Knowledge

Opie Read

Source đź“ť

416: 122: 312: 20: 167:
After 1908, Read appears to have gone into semi-retirement. His authorial productivity noticeably slackened during the thirty remaining years of his life, although he did publish six additional books (two of them
98: 72: 385: 196:
Opie Read in the Ozarks: Including Many of the Rich, Rare, Quaint, Eccentric, Ignorant and Superstitious Sayings of the Natives of Missouri and Arkansaw
445: 349: 341: 121: 133:
Read's bibliography shows that in his first 20 full years in Chicago (1888–1908) he published 54 separate books, of which 31 were
153: 460: 450: 455: 465: 115: 92: 169: 470: 160:, although the phrase seems to have been in verbal use before this and is often credited to 440: 435: 345: 333: 320: 8: 402: 328: 35: 209:. Many later critics have dismissed Read as a presenter of lower-class white Southern 118:
to Chicago in 1887. He spent the remainder of his life in the ”Windy City” (Chicago).
411: 420: 39: 311: 78: 407: 185: 429: 138: 241: 190: 201:
Read's standing was affected by the fact that many of his works, such as
161: 146: 337: 210: 206: 63: 43: 62:
Prior to 1887, Opie Read edited five separate newspapers, all in the
47: 102:, which he carried on after leaving newspaper journalism in 1887. 90:
in Little Rock, Arkansas. The Gazette was a predecessor of the
134: 403:
Opie Read biography at University of Tennessee - Chattanooga
51: 19: 152:
As a novelist, Read is credited with bringing the phrase "
332:(1920), produced and directed by George Medford with 96:. In 1882, Read founded his own humor magazine, the 427: 16:American journalist and humorist (1852–1939) 310: 120: 18: 50:. His bibliography lists 60 published 428: 137:, 18 were book-length compilations of 446:Journalists from Nashville, Tennessee 374:. Rand, McNally & Co. p. 46. 369: 386:"Southern Mountaineers Filmography" 13: 154:There's a sucker born every minute 114:, a flowing pen, and a command of 82:, all in Kentucky, as well as the 57: 14: 482: 396: 180:Read's works carried titles like 175: 105: 156:" into print in his 1898 novel 378: 363: 306: 213:for middle-class Northerners. 141:such as that published in the 1: 356: 7: 417:Works by or about Opie Read 10: 487: 461:American male journalists 145:, and five were works of 93:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette 34:(born December 22, 1852, 451:Journalists from Chicago 235:The Wives of the Prophet 216: 73:Bowling Green Pantograph 38:; d. November 2, 1939, 456:Writers from Tennessee 372:A Yankee from the West 315: 261:A Yankee from the West 158:A Yankee from the West 130: 28: 314: 124: 76:, and the Louisville 22: 334:Mabel Julienne Scott 321:The Kentucky Colonel 205:, were published as 370:Read, Opie (1898). 289:An Arkansas Planter 127:An Arkansas Planter 36:Nashville Tennessee 466:American humorists 408:Works by Opie Read 316: 223:A Kentucky Colonel 182:A Kentucky Colonel 131: 42:) was an American 32:Opie Percival Read 29: 25:Who-When-What Book 412:Project Gutenberg 284:Up Terrapin River 143:Arkansas Traveler 112:Arkansas Traveler 110:Read brought the 99:Arkansas Traveler 68:Statesville Argus 478: 421:Internet Archive 390: 389: 382: 376: 375: 367: 125:Frontispiece of 116:Southern dialect 40:Chicago Illinois 486: 485: 481: 480: 479: 477: 476: 475: 426: 425: 399: 394: 393: 384: 383: 379: 368: 364: 359: 309: 279:My Young Master 219: 186:Laird & Lee 178: 108: 79:Courier-Journal 60: 58:As a journalist 23:Opie Read from 17: 12: 11: 5: 484: 474: 473: 471:Dime novelists 468: 463: 458: 453: 448: 443: 438: 424: 423: 414: 405: 398: 397:External links 395: 392: 391: 377: 361: 360: 358: 355: 354: 353: 325: 308: 305: 304: 303: 300:The Harkriders 297: 291: 286: 281: 276: 270: 267:Judge Elbridge 264: 258: 252: 246: 238: 232: 226: 218: 215: 177: 176:His reputation 174: 107: 104: 59: 56: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 483: 472: 469: 467: 464: 462: 459: 457: 454: 452: 449: 447: 444: 442: 439: 437: 434: 433: 431: 422: 418: 415: 413: 409: 406: 404: 401: 400: 388:. 2019-10-17. 387: 381: 373: 366: 362: 351: 347: 343: 339: 335: 331: 330: 326: 323: 322: 318: 317: 313: 301: 298: 295: 294:The Starbucks 292: 290: 287: 285: 282: 280: 277: 274: 271: 268: 265: 262: 259: 256: 253: 250: 247: 244: 243: 239: 236: 233: 230: 227: 224: 221: 220: 214: 212: 208: 204: 199: 197: 193: 192: 187: 183: 173: 171: 165: 163: 159: 155: 150: 148: 144: 140: 139:short fiction 136: 128: 123: 119: 117: 113: 106:As a novelist 103: 101: 100: 95: 94: 89: 85: 81: 80: 75: 74: 69: 65: 55: 53: 49: 45: 41: 37: 33: 26: 21: 380: 371: 365: 350:Fanny Midgel 346:Charles Ogle 329:The Jucklins 327: 319: 299: 293: 288: 283: 278: 273:In the Alamo 272: 266: 260: 255:Old Ebenezer 254: 248: 242:The Jucklins 240: 234: 229:The Colossus 228: 222: 203:The Jucklins 202: 200: 195: 194:(1896), and 191:The Jucklins 189: 181: 179: 166: 157: 151: 142: 132: 129:by Opie Read 126: 111: 109: 97: 91: 87: 84:Evening Post 83: 77: 71: 67: 61: 31: 30: 24: 441:1939 deaths 436:1852 births 342:Ruth Renock 307:Filmography 211:stereotypes 207:dime novels 162:P.T. Barnum 147:non-fiction 430:Categories 357:References 338:Monte Blue 64:U.S. South 44:journalist 188:, 1890), 170:juveniles 198:(1905). 48:humorist 419:at the 249:Bolanyo 88:Gazette 348:, and 324:(1920) 302:(1903) 296:(1902) 275:(1900) 269:(1899) 263:(1898) 257:(1897) 251:(1897) 245:(1896) 237:(1894) 231:(1893) 225:(1890) 135:novels 86:, and 70:, the 66:: the 27:, 1900 217:Works 52:books 46:and 410:at 172:). 432:: 344:, 340:, 336:, 164:. 149:. 54:. 352:. 184:(

Index


Nashville Tennessee
Chicago Illinois
journalist
humorist
books
U.S. South
Bowling Green Pantograph
Courier-Journal
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Arkansas Traveler
Southern dialect

novels
short fiction
non-fiction
There's a sucker born every minute
P.T. Barnum
juveniles
Laird & Lee
The Jucklins
dime novels
stereotypes
The Jucklins

The Kentucky Colonel
The Jucklins
Mabel Julienne Scott
Monte Blue
Ruth Renock

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

↑