Edward Hoagland

American writer
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Also known as: Edward Morley Hoagland

Edward Hoagland (born December 21, 1932, New York, New York, U.S.) is an American novelist, travel writer, and essayist, noted especially for his writings about nature and wildlife.

Hoagland sold his first novel, Cat Man (1956), shortly before graduating from Harvard University (A.B., 1954). After serving in the U.S. Army (1955–57), he wrote The Circle Home (1960), set in the seedy world of prizefighting, and The Peacock’s Tail (1965). Both novels are noted for their sympathetic portrayals of impoverished, struggling people. His fourth novel, Seven Rivers West (1986), tells of the cultural collision between white railroad builders and Indians in western Canada during the 1880s. His later novels included Children Are Diamonds: An African Apocalypse (2013) and In the Country of the Blind (2016). He also published the short-story collections City Tales (1986), The Final Fate of the Alligators (1992), and The Devil’s Tub (2014).

Hoagland’s travel books included Notes from the Century Before: A Journal from British Columbia (1969), African Calliope: A Journey to the Sudan (1979), Early in the Season: A British Columbia Journal (2008), and Alaskan Travels: Far-Flung Tales of Love and Adventure (2012). Perhaps his best work is his nature essays and editorials, which combine a lifelong fondness for wilderness with his characteristic close observation. His essays are collected in The Courage of Turtles (1971), Walking the Dead Diamond River (1973), The Moose on the Wall: Field Notes from the Vermont Wilderness (1974), Red Wolves and Black Bears (1976), The Edward Hoagland Reader (1979), Balancing Acts (1992), Tigers & Ice (1999), and Hoagland on Nature (2003). Hoagland also wrote a memoir, Compass Points: How I Lived (2001).

Zora Neale Hurston (1891-1960) portrait by Carl Van Vecht April 3, 1938. Writer, folklorist and anthropologist celebrated African American culture of the rural South.
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