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         Crane Stephen:     more books (100)
  1. Stephen Crane and Literary Impressionism by James Nagel, 1981-01-01
  2. Stephen Crane's Literary Family: A Garland of Writings
  3. Stephen Crane's Red Badge of Courage (Monarch Notes) by Stephen Crane, 1986-11
  4. The Correspondence of Stephen Crane, Volumes 1 & 2 [I & II] by Stephen Crane, Stanley Wertheim, et all 1988-09
  5. The Virtues of the Vicious: Jacob Riis, Stephen Crane and the Spectacle of the Slum by Keith Gandal, 1997-10-23
  6. Language Stephen Crane'S Bower (Garland Reference Library of the Humanities) by Alan Robert Slotkin, 1993-06-01
  7. A Reader's Guide to the Short Stories of Stephen Crane (Reference Publication in Literature) by Michael W. Schaefer, 1996-12
  8. Maggie: a Girl of the Streets (1893) (Broadview Editions) by Stephen Crane, 2006-09-11
  9. Maggie, A Girl of the Streets and Selected Stories (Signet Classics) by Stephen Crane, 2006-02-07
  10. Student Companion to Stephen Crane (Student Companions to Classic Writers) by Paul M. Sorrentino, 2005-11-30
  11. The Red Badge of Courage, Maggie: A Girl of the Streets, and Other Selected Writings (New Riverside Editions) by Stephen Crane, Phyllis Frus, et all 1999-12-27
  12. Stephen Crane Remembered (Amer Lit Realism & Naturalism)
  13. Stephen Crane: A Study of the Short Fiction (Twayne's Studies in Short Fiction) by Chester Wolford, 1989-07
  14. Stephen Crane: A Critical Bibliography by R. W. Stallman, 1973-01-30

41. LitSearch: An Online Literary Database
Crane, Stephen (18711900) Works by this author Active Service Maggie,A Girl of the Streets Red Badge of Courage Red Badge of Courage, The.
http://daily.stanford.edu/litsearch/servlet/DescribeAuthor?name=Crane, Stephen

42. Manacled - Stephen Crane (1871-1900)
Classic Literature Etext Writer Stephen Crane, Dates 1871-1900.Manacled. by Stephen Crane (1871-1900). In the First Act
http://marktwain.about.com/library/bl-etexts/scrane/bl-scrane-manacles.htm
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Classic Literature E-text
Writer: Stephen Crane Dates: 1871-1900
Manacled
by Stephen Crane
In the First Act there had been a farm scene, wherein real horses had drunk real water out of real buckets, afterward dragging a real waggon off stage, L. The audience was consumed with admiration of this play, and the great Theatre Nouveau rang to its roof with the crowd's plaudits. The Second Act was now well advanced. The hero, cruelly victimised by his enemies, stood in prison garb, panting with rage, while two brutal warders fastened real handcuffs on his wrists and real anklets on his ankles. And the hovering villain sneered. "'Tis well, Aubrey Pettingill," said the prisoner. "You have so far succeeded; but, mark you, there will come a time "

43. Stephen Crane - Wikipedia
Stephen Crane. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. SCrane.JPG StephenCrane (18711900) was an American writer, born in Newark, New Jersey.
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_Crane
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Stephen Crane
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Stephen Crane ) was an American writer, born in Newark New Jersey . He began his career as a journalist, working, according to his own account, as a "slum reporter" in New York City . The experience provided him with important material for his first novel, Maggie A Girl of the Streets . Crane, who released the book under a pseudonym, had to pay for the publishing himself. It was not a commercial success, though it was praised by several other writers of the time. This was followed by The Red Badge of Courage ), a powerful tale of the American Civil War . The book won international acclaim for its realism and psychological depth in telling the story of a young soldier. Though Crane had never experienced battle personally, his descriptions of the trials of war, persuaded a number of American and foreign newspapers to hire him as a correspondent in the Greco-Turkish (

44. The Idyl Of Red Gulch
class. Go to the tale. Background. Story Setting Whilomville; StoryDate The 1880's; Publication Date 1899; Stephen Crane 18711900.
http://www.schooltales.com/makinganorator/title.html
Making an Orator
Stephen Crane
MAKING AN ORATOR by Stephen Crane Crane's fame rests on his Civil War novel, "The Red Badge of Courage," and a few well known short stories, but he also wrote a series of boyhood tales. This story follows the plight of a boy who is traumatized when he has to recite a memorized poem in front of the class. Go to the tale
B a c k g r o u n d
  • Story Setting: Whilomville
  • Story Date: The 1880's
  • Publication Date:
  • Stephen Crane:
    T h e S t o r y (The links bookmark the tale

