What Longfellow Heard (Paperback)
Description
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was enormously
 famous in his day. Adults and children celebrated
 his poems, both in America and abroad.
 He was the first American poet admitted into the
 Poets' Corner of Westminster Abbey in England
 and was renowned for such works as "Hiawatha,"
 "Paul Revere's Ride," "Evangeline," "Tales of a Wayside
 Inn" and others. However, his amazing life was
 wrought with trials and heartaches during an era
 when America was laboring to grow up without destroying
 itself in the process.
 What Longfellow Heard is a powerful telling, 
 in many of the words and musings of the poet
 himself, of his tragic quest for love and family, his
 longing for art and fame, and his heartbreaking
 loss. Discover how his art and faith wrestled within
 him while he desperately tried to make peace with
 the tumult of his times. Experience the tragedy of
 his first marriage, his long road to recovery, and his
 passion for the woman he pursued for seven years
 while the nation fractured and his poetry soared.
 What Longfellow Heard is a novel with profound
 relevance to our modern-day polarization, 
 increasingly clouded national identities, and the
 universal aching for peace, joy, and purpose in the
 midst of conflict and confusion.
 
      
