Free tours for North Carolina residents. …she gave to Luck’s Lad the title of Eugene, a name which, beautifully, means “well born,” but which, as any one will be able to testify, does not mean, has never meant, “well bred.”
Saturday December 14th is our annual holiday open house. Join us for a tour of the historic house, crafts and treats in our visitor center. Children admitted free.
We will be discussing “No Door,” originally published in two installments in Scribner’s Magazine in 1933 and 1934, and later become part of Wolfe’s full-length book Of Time and the River.
Join us in a discussion of “The Four Lost Men,” originally published as a short story of seven thousand words in Scribner’s Magazine in 1934 and later abridged by one thousand words for republication in Wolfe’s 1935 anthology From Death to Morning.
For February and the Year of the Women we are remembering one of the most memorable women in American literature–Eliza Gant or Thomas Wolfe’s mother Julia. “She pursed her lips, shook her head, a slight, abrupt movement, and smiled presently, looking at me with mischievously shining eyes.”
Join us for a discussion of “Oktoberfest” originally published in Scribner’s Magazine, June 1937. Thomas Wolfe wrote; “…in these places you come to the heart of Germany.”
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