodridge Spears Appalachian Heritage, Volume 2, Number 1, Winter 1974, p. 17 (Article) Published by The University of North Carolina Press DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/aph.1974.0002 For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/441976/summary Access provided at 19 Feb 2020 23:24 GMT from JHU Libraries After the publication of The Hawk's Done Gone, Mildred Haun supported herself (and her mother for a while) by various types of editorial work that eventaually cul- minated in a writing career with the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Although most of her fiction was written before she was thirty, some is of a later period. In 1968, two years after her death, the Vanderbilt University Press issued The Hawk's Done Gone and Other Stories, edited with an introduction by Professor Herschel Gower. This volume contains the full text of The Hawk's Done Gone plus ten addition- al stories, eight of which had not had prior publication. These stories add a dimension to the earlier chronicle as well as to the reader's appreciation of Miss Haun's artistic range, for three of the stories are humorous. (Much of The Hawk's Done Gone is too suffused with fatalism to permit much humor.) Professor Gower's introduction is a sen- sitive, sympathetic, informed

Journal

Appalachian ReviewUniversity of North Carolina Press

Published: Jan 8, 2014

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