A Retelling of 19th Century Sauk Land Dispossession & Scott County Settlement
918studio Press to release 5th anniversary edition of "Her Kind" a novel
Davenport, IA, May 10, 2018 --(PR.com)-- 918studio press announced today it will release a fifth anniversary edition of "Her Kind," a novel, by Robin Throne in September. The first edition was Throne’s debut novel, a historical fictionalized account of the Sauk relocation to the Iowa territory and Scott County settlement following the Black Hawk war for which she earned a literary fiction award and residency from the Writer’s Well.
The new edition includes a foreword by Mississippi River visual artist Nancy L. Purington, who described "Her Kind" as a poignant Great River Road history lesson along the Upper Mississippi River Valley.
Throne, a Quad Cities area writer/researcher, has continued feminist research into land and voice dispossession among indigenous cultures as a visiting researcher at the John Henry Hauberg Papers, Augustana College, in fall 2017 and will present “Hermeneutic Archival Research & Artistic License: Exhuming Dispossessed Sauk Voices through Creative Non-Fiction,” May 17 at the Fourteenth International Congress of Qualitative Inquiry at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
Her new work is an allegorical novella of three generations of Gullah women and Lowcountry heirs’ property land dispossession to be released in October by Anaphora Literary Press.
Learn more at http://918studiopress.com/her-kind-a-novel/.
The new edition includes a foreword by Mississippi River visual artist Nancy L. Purington, who described "Her Kind" as a poignant Great River Road history lesson along the Upper Mississippi River Valley.
Throne, a Quad Cities area writer/researcher, has continued feminist research into land and voice dispossession among indigenous cultures as a visiting researcher at the John Henry Hauberg Papers, Augustana College, in fall 2017 and will present “Hermeneutic Archival Research & Artistic License: Exhuming Dispossessed Sauk Voices through Creative Non-Fiction,” May 17 at the Fourteenth International Congress of Qualitative Inquiry at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
Her new work is an allegorical novella of three generations of Gullah women and Lowcountry heirs’ property land dispossession to be released in October by Anaphora Literary Press.
Learn more at http://918studiopress.com/her-kind-a-novel/.
Contact
918studio press
Jodie Toohey
563-386-3236
918studiopress.com
Contact
Jodie Toohey
563-386-3236
918studiopress.com
Categories