“Arrastre L.”
As her writing attests, Annie Proulx is a keen observer of the natural world. The landscape of North America figures prominently in her fiction: the tempestuous sea in her Pulitzer Prize-winning The Shipping News (1993); high prairies dappled in “broken-cloud light” in “Brokeback Mountain” (1997); forests of “evergreens taller than cathedrals, cloud-piercing spruce and hemlock” in her bestselling epic Barkskins (2016).
She captures the environment, with all of its harshness and beauty, in detailed sketches as well as in her lyrical prose. Her attentiveness is apparent in this watercolor drawing of Arrastre Lake, a remote body of water nestled among pine forests and open meadows in Wyoming, and accessible only about five months of the year.
: Henry W. and Albert A. Berg Collection of English and American Literature
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Items in The Written Word
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Annie Proulx’s watercolor sketchbook
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Annie Proulx’s watercolor “Arrastre L.”
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Manuscript of Mary Shelley’s poem “The Choice”
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Letter from Percy Bysshe Shelley to Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
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Discovery of Percy Shelley’s Body
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Fragments of the skull of Percy Bysshe Shelley
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