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University in Carbondale, Illinois. Morris Library has the Ruby Cohn Collection of Kay Boyle
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Letters and the Alice L. Kahler Collection of Kay Boyle Letters. A comprehensive assessment of
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Boyle's life and work was published in 1986 titled Kay Boyle, Artist and Activist by Sandra Whipple
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Spanier. In 1994 Joan Mellen published a voluminous biography of Kay Boyle, Kay Boyle: Author of
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Herself.
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A member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, in addition to her two O. Henry Awards, she
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received two Guggenheim Fellowships and in 1980 received the National Endowment for the Arts
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fellowship for "extraordinary contribution to American literature over a lifetime of creative
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work".
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Bibliography
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Novels Process (written in 1925, unpublished until 2001 ) Plagued by the Nightingale (1931)
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Year Before Last (1932) Gentlemen, I Address You Privately (1933) My Next Bride (1934)
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Death of a Man (1936) Yellow Dusk (Bettina Bedwell) (ghostwritten) (1937) Monday Night (1938)
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The Crazy Hunter: Three Short Novels (The Crazy Hunter, The Bridegroom's Body, and Big Fiddle)
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(1940)
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Primer for Combat (1942) Avalanche (1944) A Frenchman Must Die (1946) 1939 (1948)
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His Human Majesty (1949), The Seagull on the Step (1955)
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Three Short Novels (The Crazy Hunter,The Bridegroom's Body, Decision) (1958)
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Generation Without Farewell (1960) The Underground Woman (1975) Winter Night (1993)
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Story collections Short Stories (1929) Wedding Day and Other Stories (1930)
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The First Lover and Other Stories (1933)
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The White Horses of Vienna (1935) winner of the O. Henry Award The Astronomer's Wife (1936)
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Defeat (1941), winner of the O. Henry Award Thirty Stories (1946)
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The Smoking Mountain: Stories of Postwar Germany (1951)
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Nothing Ever Breaks Except the Heart (1966) Fifty Stories (1980)
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Life Being the Best and Other Stories (1988)
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Juvenile
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The Youngest Camel (1939), revised edition published as The Youngest Camel: Reconsidered and
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Rewritten (1959)
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Pinky, the Cat Who Liked to Sleep (1966) Pinky in Persia (1968)
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Poetry collections A Statement (1932) A Glad Day (1938)
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American Citizen: Naturalized in Leadville (1944) Collected Poems (1962)
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The Lost Dogs of Phnom Pehn (1968) Testament for My Students and Other Poems (1970)
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A Poem for February First (1975) This Is Not a Letter and Other Poems (1985)
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Collected Poems of Kay Boyle (Copper Canyon Press, 1991)
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Non-fiction
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Relations & Complications. Being the Recollections of H.H. The Dayang Muda of Sarawak. (1929),
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Forew. by T.P. O'Connor (Gladys Milton Brooke) (ghost-written)
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Breaking the Silence: Why a Mother Tells Her Son about the Nazi Era (1962)
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The Last Rim of The World in "Why Work Series" (1966)
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Being Geniuses Together, 1920-1930 (1968; with Robert McAlmon)
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Winter Night and a conversation with the author in New Sounds In American Fiction (1969)
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The Long Walk at San Francisco State and Other Essays (1970)
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Four Visions of America (1977; with others)
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Words That Must Somehow Be Said (edited by Elizabeth Bell; 1985)
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Translations
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Don Juan, by Joseph Delteil (New York: Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith, 1931)
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Mr Knife, Miss Fork, by René Crevel (Paris: Black Sun Press, 1931). A fragment of Babylon
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translated into English.
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The Devil in the Flesh, by Raymond Radiguet (Paris: Crosby Continental Editions, 1932)
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Babylon, by René Crevel (San Francisco: North Point Press, 1985)
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References
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External links Modern American Poetry New York review of books, articles by Kay Boyle
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WOSU Presents Ohioana Authors | Kay Boyle
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Kay Boyle Collection at the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin
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Manuscripts and correspondence in Southwest Collection/Special Collections Library at Texas Tech
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University
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Kay Boyle Papers, 1914-1987 at Southern Illinois University Carbondale, Special Collections
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Research Center
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Kay Boyle addresses The New York Herald Tribune Book and Author Luncheon as heard on WNYC, March
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14, 1960. Boyle speaks starting at 2:35.
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"The Teaching of Writing," an essay, at Narrative Magazine.
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1902 births 1992 deaths Writers from Cincinnati 20th-century American novelists
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American women short story writers American women poets MacDowell Colony fellows
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Modernist women writers O. Henry Award winners American activists American tax resisters
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University of Cincinnati alumni American women novelists 20th-century American women writers
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20th-century American poets 20th-century American short story writers Novelists from Ohio
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Shipley School alumni
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Petersham railway station is a heritage-listed railway station located on the Main Suburban line,
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serving the Sydney suburb of Petersham. It is served by Sydney Trains T2 Inner West & Leppington
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line services. It was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 2 April 1999.
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History
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Petersham Station was opened on 6 January 1857 as a halt. A goods yard was established in 1882 and
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soon afterwards plans were prepared to quadruplicate the main line from Sydney to Homebush. This
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resulted in a further reorganisation of the Petersham yard so that the main station building was
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sited "up" on the platform and a new iron footbridge was built to cross the new railway and connect
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up with a new island platform where the earlier building was demolished and replaced by an
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elegantly designed curved roof structure.
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The new station building and footbridge were all designed by George Cowdery who was also
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responsible for the design of several other large and elaborate station buildings, including
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Newcastle (1876), Werris Creek (1883) and Cootamundra (1887). The plan of the station was based on
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the standard developed by John Whitton but the design and detailing of the station buildings and
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footbridge were much more elaborate than most station designs used elsewhere.
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In 1891, the present subway was built and another island platform building constructed to serve the
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slow tracks. Access to the platforms from this subway closed after 1988.
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A turn-back siding previously located between the local tracks has now been removed. This turn back
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siding was located on land now used for the training college west of the station.
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The Main Suburban line through Petersham was quadruplicated in 1892. A pedestrian subway was
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provided in 1892 at the western end of the station, connecting Trafalgar and Terminus Streets.
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Access to the platforms from this subway closed after 1988.
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Additional land was purchased in 1911 for a large goods yard and, with a new goods shed built in
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1913, made Petersham a major suburban station serving passengers and freight.
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In 1926, the addition of a further two tracks and electrification as part of a second stage of
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sextuplication and electrification of the Main Suburban line resulted in a major change to the way
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the station operated. The 1885 station building was closed and eventually became the offices of the
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District Signal Engineer. The other platform buildings were demolished and replaced by a brick
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building. The goods yard was gradually phased out and closed shortly after the second world war.
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In 1954 the north wing of the 1885 building was taken over by the Railways and Tramways Hospital
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Fund, and the present eastern wing was added.
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Upgrades to the station took place in the late 1990s, with the wooden steps on the footbridge being