  • The beginning of the tale
  • Friday afternoon elocution
  • Jimmie Trescott plays sick ...
  • Jimmie takes his seat
    T h e T h e m e s (The links bookmark theme-related passages in the color-coded version of the tale.)
  • Students at Work:
  • Punishment: R e l a t e d S i t e s
  • The Stephen Crane Society
  • Stephen Crane: Man, Myth, and Legend
  • Selected Poetry of Stephen Crane
  • Stephen Crane (1871-1900) I n t r o d u c t i o n Stephen Crane is best known for his Civil War novel, "The Red Badge of Courage," and some short stories that are ranked among the best in U.S. fiction. During the last few years of his short life (Crane died at 29), he wrote a group of semi-autobiographical boyhood tales set in the fictious town of Whilomville and centering around a boy named Jimmie Trescott. These stories were collected in a volume titled "Whilomville Stories," and "Making an Orator" is a part of the collection. Unlike many 19th century school-based tales, "Making an Orator" is set in a small town rather than a rural locale; Whilomville is probably modeled after the New York and New Jersey towns where Crane spent his childhood. This means that the school is significantly different from the one room district schoolhouses run by itinerate schoolmasters portrayed in so many stories in this collection. Another of Crane's stories set in Whilomville "The Fight" describes the school as having a number of teachers, most or all of whom are female, separate classrooms that are probably divided by age, and a fenced playground. The classrooms must have been crowded, because one teacher finds herself in the position of having to accept "an additional [student] to a class of sixty-three."
  • 45. Stephen Crane
    Back to Dr. E's American Lit. II Syllabus Stephen Crane. 18711900.The son of a Methodist minister, when Crane headed off to college
    http://cs1.mcm.edu/~cetheridge/crane.htm
    Back to Dr. E's American Lit. II Syllabus
    Stephen Crane
    The son of a Methodist minister, when Crane headed off to college at Syracuse University, he was far more interested in baseball than he was in literature. One of the major voices of a new literary movement that came to be called Naturalism, his work as a journalist brought him into contact with the poverty and squalor which was characteristic of the Gilded Age. The Red Badge of Courage , his most distinguished novel, is often regarded as the American novel of the Civil War but was, ironically, written by someone born several years after the war ended. Some internet resources: Stephen Crane: Man, Myth, and Legend
    The Stephen Crane Society

    Personal History/Writing Style of Stephen Crane

    Stephen Crane History Page
    ...
    Back to Dr. E's American Lit. II Syllabus

    46. 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 related sites The Mad Cybrarian's Library
    Stephen Crane

    47. PRICEFARMER.COM: Farm-Fresh Price Comparisons Of Books
    1988 2. Crane Log A Documentary Life of Stephen Crane, 18711900 (Paperback)by Stanley Wertheim; Paul Sorrentino September 1995
    http://www.pricefarmer.com/cgi-bin/farm?author=Wertheim, Stanley

    48. Wacky Anne's Christmas Library: Author Information
    Stephen Crane (18711900) A Christmas Dinner Won in Battle Curiously, this storywas first published in the Plumbers' Trade Journal, Gas, Steam, and Hot Water
    http://www.geocities.com/wackyanne/library/xlinfo.htm
    The Library: Author Information
    Alcott, Louisa May Allen, Grant Andersen, Hans Christian Baum, L. Frank ... Wiggin, Kate Douglas
    Louisa May Alcott
    Little Women
    Ch.1 Playing Pilgrims
    Ch.2 A Merry Christmas
    Ch.3 The Laurence Boy

    Grant Allen
    Wolverden Tower

    Hans Christian Andersen Hans Christian Anderson's fairy tales are beautiful, but are written with strong morals and possibly disturbing conclusions, the protagonist usually dying. You might want to pre-read them before telling them to younger children.
    The Fir Tree
    Published in 1845, and translated by H.P. Paull in 1872.
    The Little Match-Girl
    Published in 1846, and translated by H.P. Paull in 1872. Here is a lovely story that always makes me cry. Another version of this story.
    The Snow Man
    Published in 1861, and translated by H.P. Paull in 1872.
    The Snow Queen: In Seven Stories
    Published in 1845, and translated by H.P. Paull in 1872.

