What Kansas Means To Me: Twentieth-Century Writers on the Sunflower State

SKU: 9760700607107
SKU: 9780700607105
$12.95
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What Kansas Means To Me:  Twentieth-Century Writers on the Sunflower State


Editor:  Thomas Fox Averill


"To understand why people say 'Dear old Kansas " is to understand that Kansas is no mere geographical expression, but a 'state of mind, ' a religion, and a philosophy in one," writes historian Carl Becker in the classic 1910 essay that leads off this volume. 


Like Becker, the twelve other essayists and four poets try to map the spiritual topography of Kansas and explain why this particular patch of prairie is so dear. 


They share the conviction that Kansas represents something powerful, something significant, something noteworthy.


The seventeen selections are put into perspective by Thomas Fox Averill's head notes and introductory essay, which makes its own contribution to our understanding of Kansas. 


The essays and poems (all previously published except for the last essay) are arranged chronologically, from the earliest (1910) to the most recent (1990).


Illustrated with woodcuts from the Prairie Print-makers.


Paperback;  256 pages


ISBN: 978-0700607105 


About the Editor


Thomas Fox Averill is the author of Rode, Secrets of the Tsil Café: A Novel with Recipes, and A Carol Dickens Christmas: A Novel,  He lives in Topeka, Kansas.






Praises for What Kansas Means To Me: Twentieth-Century Writers on the Sunflower State


"This superb collection of writings by seventeen skilled observers focuses on why Kansas has engendered such loyalty among its citizens and how they feel about it. 


Every Kansan can enjoy and benefit from this delightful and stimulating collection, and anyone seeking a better understanding of the Kansas character, the shaping forces behind the Kansas heritage, and the thinking involved in the Kansas ‘state of mind’ will find this book essential and rewarding reading."


—Wichita Eagle


"A reflective journey into Kansas not only as place but as a state of mind. The essayists include poets, journalists, historians, and writers whose views span from 1910 to the present. 


In his fine introduction (which itself stands as an evocative portrait of Kansas) Tom Averill sums up: ‘there is something powerful, something significant, something noteworthy about Kansas.’ 


Capturing this ‘something’ are pieces by William Allen White, Karl Menninger, Zula Bennington Greene, Milton Eisenhower, Robert Day, and William Least Heat-Moon, among others. 


The book is richly illustrated with prints by Kansas artists, visual essays of simple power."


—Topeka Capital-Journal


"A must-have for Kansans in heart, mind, or spirit, if not in fact. Black-and-white illustrations throughout come from such Kansas artists as John Steuart Curry and Birger Sandzen."


—Kansas City Star

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