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Elizabeth Madox Roberts (1881-1941), one of America's most original novelists and poets, set her work in the area around her home town of Springfield, Kentucky, what she called her Little Country, the rolling hills at the southern edge of the Bluegrass. Her distinctive voice came clear in her first book, Under the Tree (1922), a never-out-of-print collection of poems for children. Roberts liberated the genre from didactic sentimentalism and instead portrayed a child's sense of wonder and often comic absurdity. In her best known novels -- The Time of Man (1926) and The Great Meadow (1930), both short-listed for the Pulitzer Prize -- she developed a highly idiosyncratic language to explore the inner lives of women as they make sense of their places in the sometimes hostile but vividly rendered outer world.
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