Mary E. Wilkins Freeman ranks among the foremost interpreters of New England village and rural life. Though she may correctly be described as a local colorist, she is much more, for in her short stories and novels she deals perceptively with the 250-year...
The life of Mary E. Wilkins Freeman has too often been compared to that of the spinsters who populate much of her fiction. Although she lived most of her life in small New England villages and did not marry until she was forty-nine years of age, Freeman'...
A small doll-like woman, who never wished to grow old and yet came to resemble so many of her aging heroines, created in her fiction the heart of New England's life and ethos. Mary Wilkins Freeman created strong-willed characters, whose Yankee stoicism o...
Only a miracle could draw people to that canal, water that hasn't moved in years, rancid, shut off from the main river years ago. The canal has been forgotten about, like the neighborhood itself, left as a depository, a collection box of dumped appliances,...
Byline: Melynda Findlay Daily Herald Staff Writer The Chicago area is chock-full of terrible tales and frightening fables, told and retold each year at Halloween. From the strange smells around a fire victim's memorial, to the residual hauntings by victims of one...
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