    L . Frank Baum Did you think that all Frank Baum ever wrote were Oz books? This prolific writer has tried his hand at many types of children's stories, including these tales of Santa Claus.
    A Kidnapped Santa Claus
    text (30KB) or zipped
    Life and Adventures of Santa Claus
    text (171KB) or zipped

    Valerie Bryusov
    Protection: A Christmas Story , c.1918

    49. Crane
    Stephen Crane. (18711900). By Corinne Miller. GENERAL Stephen Crane,renowned author of The Red Badge of Courage and Maggie A Girl
    http://www.spanamwar.com/crane.htm
    Stephen Crane By Corinne Miller GENERAL: Stephen Crane, renowned author of The Red Badge of Courage and Maggie: A Girl of the Streets , was a correspondent for Pulitzer's World during the Spanish American war.
    BIOGRAPHY: Stephen Crane, the youngest of fourteen children, was born to the Reverend Jonathan Townly Crane and Mary Helen Peck Crane on November 1, 1871 in Newark, New Jersey. He briefly attended Lafayette College and Syracuse University before moving to New York City in 1891. It was here that Crane wrote his famous novel Maggie: A Girl of the Streets (1893), the story of a girl who grew up in the slums of New York. Crane's greatest novel, The Red Badge of Courage (1895), takes place during the Civil War and was the first of many works that Crane wrote about war. These works express Crane's intense interest in war. Stephen Crane, seated, with fellow reporter Richard Harding Davis shipboard off Ponce, Puerto Rico In April, 1898, two months after the sinking of the Maine , Stephen Crane was anxious to join the navy by any means necessary. "Nothing could have held him back," Joseph Conrad, a dear friend of Crane, wrote of his ambition; "He was ready to swim the ocean." Unfortunately Crane was unable to pass the Navy's physical examination. Instead he signed on as a correspondent with Joseph Pulitzer's World . Crane sailed on the THREE FRIENDS to Key West where he wrote ten dispatches for World in May alone, as well as many other works including "The Open Boat" a short story entitled "His New Mittens" and other stories. On June 13, Crane had his first experience in war when the Spaniards launched a strong, unexpected attack. Crane dropped to the ground as bullets shot around him but Crane's companion Gibbs was shot in the forehead and died. Of this experience Crane wrote:

    50. Antiquarian Books Catalogue
    85, CORVO, BARON(FREDERICK ROLFE)(18601913) CORVO, BARON 86, Crane, Stephen(1871-1900) Crane, S. 87, DICKENS, CHARLES (1812-1870) DICKENS, C.
    http://www.kitazawa.co.jp/ANTIQU/386/I02E.htm
    ‚Q. Authors A to Z
    [ALCOTT, LOUISA MAY (1832-1888)] ALCOTT, L.M.:

    [BEARDSLEY, AUBREY (1872-1898)] BEARDSLEY, A.:

    JONSON, B. / A. BEARDSLEY, ILLUS.:

    [BECKFORD, WILLIAM (1760-1844)] BECKFORD, W.:
    ...
    [YEATS, WILLIAM BUTLER (1865-1939)] OSHIMA, S.:

    (c)Kitazawa Bookstore 1998-2002

    51. Stephen Crane
    Stephen Crane (18711900) A Psychological Portrayal of War in The RedBadge of Courage Zenaida Lockard Sensational Fictions English 402-01.
    http://www.louisville.edu/~zrlock01/stephencrane.html
    Stephen Crane (1871-1900)
    "A Psychological Portrayal of War" in
    The Red Badge of Courage

    Zenaida Lockard
    Sensational Fictions: English 402-01
    Biography of Crane

    Contemporary Crane Reviews

    Crane's Reflections on War

    Crane and The Civil War

    [I] intended The Red Badge of Courage The Red Badge of Courage was published I found it difficult to make both ends meet … Now that I have reached the goal, I suppose that I ought to be contented; but I am not. I was happier in the old days when I was always dreaming of the thing I have now attained. I am disappointed with success, and I am tired of abuse. ~Stephen Crane (letter date 1897?)
    To John N. Hilliard Link to Works Cited Page Link to Julia Noran's Web Page Link to AdrienneWorsham's Web Page Link to the Stephen Crane Society ... Return to Zenaida Lockard's Main Page Please direct any questions to zeebird@hotmail.com

