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  2. The Open Boat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_open_boat

    "The Open Boat" is a short story by American author Stephen Crane (1871–1900). First published in 1898, it was based on Crane's experience of surviving a shipwreck off the coast of Florida earlier that year while traveling to Cuba to work as a newspaper correspondent.

  3. Édouard Glissant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Édouard_Glissant

    In the excerpt from Poetics of Relation, [6] "The Open Boat", Glissant's imagery was particularly compelling when describing the slave experience and the linkage between a slave and the homeland and the slave and the unknown. This poem paralleled Dionne Brand's book in calling the "Door of No Return" an Infinite Abyss. This image conveys ...

  4. Stephen Crane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_Crane

    The Open Boat and Other Stories (1898) contains seventeen short stories that deal with three periods in Crane's life: his Asbury Park boyhood, his trip to the West and Mexico in 1895, and his Cuban adventure in 1897. [223] This collection was well received and included several of his most critically successful works.

  5. Wikipedia:Peer review/The Open Boat/archive1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../The_Open_Boat/archive1

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  6. The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bride_Comes_to_Yellow_Sky

    At the time of his death he was living in Germany. According to Encyclopædia Britannica, "He is known for being a novelist, poet, and short-story writer, best known for his novels Maggie: A Girl of the Streets (1893) and The Red Badge of Courage (1895) and the short stories 'The Open Boat', 'The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky', and 'The Blue Hotel'".

  7. Wikipedia : Featured article candidates/The Open Boat/archive1

    en.wikipedia.org/.../The_Open_Boat/archive1

    Language links are at the top of the page across from the title.

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  9. The Black Riders and Other Lines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Black_Riders_and_Other...

    Crane was inspired by her writing and, within several months, wrote the beginnings of what became his first book of poetry. [1] One friend recalled that he saw Crane's first attempts at poetry in mid-February 1894 and Hamlin Garland claimed in a later reminiscence that Crane brought him a pile of manuscripts the next month. [2]