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The site of a thriving literary tradition, Washington, DC, has been the home to many of our nations most acclaimed writers. From the citys founding to the beginnings of modernism, literary luminaries including Walt Whitman, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Alice Dunbar-Nelson, Henry Adams, Langston Hughes, and Zora Neale Hurston have lived and worked at their craft in our nations capital.In A Literary Guide to Washington, DC, Kim Roberts offers a guide to the citys rich literary history. Part walking tour, part anthology, A Literary Guide to Washington, DC is organized into five sections, each corresponding to a particularly vibrant period in Washingtons literary community. Starting with the citys earliest years, Roberts examines writers such as Hasty-Pudding poet Joel Barlow and "Star-Spangled Banner" lyricist Francis Scott Key before moving on to the Civil War and Reconstruction and touching on the lives of authors such as Charlotte Forten Grimké and James Weldon Johnson. She wraps up her tour with World War I and the Jazz Age, which brought to the city some writers at the forefront of modernism, including the first American to win the Nobel Prize for Literature, Sinclair Lewis. The books stimulating tours cover downtown, the LeDroit Park and Shaw neighborhoods, Lafayette Square, and the historic U Street district, bringing the history of the city to life in surprising ways.Written for tourists, literary enthusiasts, amateur historians, and armchair travelers, A Literary Guide to Washington, DC offers a cultural tour of our nations capital through a literary lens.



About the Author

Kim Roberts

Kim Roberts is the author of five books of poems, most recently The Scientific Method. She is editor of the anthology Full Moon on K Street: Poems About Washington, DC, and co-edits the literary journal Beltway Poetry Quarterly. The recipient of grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Humanities Council of Washington, and the DC Commission on the Arts, she has been a writer-in-residence at seventeen artist colonies, and her poetry has been translated into Spanish, Portuguese, German, and Mandarin. Her website: www.kimroberts.org



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