The Bower Atmosphere: A Biography of B. M. Bower
Autor Victoria Lamonten Limba Engleză Paperback – mar 2024
Discouraged by her editors from publicizing her identity as a woman, Bower’s important contribution to American mass culture faded from cultural memory after her death in 1940. Based on extensive research in Bower’s personal archives and publishers’ records, as well as interviews with some of her descendants, The Bower Atmosphere recounts the remarkable twists and turns of Bower’s life, from her beginnings on a Montana cattle ranch to her success as a writer of serial westerns, all the while contending with the conflicting pressures of editors, husbands, children, and her own creative aspirations.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781496236210
ISBN-10: 1496236211
Pagini: 216
Ilustrații: 13 photographs, index
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: BISON BOOKS
Colecția Bison Books
Locul publicării:United States
ISBN-10: 1496236211
Pagini: 216
Ilustrații: 13 photographs, index
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: BISON BOOKS
Colecția Bison Books
Locul publicării:United States
Notă biografică
Victoria Lamont is a professor of English at the University of Waterloo. She is the author of Westerns: A Women’s History (Nebraska, 2016) and coauthor of Judith Merril: A Critical Study.
Extras
1
An Unbearable Servitude
Bertha Muzzy Bower was living in close quarters in a tiny cabin in a
hayfield near Big Sandy, Montana, when she made her first serious foray
as a professional writer. It was the winter of 1900, and Bertha shared
the drafty, three-room cabin with her husband and three children.
Her husband, Clayton, had been hired to feed calves for the winter for
the McNamara and Marlow cattle company, among the largest cattle
operations in Montana. In exchange for forking hay to five hundred
calves twice a day during the harsh Montana winter, Clayton received
a wage and use of the small cabin on the tl ranch, part of McNamara
and Marlow’s extensive holdings in the state. Deeply resentful of her
dependency on Clayton, and having from a young age nursed ambitions
to become a writer, Bertha saved enough money to buy a typewriter,
paper, and other supplies she would need to embark on a career as a
professional writer. On December 15, 1900, she made the trek to town
to post her first submission, a short story called “The Backsliding of
Sister Stewart,” to McClure’s Magazine.
It was an opportune time for budding writers, especially from the
West, because of a perfect storm of technological and social transfor-
mations that had been unfolding since the end of the Civil War. Print
technologies made it possible to mass-produce magazines using cheap
“pulp” paper, which could be widely distributed thanks to the expan-
sion of the national railroad system. These same railroads brought
millions of Americans to the big cities in search of factory work—
another product of the technological boom. As American life became
more urban and mechanized, readers craved stories about adventure
and open space. So magazine editors, scrambling for quality content
to fill their publications, looked West. Taking advantage of these con-
ditions, a Montana housewife named Bertha Muzzy Bower became
B. M. Bower, one of America’s earliest and most important authors of
that most macho of genres: the western.
An Unbearable Servitude
Bertha Muzzy Bower was living in close quarters in a tiny cabin in a
hayfield near Big Sandy, Montana, when she made her first serious foray
as a professional writer. It was the winter of 1900, and Bertha shared
the drafty, three-room cabin with her husband and three children.
Her husband, Clayton, had been hired to feed calves for the winter for
the McNamara and Marlow cattle company, among the largest cattle
operations in Montana. In exchange for forking hay to five hundred
calves twice a day during the harsh Montana winter, Clayton received
a wage and use of the small cabin on the tl ranch, part of McNamara
and Marlow’s extensive holdings in the state. Deeply resentful of her
dependency on Clayton, and having from a young age nursed ambitions
to become a writer, Bertha saved enough money to buy a typewriter,
paper, and other supplies she would need to embark on a career as a
professional writer. On December 15, 1900, she made the trek to town
to post her first submission, a short story called “The Backsliding of
Sister Stewart,” to McClure’s Magazine.
It was an opportune time for budding writers, especially from the
West, because of a perfect storm of technological and social transfor-
mations that had been unfolding since the end of the Civil War. Print
technologies made it possible to mass-produce magazines using cheap
“pulp” paper, which could be widely distributed thanks to the expan-
sion of the national railroad system. These same railroads brought
millions of Americans to the big cities in search of factory work—
another product of the technological boom. As American life became
more urban and mechanized, readers craved stories about adventure
and open space. So magazine editors, scrambling for quality content
to fill their publications, looked West. Taking advantage of these con-
ditions, a Montana housewife named Bertha Muzzy Bower became
B. M. Bower, one of America’s earliest and most important authors of
that most macho of genres: the western.
Cuprins
List of Illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. An Unbearable Servitude
2. A Brief and Stormy Passage
3. A Lodge in the Wilderness
4. Nature at Her Uncanny Worst
5. Days of Little Things
6. Readjustments
7. “Don’t Be Pious”
Afterword
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. An Unbearable Servitude
2. A Brief and Stormy Passage
3. A Lodge in the Wilderness
4. Nature at Her Uncanny Worst
5. Days of Little Things
6. Readjustments
7. “Don’t Be Pious”
Afterword
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Recenzii
"Undoubtedly the best biography of Western fiction writer Bertha Muzzy Sinclair, best known as B. M. Bower. Based on research in scattered archives and especially family papers, lore and oral history, Lamont has produced a meticulous portrayal of Bower's personal and publishing life."—Charles E. Rankin, Roundup Magazine
“This excellent volume . . . dramatically reframes the literary history of the western, confirming Bower’s foundational but heretofore unacknowledged role in establishing the genre; the western, Lamont proves, was never the sole province of male authors, its most genuine plots crafted by a woman whose gender was too long obscured.”—Jennifer S. Tuttle, coeditor of Charlotte Perkins Gilman: New Texts, New Contexts
“Victoria Lamont’s compelling biography—packed with verve, deep archival research, and the everyday dramas of B. M. Bower’s writing life—changes the story not only on one fascinating woman and her work but on larger assumptions, legacies, and lineages of western women writers.”—Christine Bold, author of The Frontier Club
“Meticulously researched, eminently readable. . . . Lamont traces a remarkable tale of Bower’s persistent creativity and remarkably varied contributions to early twentieth-century mass culture.”—Mary Chapman, author of Making Noise, Making News: Suffrage Print Culture and U.S. Modernism
Descriere
Reconstructing B. M. Bower’s daily life as it is documented in her diaries, letters, and family papers, this biography claims Bertha Muzzy Bower as a progenitor: a writer and western maverick whose daily life proved as dramatic as her fiction.