Bill Bauer

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William Bauer is a U.S.-born poet who immigrated with his wife, Nancy Bauer, to Fredericton, New Brunswick in 1965.

[edit] Works

[1]

  • A Migration now Largely Forgotten (poems), Fiddlehead
  • If I Don’t Tell You, No One Else Will (poems), Fiddlehead
  • The Trail of the Lonesome Pine, (1968)
  • The Terrible Word, 1978
  • The Unsnarling String, 1983
  • Family Album

[edit] Papers and Addresses

[1]

  • Defoe’s Review and the Reform of Manners Movement. Paper presented to the Annual Meeting of the Association of Canadian University Teachers of English, Calgary, Alberta, June 11, 1968.
  • Burns in Our Time. Address to the Fredericton Society of St. Andrew, Fredericton, N.B., January 1970.
  • The Meaning of Forms in the Tatler and its Many Successors. Paper presented at a plenary session of the Fifth Annual Conference, Atlantic Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies, Saint John, New Brunswick, April 29, 1977.
  • Like No Other Place: The Arts in Atlantic Canada. Address to University of Maine at Orono, Canadian-American Studies, March 22, 1991.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b "WILLIAM BAUER". The Canadian Literature Archive. University of Manitoba. http://www.umanitoba.ca/canlit/bill_bauer.shtml. Retrieved 21 January 2010. 
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