Willa Cather wrote several wonderful stories and novels. After reading or looking at three of them and reading some of her other works on the Internet, I noticed that all of this has something in common. In her work there are many things related to the situation of the family and how various kinds of people cope with death. These stories often reflect the time of life I will think. They are reflected in her house many times. The story tends to use the same type of conversation and also has similar characteristics.
WILLA SIBERT CATHER Resume was born on December 7, 1873 from Charles and Mary Cather in Winchester, Virginia. Willa's father is a deputy sheriff and farmer, her mother is a school teacher. When Willa was 9 years old, in 1883 her family moved to the Nebraska prairies following her grandparents William and Caroline. The life of the prairie is a strange landscape indispensable to the life of Cather. In 1888, Cather decided to be a surgeon to compare article # 2. Since the establishment of the colony, the United States has always been considered a "place of opportunity". It is a safe haven for immigrants and is considered a new opportunity for others. "The forgiveness in court" published by Willa Cather in 1893 tells the story of Russian immigrant Sarl, overcomes the difficult childhood struggle and escapes to America for national protection.
Willa Cather's O Pioneer relationship and scenes! O Pioneer! (1993) Between 1883 and 1890 Began with Willa Cather in the harsh wind winter in Hanover, Nebraska. Narrator introduced four main characters: Very young Emile Bergson, his sister Alexandra, and her friend Carl Rinssehram, and a small girl, Mary Shabata. Alexandra's father, John Bergson, is dead. He told his two biggest sons, Oscar and Oscar, he will leave the farm, and he said he had a community with all the characters of the O Pioneer! Author: Willa Cather's Novel O Pioneer! Alexandra Bergson's view by author Willa Cather is consistent with the role of other authors such as Nathaniel Hawthorne (Scarlet Letter) and Stephan Crane (Maggie: Street Girl). In each novel, all writers have central characteristics with a clear tension between themselves and their community. Unlike previous writers, Cather's sympathy is Alexandra. she is