The People, Yes
Book by Carl Sandburg
0156716658 The People, Yes is a book-length poem written by Carl Sandburg and published in 1936. The 300 page work is thoroughly interspersed with references to American culture, phrases, and stories (such as the legend of Paul Bunyan). Published at the height of the Great Depression, the work lauds the perseverance of the American people in notably plain-spoken language. It was written over an eight-year period. It is Sandburg’s last major book of poetry.[1][2]
References
- v
- t
- e
Carl Sandburg
Bibliography
- "Chicago"
- "Fog"
- "Cool Tombs"
- "Grass"
- "Arithmetic"
- In Reckless Ecstasy
- Incidentals
- The Plaint of the Rose
- Chicago Poems
- Cornhuskers
- Smoke and Steel
- Slabs of the Sunburnt West
- Selected Poems
- Good Morning, America
- The People, Yes
- The American Songbag
- Songs of America
- The New American Songbag
- Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years
- Mary Lincoln: Wife and Widow
- Abraham Lincoln: The War Years
- Rootabaga Stories
- Rootabaga Pigeons
- Abe Lincoln Grows Up
- Early Moon
- Potato Face
- Prairie-Town Boy
- Wind Song
- Remembrance Rock
- The Family of Man introduction
- Carl Sandburg at the Movies
- Carl Sandburg Tribute (UCLA, 1958)
- The World of Carl Sandburg
- Rootabaga Stories
- Lincoln Portrait
- Carl Sandburg Reading Fog and other Poems
- Birthplace, boyhood home, gravesite
- Carl Sandburg Home National Historic Site
- Manuscripts and personal papers
- Carl Sandburg College
- Edward Steichen (brother-in-law)
- Commons
- Wikibooks
- Wikiquote
- Wikisource texts
This article related to a poem is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e