1998

Primary Sources
Miller, Joaquin. “An Elk Hunt.” Natural State: A Literary Anthology of California Nature Writing. Selected and Edited by Steven Gilbar. Foreword by David Brower. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998. 377pp. [MULT] [WC] [PSU] [MCK]

Secondary Sources
Dulchinos, Donald P. Pioneer of Inner Space: the life of Fitz Hugh Ludlow, Hasheesh Eater. Autonomedia. 1998, 318 pages. [References to Miller not located] [MGK]
Lawson, Benjamin S. “Joaquin Miller (Cincinnatus Hiner)” in Encyclopedia of American
Poetry: The Nineteenth Century. Edited by Eric L. Haralson and John Hollander. Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn, 1998. 536pp. [MULT] [PSU] [WC] [MCK]
-----. “Robert W. Chambers,” “Winston Churchill,” “Joaquin Miller,” “Charles Warren Stoddard,” and “Maurice Thompson.” Encyclopedia of American Literature. New York: Ungar and Crossroads Publishers. 1998. [MGK]
-----. “The Presence of Joaquin Miller in the Octopus.” Frank Norris Studies 6 (1988): 1-3. [MGK]
Procter, Ben. William Randolph Hearst: The Early Years, 1863-1910. New York: Oxford University Press, 1998. 345pp. 100. [MULT] [WC] [PSU] [MCK]
[A brief mention that Hearst sent Joaquin and a boatload of journalists to cover the Klondike gold rush.]
“To Walt Whitman.” In Walt Whitman - the Measure of His Song. Edited by Jim
Perlman, Ed Folsom and Dan Campion. 2nd Revised Edition. Duluth: Holy Cow! Press, 1998. 531pp. [MCK] [WC] [First published in 1981]
Asche, Jennifer. “A Novel Shot of History for London’s Bar.” San Francisco Chronicle
(9 January 1998) [Noted that Joaquin also frequented Heinold’s First and Last Chance Saloon and that his portrait hangs near pictures of Jack London.] [MCK]
Butruille, Susan G. Women’s Voices From the Mother Lode: Tales from the California
Gold Rush. Boise: Tamarack Books, 1998. 272pp. 55, 91. [MULT] [PSU]
[WC] [MCK] [Quotes from Joaquin’s “Isles of the Amazons” head two chapters.]
Guilford-Kardell, Margaret. Joaquin Miller Newsletter I.5 (February 1998) [MGK]
Chun, Kimberly. “Jack London Slept (and Worked) Here.” San Francisco Chronicle (6
March 1998) [MCK] [Noted that Jack London belonged to the Press Club of Alameda (later the California Writer’s Club), a club of which Joaquin was an honorary member. Chun also notes that the club’s original motto was “Sail on!”]
Guilford-Kardell, Margaret. “Joaquin Miller (1841-1913) Poet, Tale Teller, Journalist and Historian.” A paper read at the 27th Annual Northstate Reading Council, Redding, California. (12 March 1998) [MGK]
Guilford-Kardell, Margaret. ”Joaquin Miller: Our Western Archetype Key to Understanding Ourselves.” [The myths and reality in the life and works of Joaquin Miller are both basic to our understanding of the formation of our western culture.] A paper read 12 March 1998 at the Shasta Reading Council’s 27th. Annual Northstate Reading Conference, Redding. CA. [MGK]
Guilford-Kardell, Margaret. ”Joaquin Miller and Black Bart: Our Two Most Famous Gold Miners.” A paper read at the Shasta Historical Society Monthly Meeting (14 March 1998) Redding, CA. [MGK]
Swensen, Rolf. “Oregon’s ‘Poetry Landslide’: Col. E. Hofer and the Lariat,” Oregon Historical Quarterly 99.1 (Spring 1998) [MGK]
Guilford-Kardell, Margaret. “Letter to the Editor.” Western American Literature (Summer 1998): 115. Re: Miller’s cairn in the Siskiyous and the new cairn logo in the Quarterly Journal of the Western Literature Association. [MGK]
Guilford-Kardell, Margaret. Joaquin Miller Newsletter I.6 (August 1998) [MGK]
Holt, Tim. “Lonely as God, etc.” “Score one for the Indians: Forest Service recognizes sacred relationship of tribes to Mt. Shasta.” Redding Record Searchlight (16 August 1998): A-7. [MGK]
Sunset Magazine Centennial Exhibition Sunset Magazine: A century of Western Living 1898 - 1998 on page 2 of 12-page handout Hoover Institution, Stanford University May 12 - August 15, 1998, California Historical Society, San Francisco, September 10, 1998 - January 2, 1999. [MGK]
McElrath, Joseph R., Jr. “Frank Norris’s Portrait of Joaquin Miller in The Octopus.”
Frank Norris Studies 26 (Autumn 1998): 7-8. [MLA] [MCK]
“The Lady in the Woods (Juanita Miller, Urban Legends).” Oakland Tribune (4 October
1998): 1. [MCK]

Web Sites
Adler, Jack “Joaquin Miller: Poet of the Sierras.” ©1998 Literary Traveler. The Nomad Group, 1998-2004 http://www.literarytraveler.com/miller/joaquinmiller.html [MGK]
Smith , Roxann Gess “Joaquin Miller: Oregon and Beyond” ©1998 [MGK] http://gesswhoto.com/miller.html

Walter, Curtis “The Wild West in Piccadilly: Joaquin Miller and the Performance of Place” 19th-century Regional Writing in the United States “ drdotwebb@traverse.net (8 August 1998) Joaquin Miller, and other early Oregon writers
http://www.traverse.com/people/dot/miller_london.html
Errrata “Pitt River Tribe” [Wintu] [MGK]
The Word Works Programs. “ABOUT THE SERIES: POETRY UNDER THE STARS: The Miller Cabin Poetry Series is the oldest summer reading series in Washington. In 1976, through the efforts of poet and physicist Jim Beall, the National Park Service gave The Word Works permission to use the Joaquin Miller Cabin in Washington's Rock Creek Park. Poets gathered for informal poetry workshops by candlelight in the rustic setting. In 1978 Karren Alenier established a reading series inside the cabin which was built in 1883. When audiences became too large for the small cabin, the programs were moved outside to the grounds behind the cabin. The programs directed by Karren Alenier have been documented in WHOSE WOODS THESE ARE, an anthology of poetry, anecdotes, and photos. “http://www.wordworksdc.com/miller_cabin.html#miller2
www.wordworksdc.com

 
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