    52. Stephen Crane
    Stephen Crane. 18711900. by Allen Blarksdale. Born Nov. 1,1871 in Newark, New Jersey,Stephen Crane was the 14th son and youngest child of a Methodist minister.
    http://www.bgsu.edu/departments/acs/1890s/crane/crane.html
    Stephen Crane by Allen Blarksdale Born Nov. 1,1871 in Newark, New Jersey, Stephen Crane was the 14th son and youngest child of a Methodist minister. His father J..T. Crane authored a number of books including Popular Amusements (1869) and Arts of Intoxication (1870) which generally addressed moral and ecclestical issues of the day. Stephen's mother, Mary Helen Peck Crane was an active participant in the temprance movement of the 1870s and 80s. A sickly and frail child, Crane did not attend school prior to age eight. Encouraged by his parents to pursue a carrer as a clergyman, Crane attended the Pennigton Seminary from September 1885-December 1887. His father had served as the institutions principal during the 1850s. In 1888 Crane transfered to Claverack College, a military academy in upstate New York. He was a sucessful cadet achieving the rank of !st Lieutenant. This experience possibly influenced the composition of The Red Badge of Courage in 1895. Later Crane enrolled at Lafayette College in Pennsylvania, but after failing five of seven classes he transfered to the university at Syracuse New York. At Syracuse Crane played baseball and wrote for the school paper but was academically uninspired and left school in 1891. In June 1891 Crane moved to New York City. At this time he began work on his first novel, Maggie: A Girl of the Streets, utilizing the slums of lower Manhattan as the setting. This work was privately published in early 1893 with Crane using the pseudonym of Jonston Smith. 1894's George's Mother is perceived by some to be a thematic sequel to Maggie.

    53. Encyclopædia Britannica
    See Article. The Web's Best Sites. Stephen Crane (18711900) Shortbiography of this American poet, novelist, and short-story writer.
    http://search.britannica.com/search?miid=1136699&query=Crane, Stephen (Am. writ.

    54. Encyclopædia Britannica
    Selected Poetry of Stephen Crane (18711900) E-text of the poems In Heaven, A ManSaid to the Universe, and Should the Wide World Roll Away by this American
    http://search.britannica.com/search?query=crane, stephen (am. writ.)&fuzzy=N&ct=

    55. Overviews - Facts About The USA InfoUSA
    Crane, Hart, 18991932 (.?). Crane, Stephen, 1871-1900(?.?); Cummings, EE 1894-1962 (E.E.?).
    http://www.usembassy-china.org.cn/infousa/cul_author_gb.htm

    56. 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 A Crane Chronology And much more. Medical Humanities Discussion of "An Episode of War" Medical Humanities Discussion of The Monster Crane's "Patriot Shrine of Texas" ... Back to American Literature II

    57. Index To Comic Art Collection: "Crane" To "Cranium"
    Crane, Stephen, 18711900. American writer. -Crane, Stephen, 1871-1900. Das Blaue Hotel / by Stephen Crane.
    http://www.lib.msu.edu/comics/rri/crri/crane.htm
    Michigan State University Libraries
    Special Collections Division
    Reading Room Index to the Comic Art Collection
    "Crane" to "Cranium" Back to the C index screen
    Back to the
    ...
    Back up the list
    Crane, Brian
    American comics artist
    Crane, Roy, 1901-1977
    American comics artist, creator of Wash Tubbs and Buz Sawyer
    Crane, Stephen, 1871-1900
    American writer
    Crane, Walter, 1845-1915
    British cartoonist
    On down the list
    This segment last edited June 25, 2002

    58. Links
    The Stephen Crane Society. Stephen Crane (18711900). Yet Another StephenCrane (1871-1900). Stephen Crane's Late Years. UTEL Stephen Crane page.
    http://www.uta.edu/english/tim/poetry/sc/Links page.htm
    Links and Reviews
    The Stephen Crane Society
    Stephen Crane (1871-1900) Yet Another Stephen Crane (1871-1900) Stephen Crane's Late Years ... home

    59. Stephen Crane
    Stephen Crane. go to books by this author. Stephen Crane (18711900)was an American writer, born in Newark, New Jersey. He began
    http://www.abacci.com/books/authorDetails.asp?authorID=47

    60. 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.

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