A lively account of Maryland's long-overlooked but substantial
contribution to American letters.
In this first comprehensive literary history of Baltimore and Maryland
(with notes on Washington writers), Frank R. Shivers, Jr., explores the
region's long-overlooked but substantial contribution to American
letters. In picture and story, Shivers's lively account ranges from the
colonial satire of Ebenezer Cook, to the National Anthem of Francis
Scott Key, to the acclaimed works of Poe, Mencken, and Fitzgerald. Here
are surprising stories of Frederick Douglass, Walt Whitman, Dashiel
Hammett, Gertrude Stein, John Dos Passos, and other writers influenced
by Chesapeake culture--an influence still fresh in the work of such
contemporary writers as John Barth, Anne Tyler, and Russell Baker.
"Nothing," wrote Gertrude Stein, "really can stop anyone living and
feeling as they do in Baltimore." As entertaining as it is informative,
Maryland Wits and Baltimore Bards shows us why.