Saturday, October 18, 2014
Pulitzer Prize winner H.L. Davis, of Oregon, was known as the Northwest's Mark Twain
It is the birthday of writer H.L. Davis (1894), who won the Pulitzer
Prize in 1936 for his epic novel Honey in the Horn (1935), a coming of
age tale about an orphaned youth in Oregon's homesteading days. Davis
is the only Oregon-born writer to receive a Pulitzer Prize. He has been
called the Northwest's Mark Twain. Among his books are Harp of a Thousand
Strings (1941), Proud Riders and Other Poems (1942), Beulah Land
(1949), Winds of Morning (1952), Team Bells Woke Me and Other Stories
(1953), The Distant Music (1957), Kettle of Fire (1957), and The
Selected Poems of H.L. Davis (1978).
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