Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Jul 10, 2023 · Bierce was born to Marcus Aurelius and Laura Sherwood Bierce on a farm in Horse Cave Creek, Meigs County, Ohio, and moved to northern Indiana at an early age. After some years spent at an abolitionist paper (1857-1859), printer’s devil at the Northern Indianan ), enrolled at the Kentucky Military Institute (1859-60), and working on the family ...

    • Biography
    • Historical and Literary Significance
    • References

    Ambrose Bierce is best known for his short stories, many of which combine the experience of the Civil War with psychologically or supernaturally uncanny events. He was also a cutting newspaper columnist, and his satirical mode is evident in works such as The Devil’s Dictionary. His satirical political writings earned him attention and no small degr...

    Much of Bierce’s work is characterized by cynicism and satire, which takes on more literal and cutting forms in his journalistic work (as well as in his collection of satirical aphorisms, The Devil’s Dictionary) but is more abstractly expressed in much of his fiction. A number of his most-studied works (including “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge,...

    “Ambrose (Gwinett) Bierce.” In Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit: Gale, 2003. “Bierce, Ambrose.” In Gale Contextual Encyclopedia of American Literature, 147-151. Vol. 1. Detroit: Gale, 2009. Solomon, Eric. “Bierce, Ambrose (Gwinnet).” In Reference Guide to Short Fiction, 2nd ed., edited by Thomas Riggs, 70-71. Detroit: St. James Press, 1999.

  2. Dec 27, 2016 · December 27, 1913 My Favorite Curmudgeon. Today, any writer who wants to be the least bit controversial had better keep his lawyer’s number on speed dial. In Bierces day, he’d better carry a gun. Ambrose Bierce was born in Horse Cave Creek, Ohio, to Marcus Aurelius and Laura Sherwood Bierce, the 10th of 13 children, all with names ...

  3. His satirical political writings earned him attention and no small degree of notoriety in his time, as well as the nickname “Bitter Bierce.” Bierce was born to Marcus Aurelius and Laura Sherwood Bierce on a farm in Horse Cave Creek, Meigs County, Ohio, and moved to northern Indiana at an early age.

  4. Goodwin-Genealogy Wikia. Laura (Sherwood) Bierce. Laura Sherwood's tombstone, 2012. Laura Sherwood (February 28, 1803 - May 22, 1878) was a resident of Cornwall, Connecticut, and the state of Ohio and Indiana. Sherwood was born in Cornwall, Connecticut on February 28, 1803 as the daughter of a Congregational deacon.

  5. Born June 24, 1842, in Horse Cave Creek, Meigs County, OH; disappeared in Mexico while acting as an observer of that country's civil war, c. January, 1914; son of Marcus Aurelius (a journeyman farmer) and Laura (Sherwood) Bierce; married Mary Ellen (Mollie) Day, December 25, 1871 (separated, 1891; divorced, 1904; died, 1904); children: Day (son ...

  6. Ambrose Gwinnett Bierce was born on June 24, 1842 in Megis County, Ohio to Marcus Aurelius Bierce and Laura Sherwood Bierce. Bierce was the tenth of thirteen children, whose names all began with the letter "A". Bierce grew up in a poor, but literary, family who encouraged his love for books.

  1. People also search for