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  1. Ernest James Haycox (October 1, 1899 – October 13, 1950) [1] was an American writer of Western fiction . Biography. Haycox was born in Portland, Oregon, to William James Haycox and the former Martha Burghardt on October 1, 1899. [2] .

  2. Ernest Haycox was an important figure in the development of the popular Western. Diligent, prolific, and ambitious, he wrote twenty-four novels, nearly three hundred short stories and serial installments, and dozens of essays.

  3. Complete order of Ernest Haycox books in Publication Order and Chronological Order.

  4. Excellent bibliographies of Haycox' work are in Ernest Haycox Fiction ( A Checklist, Call Number 25, Fall 1963-Spring 1964, and Ernest Haycox, Stephen L. Tanner, Twayne Publishers, New York, 1996. that featured western Indians and cattle drivers in peaceful harmony.

  5. www.oregonencyclopedia.org › about › authorsThe Oregon Encyclopedia

    Ernest Haycox was an important figure in the development of the popular Western. Diligent, prolific, and ambitious, he wrote twenty-four novels, nearly three hundred short stories and serial installments, and dozens of essays.

    • Ernest Haycox1
    • Ernest Haycox2
    • Ernest Haycox3
    • Ernest Haycox4
    • Ernest Haycox5
  6. Dec 17, 2017 · When Ernest Haycox applied his University of Oregon journalism education to western literature, he reinvented the genre. In place of flowery bursts of sentiment and sensationalism, Haycox offered clear, lean, and active prose.

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  8. Feb 26, 2018 · Ernest Haycox died in 1950, but he continues to cast a long shadow over Western fiction. In Ernest Haycox and the Western (University Press of Oklahoma, $29.95), Richard W. Etulain gives us a literary history of the author’s work, with special emphasis on two breakthrough novels: The Wild Bunch (1943) and Bugles in the Afternoon (1944).

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