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"This twentieth anniversary of the Red River Flood of 1997, which devastated the town of Grand Forks, North Dakota and surrounding areas, gives a new generation of Grand Forksers and Red River valley citizens the occasion to look backward so that they can look forward. Taking stock of how the city and its people have changed in these last twenty years offers us a new chance to envision the future of Grand Forks and the Red River Valley. ... The book emerged from a year long course in the University of North Dakota's Writing, Editing, and Publishing Program led by Dr. David Haeselin. Students…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"This twentieth anniversary of the Red River Flood of 1997, which devastated the town of Grand Forks, North Dakota and surrounding areas, gives a new generation of Grand Forksers and Red River valley citizens the occasion to look backward so that they can look forward. Taking stock of how the city and its people have changed in these last twenty years offers us a new chance to envision the future of Grand Forks and the Red River Valley. ... The book emerged from a year long course in the University of North Dakota's Writing, Editing, and Publishing Program led by Dr. David Haeselin. Students in this course compiled, organized, and edited unpublished archival documents from the Orin G. Libby Manuscript Collection in the Elwyn B. Robinson Special Collections of the Chester Fritz Library at the University of North Dakota with new contributions from citizens and experts who lived through the flood and the region's recovery"--Digital Press website.
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Autorenporträt
David Haeselin, PhD, is an instructor in the English department at the University of North Dakota, where he teaches courses in the Writing, Editing, and Publishing certificate program. He is interested in finding ways to better explain the work of the humanities and the sciences to the public. His recent writing appears in Hybrid Pedagogy, Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction, and The Los Angeles Review of Books.