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* ''The Mountains'' (1904)
* ''The Mountains'' (1904)
* ''The Silent Places'' (1904)
* ''The Silent Places'' (1904)
* ''The Pass'' (1906), with S. H. Adams
* ''The Pass'' (1906), with [[Samuel Hopkins Adams|S. H. Adams]]
* ''The Mystery'' (1907), with S. H. Adams
* ''The Mystery'' (1907), with S. H. Adams
* ''The Riverman'' (1908)
* ''The Riverman'' (1908)
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* ''Gray Dawn'' (1915)
* ''Gray Dawn'' (1915)
* ''Rediscovered Country'' (1915)
* ''Rediscovered Country'' (1915)



==Literature==
==Literature==

Revision as of 08:28, 5 April 2007

Stewart Edward White (12 March 1873September 18 1946) was an American author.

Born in Grand Rapids, Michigan he earned degrees from University of Michigan (Ph.D., 1895; M.A., 1903).

From about 1900 until about 1922, he wrote adventure travel books. Starting in 1922, He and his wife Elizabeth "Betty" Grant White wrote numerous books they claimed were received through channelling with spirits. They also wrote of their travels around the state of California. White died in Hillsborough, California.

Works

  • The Westerners (1901)
  • The Claim Jumpers (1901)
  • Conjurer's House (1903)
  • The Forest (1903)
  • Blazed Trail Stories (1904)
  • The Mountains (1904)
  • The Silent Places (1904)
  • The Pass (1906), with S. H. Adams
  • The Mystery (1907), with S. H. Adams
  • The Riverman (1908)
  • The Cabin (1910)
  • The Land of Footprints (1912)
  • African Camp Fires (1913)
  • Gold (1913)
  • Gray Dawn (1915)
  • Rediscovered Country (1915)

Literature

  • J. C. Underwood, Literature and Insurgency (New York, 1914)

References

  • Staff report (September 19, 1946). STEWART E. WHITE, NOVELIST, IS DEAD; Author of Stories of Adventure and Frontier Life Was 73-- Stricken After Fabled Career CHOKED LEOPARD TO DEATH Writer of 'Blazed Trail' Knew Yukon, Africa and West-- Honored as Geographer
  • "Stewart White, Adventurer and novelist, dies; books captured thrills of own exciting life." Chicago Tribune, September 19, 1946