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The Thomas Wolfe House, also known as the Thomas Wolfe Memorial, is a state historic site, historic house and museum located at 52 North Market Street in downtown Asheville, North Carolina. The American author Thomas Wolfe (1900–1938) lived in the home during his boyhood.
The people who bought lots and built in the Montford area in its building prime were for the most part middle class individuals who carried out the day-to-day activities of the city—businessmen, lawyers, doctors, and a few architects. Several residents found immortality in Thomas Wolfe's autobiographical Look Homeward, Angel. Early city ...
Thomas Clayton Wolfe (October 3, 1900 – September 15, 1938) was an American novelist. [1] [2] He is known largely for his first novel, Look Homeward, Angel (1929), and for the short fiction that appeared during the last years of his life. [1]
The Thomas Wolfe Memorial is closed "indefinitely" after a tree fell on the famed novelist's childhood home. "Due to the intense winds brought on by Hurricane Helene, one of the property’s maple ...
View of E. Max Whitson's cabin in the woods of Oteen, where Thomas Wolfe spent some of the summer of 1937. Chamber of Commerce photo. Print donated 1998 by John F. Barber.
This list of books about Thomas Wolfe (1900 – 1938) includes biographies, literary criticism, and like books. Wolfe is widely considered to be a major American novelist and short story writer of the early 20th century, and some critics consider some of his work to be worthy of inclusion in the American literary canon.
Thomas Wolfe House: Thomas Wolfe House. November 11, 1971 Asheville: Buncombe: 39 ... Wright Brothers National Memorial Visitor Center. January 3, 2001
Library Journal called the book the most successful of Wolfe's three major biographies to that date [3] (it had been preceded by books by Wolfe's agent Elizabeth Nowell [4] (1960) and by Andrew Turnbull (1967), [5] both titled Thomas Wolfe: A Biography; other biographies have been published since).