SUMMARY Sherwood Anderson was a poet, novelist, essayist, businessman, and newspaper editor most often associated with the American Midwest. His notable collection of related short stories,
Winesburg, Ohio (1919), examined small-town life in the late 1800s. Anderson moved in the highest of American literary circles, entertaining and to some extent even influencing such writers as William Faulkner (about whom Anderson wrote the short story “A Meeting South”) and Ernest Hemingway, who parodied Anderson in his debut novel
The Torrents of Spring (1926). Anderson moved to southwestern Virginia in 1926, where he spent the rest of his years chronicling life in the depression-era South.
american public s future, i m all for it. i m going to give in, i m going to sacrifice for that because that s what the american public wants. that s what my children want that s what my family wants and that s what the vast majority of people in this country want. they want border security and we re willing to give that to them. neil: but do you think that whatever the president is envisioning is going to be enough? if you think about it brandon, the fight over the $5 billion, is actually a fight over a continuing down payment on something that will eventually cost in excess of $25 billion, right? well, if we saw that the democrats actually had a plan to physically keep people from crossing the border illegally, we re not talking about legal immigration, it s illegal immigration, if they had a plan to physically keep people out, we could get behind that. they don t. what this president is talking about, he s talking about the proper mixture of infrastructure which is the wall, he s