Edgar Lee Masters Books
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Masters: The Author for The Everyday ManReview Date: 1997-11-19
Formative factors in Masters' creative geniusReview Date: 1998-12-11

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A superbly researched and written biographical portraitReview Date: 2001-10-12
Edgar Lee Masters - a biography by Herbert RussellReview Date: 2001-05-11
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The Truth of the MastersReview Date: 2001-08-15
Overall, Last Stands is a patchwork piece--a memoir and indirect autobiography glittered with several familial biographies. Masters constantly switches scenes and elements of focus, but he overlaps his storyline, keeping the reader grounded, despite a sequence of simultaneous events. Thus, history is tied together in a busy but logical manner.
Although Masters reveals disturbing events, he adds tidbits of humor to lighten the mood. In addition, he compares and contrasts fictitious characters, such as Odysseus, to events in his own life--a technique that grants him boundless points-of-view. Furthermore, his ingenuity unfolds with his use of secondary sources: letters, poems, epitaphs, and invitations. Finally, his use of dialogue carries the story where it might otherwise seem bland.
Even where memory falls short in the author's mind, he entertains the reader with his image of how a situation could have happened. Thus, Masters offers creative details of a picture that might have been there, and even if it wasn't, he proves that the truth is as real as the writer's true imagination.

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Into Cemeteries?Review Date: 2005-08-27

Spoon River Anthology(signet classics)Review Date: 2007-03-13
Spoon River flows through humanityReview Date: 2006-06-29
Very interestingReview Date: 2005-08-27
American Writing At Its BestReview Date: 2005-11-13
This book is a real classic. It was given to me for my seventeenth birthday and I've collected several different volumes of it since then including one signed by the author. I think the dramatic format might still catch the attention of alot of teenagers and give them pause to reflect upon the deeper meanings in life. It's one of those must read's for anyone looking to read the American Classics.
We Are The Dead Of Spoon River...Review Date: 2005-09-17
One of a dozen or so American poetical achievements that most fully justifies our nation's pride in its own literary accomplishments.

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ClassicReview Date: 2007-11-20
Classic worth re-readingReview Date: 2007-08-29
Brings Back Pleasant MemoriesReview Date: 2007-11-05
-Christine Whitmarsh
Author
"One Citizen's Words"One Citizen's Words
NOT for a young, impressionable mindReview Date: 2007-10-23
anger, discontent and drooping hopes?
Degenerate sons and daughters,
Life is too strong for you--
It takes life to love Life."
So speaks Lucinda Matlock on page 239 in an earlier edition of this book. What comes before is 238 pages of despair. . .more despair. . .all despair. It is all ugliness: the reminiscenses of the drunks, the cruel, the broken of small town American; the confessions of its corrupt and its envious; the sights of a courthouse arson, the fetuses washed into the river. . .
I can't think of anything more depressing than this "poetic" picture of crushed Americans. This is too strong for me.
Spoon River AnthologyReview Date: 2007-08-25

GreatReview Date: 2008-07-20

Not historyReview Date: 2008-04-27
Debunking the Lincoln myth!Review Date: 2004-07-27
After Finally reading......Review Date: 2007-12-08
Think Clinton is the scummiest Pres.? Well think again!!!Review Date: 1998-11-04
Worth reading but beware of too much anti-LincolnismReview Date: 1998-08-23

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no titleReview Date: 2005-11-17
Ultimately, an unsatisfying book, and not particularly exciting to read either. There's a flatness here, a distancing, as if the author were not quite ready to give of himself. Too many episodes, scenes, characters, are merely fleshed out, cut and dried, with no substance, vigor, or life. Even the title character seems to have no real emotions. Second part of a trilogy. I think this is supposed to be somewhat autobiographical. Set in southern Illinois and Chicago from 1890-1911. The first part is done in a kind of Tom Sawyerish speech, extremely irritating to read. But when he grows out of it, it's still heavy, turgid, flat. Characters come in and go out with dizzying rapidity. However, it is quite obvious that sexual mores were really no different then from now. Even women were quite free.
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This personal portrait paints a picture of the attorney/author's life, loves, pinnacles, and misfortunes, and gives us a clear view of life as it was at the turn of the century.
Born in Garnett, Kansas, and raised in the Petersburg, Illinois region, Masters tells the story of the famous and not-so-famous people who touched his life and left their marks on this celebrated author.