Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Paul Blackburn (1926–1971) Nicole Blackman (born 1971) Kimberly M. Blaeser (born 1955) Brian Blanchfield (born 1973) Don Blanding (1894–1957) Robin Blaser (1925–2009) Anthony Bleecker (1770–1827) Adrian Blevins (born 1964) Benjamin Paul Blood (1832–1919) Henry Ames Blood (1836–1900) Roberts Blossom (1924–2011) Annie R. Blount ...
The poem was published without attribution. Lucien Galtier is sometimes said to have proclaimed the final phrases at the dedication of the log cabin chapel of Saint Paul on November 1, 1841. [3] The poem in its entirety was often attributed in the decades following publication to the Minnesota Pioneer editor, James Goodhue. [4] [3] [5] [6]
Polish-born Jewish-American Yiddish writer, poet, and humorist [3] Nan Hayden Agle: 1905–2006: 100: American children's writer [4] Said Akl: 1912–2014: 102: Lebanese writer and poet [5] Roger Angell: 1920–2022: 101: American essayist, writer and poet [6] Ruth Nanda Anshen: 1900–2003: 103: American author and editor. [7] Jaime Ardila ...
This is a list of notable African American poets. For other African Americans, ... poet, journalist [11] Paul Laurence ... Alice Walker, novelist, writer, poet, and ...
March – Alvin Aubert (died 2014), African-American poet and scholar; March 21 – Roger-Arnould Rivière (suicide 1959), French poet; March 26 – Gregory Corso (died 2001), American poet; April 8 – Miller Williams (died 2015), American poet, translator and editor; May 3 – Juan Gelman (died 2014), Argentine poet
Bertrand N. O. Walker (1870 – June 27, 1927), who published under his Wyandotte name Hen-Toh, was a Native American author of poetry and folktales best known for two books, Tales of the Bark Lodges (1919), and Yon-Doo-Shah-We-Ah (Nubbins) (1924).
Eve Brodlique (1867–1949), British-born Canadian/American poet, author and journalist; Joseph Brodsky (1940–1996), Russian poet and essayist; Wladyslaw Broniewski (1897–1962), Polish poet and soldier; William Bronk (1918–1999), US poet; Anne Brontë (1820–1849), English novelist and poet, youngest of three Brontë sisters
June 6 – Gerhart Hauptmann, German dramatist, novelist and poet, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature (born 1862) [12] July 8 – Orrick Glenday Johns, American poet and playwright (born 1887) July 22 – Edward Sperling, Russian-born American humorist (killed by bomb, born 1889)