A classic of American realism, A Son of the Middle Border (1917) is the
true coming-of-age odyssey of a farm boy who--informed by the full brute
force of a homesteaders' life on the vast unbroken prairie--would become
a preeminent American writer of the early twentieth century. Pulitzer
Prize winner Hamlin Garland's captivating autobiography recounts his
journey from a rural childhood to the study of literature and the
sciences in Boston, his vital connections with such inspirations as
William Dean Howell, and eventually his reclaimed sense of identity as a
writer of the Midwest's beautiful yet hard land. This definitive book
placed Garland among such regionalist writers as Willa Cather, Sherwood
Anderson, and Theodore Dreiser.