1980

Secondary Sources
Ferlinghetti, Lawrence and Nancy J. Peters. Literary San Francisco. San Francisco: City Lights Books, New York: Harper & Row, Toronto: Fitzhenry and Whiteside, Ltd. 1980. [MGK]
Guilford-Kardell, Margaret, Assembled with Jim Dotta. “Some Pre-Contact Shasta County Wintu Site Locations: Correlation of the Previously Unpublished Notes of Jeremiah Curtin and J.P. Harrington with Later Published, Recorded, and Unrecorded Data on the Dawpom, Wenemem, Puidalpom, and Waimuk Areas of Wintu Population,” Occasional Papers of the Redding Museum. Paper #1, Redding,CA: Redding Museum and Art Center, 1980. 131pp.[Note: Wintu was not a written language. Worotitot lived on the McCloud River at Waielqpormas [now Ah-di-na] (p. 75). Worotitot was given by Norelputis as meaning “Short fellow” (p. 119). In Miller’s autobiographical novel Life Amongst the Modocs Miller spelled Worotitot as Warrottetot (p. 364) and elsewhere implies he is his father-in-law.] [Referenced in this bibliography as MGK]
Grant Co. Museum. “How to Get Your Head Through a Crack in the Barn Door” in Pioneeer Life in Eastern Oregon. [Re marriage by Joaquin Miller February 23, 1870 in Cañon City of Sarah Manwaring and Thomas Meador.] [MGK]
Jones, J. Roy. Saddle Bags in Siskiyou. Happy Camp, California: Naturgraph Publishers, Inc. 1980. pp. 40, 57, 58, 75, 123, 152, 202, 209, 232. Reprint of 1953 edition. [MGK]
Kaplan, Justin. Walt Whitman, A Life. New York: Simon and Schuster, 432p. Miller p. 340. Limited 1st Edition. Franklin Center, Pennsylvania: Franklin Library, 1980. 428pp. [WC] [MULT] [PSU] [MGK] [MCK] [Also published in 1982 and 1986] [Note about Whitman running into Miller on Fifth Avenue in New York in July 1872. The men talked for three hours. Kaplan compares the styles of the two men, quotes Miller as saying ‘it helps sell the poems, you know, and it tickles the duchesses’ and quotes Whitman as calling the Poet of the Sierras “a natural prince” and a “California Hamlet, unhappy everywhere.”] [MCK]
Lawson, Benjamin. Joaquin Miller. Edited by Wayne Chatterton and James H. Maguire. Western Writers Series No. 43. Boise, Idaho: Boise State University Press, 1980. 52pp.[BAN] [OHS] [HUN] [MLA] [MGK] [MCK]
Levernier, James A. “Joaquin Miller.” American Literature to 1900. St. Martins Press. 1980. pp. 230-232. [MGK]
Longtin, Ray C. Three Writers of the Far West: A Reference Guide. Boston: G.K. Hall & Co. 1980. 296 pp. [BAN] [MLA] [MGK] [MCK] [A well-annotated guide to the work of and writings about Joaquin Miller, Charles Warren Stoddard, and George Sterling. In 1980 Dr. Ray C. Longtin began to sense “...a subtle undercurrent of rethinking about this eccentric man. Perhaps, for reasons other than his poetry, Miller deserves restudy.”]
Morrow, Patrick D. “Parody and Parable in Early Western Local Color Writing” in Journal of the West 19.1 (1980): 9-16. Miller’s contribution to local color writing discussed in this article. [MGK]
Bagwell, Beth. “Joaquin C.H. Miller, the Poet of the Sierras...much more than a Bearded Bard.” Montclarion, Oakland, California (18 June 1980): 6-7. [OAK] [MGK]

Letters and Archival Papers
Cook, Thomas B. “Crater Lake, 1903.” Oregon Historical Quarterly 81.1 (Spring 1980): 44. [Picture of Crater Lake. Will G. Steel stands at right in rim view above. The occasion was an excursion to Crater Lake from Medford in August 1903. Photo shows Joaquin Miller with three companions, identities unknown. (Kising Brothers Photographers; Oregon Historical Society collection.)] [MGK]

 
Bibliography: Printable

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