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My Ántonia
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My Ántonia
December 26 | 9PM EST | C-SPAN
My Ántonia
Your purchase helps support C‑SPAN
Click here to learn how

C‑SPAN.org offers links to books featured on the C‑SPAN networks to make it simpler for viewers to purchase them. C‑SPAN has agreements with retailers that share a small percentage of your purchase price with our network. For example, as an Amazon Associate, C‑SPAN earns money from your qualifying purchases. However, C‑SPAN only receives this revenue if your book purchase is made using the links on this page.

Any revenue realized from this program goes into a general account to help fund C‑SPAN operations.

Please note that questions regarding fulfillment, customer service, privacy policies, or issues relating to your book orders should be directed to the Webmaster or administrator of the specific bookseller's site and are their sole responsibility.

Willa Cather
Willa Cather
In 1883, Willa Cather moved with her family from Virginia to the Nebraska village of Red Cloud, where she grew up among immigrants from Europe—Swedes, Bohemians, Russians, Germans—who were establishing homesteads on the Great Plains. After graduating from the University of Nebraska in 1895, she began work as a journalist for a magazine in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. By 1912, Cather had devoted herself wholly to writing novels. After setting her first novel, Alexander's Bridge, in Boston and London, Cather turned to her familiar Nebraska for other material, writing O Pioneers! and My Ántonia, which is often called her finest achievement.
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Summary
Willa Cather's novel, My Ántonia, evokes the Nebraska prairie life of her childhood and pays tribute to the spirit and courage of immigrant pioneers in America. Written in 1918, the book tells the story of a girl who arrives on the frontier as part of a family of Bohemian immigrants, and her friendship with an orphaned boy who taught her English. The book explores issues facing women of the time in that region, and the meaning of success in America.

Willa Cather
Willa Cather
In 1883, Willa Cather moved with her family from Virginia to the Nebraska village of Red Cloud, where she grew up among immigrants from Europe—Swedes, Bohemians, Russians, Germans—who were establishing homesteads on the Great Plains. After graduating from the University of Nebraska in 1895, she began work as a journalist for a magazine in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. By 1912, Cather had devoted herself wholly to writing novels. After setting her first novel, ''Alexander's Bridge'', in Boston and London, Cather turned to her familiar Nebraska for other material, writing ''O Pioneers!'' and ''My Ántonia'', which is often called her finest achievement.
To learn more about this author, listen to our companion podcast

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