

WILLIAM PESTER SERIES
Boise State University Western Writers Series (BSUWWS #) – Boise, Idaho.The Grumbling Gods: a Palm Springs Reader.A Rendezvous Reader: Tall, Tangled, and True Tales of the Mountain Men, 1805–1850.Into the Wilderness Dream: Explorations Narratives of the American West, 1500–1805.Van Dyke: A Personal Narrative of American Life, 1861–1931. Republished as: The New Desert Reader: Descriptions of America's Arid Regions.The Desert Reader: Descriptions of America's Arid Regions.University of Utah Press – Salt Lake City (as editor).New York: New Rivers Press (distributor: Serendipity Books). (with Matthews, William (introduction) Eddy, Deborah (illustrations)). Cincinnati, OH: Art Association of Cincinnati. His 1973 volume of poetry, Cochise, a eulogy to the Chiricahua Apache Indians and their leader Cochise, was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in Poetry. He then began teaching for nearly 40 years and wrote over 2,000 poems also, he edited or wrote some 80 fiction and non-fiction books, largely dealing with the American West. in 1969 from the University of California, Irvine. Forest Service, and served as a lieutenant with the U.S.

:5 Wild worked as a rancher and firefighter for the U.S. Born in Northampton, Massachusetts, he grew up in and graduated from high school in Easthampton, Massachusetts. Wild (Ap– February 23, 2009) was a poet, historian, and professor of English at the University of Arizona in Tucson, Arizona. Nominated, Pulitzer Prize in Poetry, 1973

& M.A.), University of California, Irvine (M.F.A.)
