Jump to content

Erskine Caldwell: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Oos (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Line 2: Line 2:


'''Erskine Preston Caldwell''' ([[December 17]],[[1903]]-[[April 11]], [[1987]]) was an [[United States|American]] [[author]] born in a house in the woods outside [[Moreland, Georgia]] in [[Coweta County, Georgia|Coweta County]]. Caldwell was the son of a minister in the [[Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church]] and he attended, but did not graduate from, [[Erskine College]]. He was athletic, played football, and stood six foot tall, and has been described by one of his publishers to have an unusually kind face and otherwise angelic appearance. His political sympathies lay with blue collar workers, and as he went from job to job in his younger days, drew on his experiences with common workers to write books that extolled the simple life of those less fortunate than he was. Later in life, he gave seminars on low income tenant-sharecroppers in the [[American South]].
'''Erskine Preston Caldwell''' ([[December 17]],[[1903]]-[[April 11]], [[1987]]) was an [[United States|American]] [[author]] born in a house in the woods outside [[Moreland, Georgia]] in [[Coweta County, Georgia|Coweta County]]. Caldwell was the son of a minister in the [[Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church]] and he attended, but did not graduate from, [[Erskine College]]. He was athletic, played football, and stood six foot tall, and has been described by one of his publishers to have an unusually kind face and otherwise angelic appearance. His political sympathies lay with blue collar workers, and as he went from job to job in his younger days, drew on his experiences with common workers to write books that extolled the simple life of those less fortunate than he was. Later in life, he gave seminars on low income [[sharecropper|tenant-sharecroppers]] in the [[American South]].


His most famous works are the novels ''[[Tobacco Road (novel)|Tobacco Road]]'' and ''[[God's Little Acre]]''.
His most famous works are the novels ''[[Tobacco Road (novel)|Tobacco Road]]'' and ''[[God's Little Acre]]''.

Revision as of 09:04, 19 July 2006

Erskine Caldwell photographed by Carl Van Vechten, 1938


Erskine Preston Caldwell (December 17,1903-April 11, 1987) was an American author born in a house in the woods outside Moreland, Georgia in Coweta County. Caldwell was the son of a minister in the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church and he attended, but did not graduate from, Erskine College. He was athletic, played football, and stood six foot tall, and has been described by one of his publishers to have an unusually kind face and otherwise angelic appearance. His political sympathies lay with blue collar workers, and as he went from job to job in his younger days, drew on his experiences with common workers to write books that extolled the simple life of those less fortunate than he was. Later in life, he gave seminars on low income tenant-sharecroppers in the American South.

His most famous works are the novels Tobacco Road and God's Little Acre.

Caldwell was married to photographer Margaret Bourke-White from 1939 to 1942, and they collaborated on You Have Seen Their Faces (1937).


Works

  • God's Little Acre
  • Trouble in July
  • Tobacco Road
  • Place Called Estherville
    File:PlaceCalledEsthervillepaperback.JPG
    1959 paperback of Place Called Estherville (1949)
  • Journeyman
  • Tragic Ground
  • The Sure Hand of God
  • Georgia Boy
  • A Swell Looking Girl
  • This Very Earth
  • Kneel to the Rising Sun
  • The Humorous Side of Erskine Caldwell, edited by Robert Cantwell
  • Southways
  • Episode in Palmetto
  • The Courting of Susie Brown
  • A Lamp for Nightfall
  • We Are the Living
  • The Complete Stories of Erskine Caldwell
  • Love and Money
  • Gretta
  • Call It Experience
  • Gulf Coast Stories
  • The Sacrilege of Alan Kent
  • Certain Women