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Gary Soto - McFarland, Ron
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  • Broschiertes Buch

In a 1995 interview, prolific Chicano writer Gary Soto noted, ""Wonderment has always been a part of my life."" This book surveys Soto's immense range of poems, stories, novels, essays and plays for audiences of prereaders to adults. Soto's world moves from the cotton and beet fields of the San Joaquin Valley to the blue-collar barrios of Fresno, and to urban and suburban settings in Oakland and Berkeley. Chapters analyze a wide variety of Soto titles, from his breakout works like 1977's The Elements of San Joaquin to the Chato the Cat illustrated books for children. With self-deprecating…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In a 1995 interview, prolific Chicano writer Gary Soto noted, ""Wonderment has always been a part of my life."" This book surveys Soto's immense range of poems, stories, novels, essays and plays for audiences of prereaders to adults. Soto's world moves from the cotton and beet fields of the San Joaquin Valley to the blue-collar barrios of Fresno, and to urban and suburban settings in Oakland and Berkeley. Chapters analyze a wide variety of Soto titles, from his breakout works like 1977's The Elements of San Joaquin to the Chato the Cat illustrated books for children. With self-deprecating humor, particularly in his poems, Soto combines his wonderment with the trials and conflicts that beset him throughout life. In such novels as Jesse, Buried Onions and The Afterlife, and in his stories for YA readers, including Baseball in April and Petty Crimes, his broad array of characters confront the anxieties and annoyances of adolescence. Although he continues to motivate young Chicanos to read and write, Soto stakes his greatest claims to literary prominence through his poems, which are accessible to readers of all ages.
Autorenporträt
Ron McFarland was born in Bellaire, Ohio, grew up in Cocoa, Florida, took his bachelor's and master's degrees in English from Florida State University in Tallahassee, taught two years at Sam Houston State in Huntsville, Texas, garnered his doctorate at the University of Illinois with a dissertation in 17th-century British literature, and embarked on a nearly 50-year teaching career at the University of Idaho, where he acted as impresario of poetry readings, served for many years as faculty advisor of the literary magazine Fugue, and helped create the MFA program. He played soccer with the Idaho club team for more than twenty years.He was an Eagle Scout, and he played trumpet in a very good high school band. He almost played on the baseball team at Brevard Junior College (now East Florida State College), but instead edited the school newspaper, which prompted him to be a writer. He worked as library assistant in the Cocoa Public Library. In Texas he and a colleague edited a freshman composition reader-rhetoric, American Controversy, published by Scott-Foresman in 1968-his first book.Confluence Press (Lewiston, Idaho) published a chapbook of his poems, Certain Women, in 1977, and he edited an anthology, Eight Idaho Poets, published by the University Press of Idaho. In 1984 he was named the state's first Writer-in-Residence, a two-year position that entailed giving ten readings a year throughout the state for the next two years. In that context Confluence published his first full-length book of poems, Composting at Forty. His thirty-odd books include chapbooks of poems and booklets in the Western Writers Series on Tess Gallagher, William Kittredge, and Norman Maclean. The University of Idaho Press published his The World of David Wagoner in 1997.Ron's new and selected poems, Stranger in Town, appeared in 2000, the year Permafrost Press released his chapbook, The Mad Waitress Poems. His most recent full-length collection of poems, Subtle Thieves, appeared in 2012. Other titles include a memoir of growing up in Florida during the 1950s & 1960s, Confessions of a Night Librarian and Other Embarrassments, Catching First Light (stories & essays from Idaho), The Rockies in First Person (a study of regional memoirs), Appropriating Hemingway: Using Him as a Fictional Character, Edward J. Steptoe and the Indian Wars and most recently, Gary Soto: A Career in Poetry and Prose (2022) and Professor McFarland in Reel Time: Poems and Prose of an Angler (2020).His two grown daughters and son have provided him with five grandchildren. With the love of his life Georgia Tiffany, pianist, former high school teacher, and poet, he has acquired four additional grandchildren. Georgia's first full-length collection of poems, Body Be Sound, has just been published by Encircle Press. An occasional bird hunter, he regards himself as an avid but mostly inept fly angler. He currently serves as program director of the Clearwater Fly Casters.