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My Ántonia by Willa Cather
My Ántonia by Willa Cather











My Ántonia by Willa Cather

When Willa was about a year old, her parents moved a mile or so to her grandfather William Cather's farm, Willow Shade, named for the multitude of willow trees surrounding the house. Cather, however, gave her children the freedom to do almost anything they wished, so long as they obeyed household rules. Brown, when necessary, she disciplined her children with a rawhide whip in later years, none of them seemed to resent the whippings and even declared them beneficial. Willa's mother, Jennie, was the dominant parent, and, according to biographer E.

My Ántonia by Willa Cather

As a young man, he'd studied law for a couple of years and, because of his helpful nature, neighbors often asked for his help in settling disputes. Willa's father, Charles, was tall and fair, with the manners of a southern gentleman. She hated her given, or Christian, name and as soon as she had some say about the matter, friends and family knew her as "Willie." She called herself "William" as an adolescent, and she signed her early college papers "William Cather, Jr." Throughout her life - even among family - she insisted that she had been born in 1876. The oldest of seven children, Willa was named for an aunt who died of diphtheria. Wilella Cather (rhymes with gather) was born on December 7, 1873, in the home of her short, stalwart, maternal grandmother, Rachel Boak, in Back Creek Valley (near Gore), on the northwest tip of Virginia. Book IV: The Pioneer Woman's Story: Chapters I-IV.Book II: The Hired Girls: Chapters XI-XV.Book II: The Hired Girls: Chapters VIII-X.Book II: The Hired Girls: Chapters V-VII.Book II: The Hired Girls: Chapters I-IV.Book I: The Shimerdas: Chapters XVII-XVIII.Book I: The Shimerdas: Chapters XIV-XVI.













My Ántonia by Willa Cather