"The
realist . . . is really an optimist, a dreamer. He sees life in terms of what
it might be, as well as in terms of what it is; but he writes of what is, and,
at his best, suggests what is to be, by contrast."
– Hamlin Garland
Born on a Wisconsin farm on
Sept. 14 1860 to devotees, Garland was named
Hannibal Hamlin after Abraham Lincoln’s vice presidential running mate. But he never much liked the name Hannibal
and went by Hamlin most of his life, particularly after his writing career took
off.
Novelist, poet, essayist, short
story writer, Garland is best known for his fiction involving hard-working
Midwestern farmers – a reflection of his “Growing Up Days” in Wisconsin, Iowa
and South Dakota. His first major
success, in fact, was a book of short stories Main-Travelled Roads,
inspired by his days on the farm. He then serialized a biography of Ulysses S.
Grant in McClure's Magazine, publishing it as a book in 1898, the same
year he traveled to the Yukon to witness the Klondike Gold Rush and inspiring his
best-seller The Trail of the Gold Seekers.
While he was a prolific writer in
many genres, his work as a memoirist brought him his most acclaim, beginning
with his autobiography A Son of the Middle Border, its Pulitzer
Prize-winning sequel A Daughter of the Middle Border, and a number of
other memoirs about farm life, the people, and the harsh land they strove to
tame – “...the hard, unromantic truth," he said, "of pioneer life on the plains.”
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