Authors > Fiction > Sherwood Anderson
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He carried his childhood like a hurt warm bird held to his middle-aged chest.
On Anderson
Herbert
Gold
Sherwood Anderson
 
1876–1941, American novelist and short-story writer, b. Camden, Ohio. His first novel, Windy McPherson’s Son (1916), concerning a boy’s life in Iowa, was followed by Marching Men (1917), a chronicle about the plight of the working man in an industrial society. In his best-known work, Winesburg, Ohio (1919), a closely integrated collection of stories, he explores the loneliness and frustration of small-town lives.—continue at Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2002 Columbia University Press.
 
Pronunciation:  n´dr-sn from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
 
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Winesburg, Ohio
This collection of short stories allows us to enter the alternately complex, lonely, joyful, and strange lives of the inhabitants of the small town of Winesburg, Ohio.



 
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