Archbishop of death from the following: Willa Catherwilla Cather is the author of the 1927 novel that won the "Death from the Archbishop" award. She was born in the vicinity of Winchester, Virginia in 1873 and soon moved to Nebraska (Cather, 1927). She was surrounded by foreign languages and customs when she was young. Even when I was young, I felt connected with immigrants in Nebraska state and I was interested in connecting with the land. Willa also likes to write about the disappearance of southwest United States where nature and Christianity are contrary to contemporary urban life and society (http://fp.image.dk).
Cather was a major American writer, and in 1923 he received the Pulitzer Prize in his novel "One of Myself". In 1928, Carol came to the archbishop after the Holocaust's death. Death comes from the fact that Archbishop was included in the best 100 novels of the 20th century of modern libraries and the best British novel of the period from 1923 to 2005. By the 1930's, however, critics began to regard her as "a romantic and nostalgic writer that can not respond to the present". Escape the idealized past. In the hardships of sandstorms and Great Depression, her works are considered to lack social significance.
Archbishop death is not considered appropriate at the time, but it is appropriate for the overall scan of contemporary literature. That style of writing is relaxing, the story goes back to the age of quiet and unique heroism apart from the terrible social problems of modern life. To make matters worse, it is surrounded by religious beliefs. In Cather's defense, I'd like to say that she deals with a more general problem - conscience and personal ethics, the fight to survive in a tough world, the early definition of the North American struggle, the formation of a society born from them is. . And there is subtle colonial distortion. The fathers of Latour and Vaillant, whose names clearly indicate their academic reflections and the tendency to act boldly do not actually save many souls of the new world.