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"Someone has said that fiction by definition is a lie. By extension this means that fiction writers are liars. In that context, I will admit to it, and go a step further. I will say that fiction writers are thieves." With that opening confession, novelist Elmer Kelton, for over forty years a livestock journalist, discusses the relationship between his two careers and the way in which his journalistic writing served as a source for his novels. To illustrate, he reads from four of his novels--The Time It Never Rained, The Day the Cowboys Quit, The Good Old Boys, and Manhunters --contrasting…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"Someone has said that fiction by definition is a lie. By extension this means that fiction writers are liars. In that context, I will admit to it, and go a step further. I will say that fiction writers are thieves." With that opening confession, novelist Elmer Kelton, for over forty years a livestock journalist, discusses the relationship between his two careers and the way in which his journalistic writing served as a source for his novels. To illustrate, he reads from four of his novels--The Time It Never Rained, The Day the Cowboys Quit, The Good Old Boys, and Manhunters --contrasting historical incidents with their use in his fiction. Both fact and fiction come alive when read in Kelton's West Texas voice, the same voice which distinguishes his fiction from most other western writing.
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Autorenporträt
Elmer Kelton writes about the world he knows best--Texas, mostly West Texas--and his thirty-plus novels cover its history from the days of the Republic of Texas to the present. His novels have won major awards from Western Writers of America and the Cowboy Hall of Fame, and he has been recognized for lifetime achievement by WWA, the Western Literature Association, and the Texas Institute of Letters.