# 3444 PB - 2000 33c Literary Arts: Thomas Wolfe
33¢ Thomas Wolfe
Literary Arts Series
City: Asheville, NC
Quantity: 53,000,000
Printed by: Ashton-Potter (USA) Ltd
Printing Method: Lithographed
Perforations: 11
Color: Multicolored
Birth Of Thomas Wolfe
Wolfe was the youngest of eight siblings. His father was a stone carver and his mother ran a series of boarding houses, eventually becoming a successful real estate speculator. Wolfe grew up in one of these boarding houses until he went to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1916.
There, Wolfe was a member of the Dialectic Society and edited the school newspaper, The Daily Tar Heel. He won the Worth Prize for Philosophy for his essay, The Crisis in Industry. Wolfe took playwriting courses and wrote two plays that were performed by the school’s acting troupe.
Wolfe soon began to realize that his writing style was more geared toward fiction than plays, so he began writing his first novel, Look Homeward, Angel. Set in a fictional small town based on his hometown of Asheville, the book was a largely autobiographical story of his childhood, reflecting a young man’s struggle in a small town.
Wolfe spent the next four years writing a sequel, Of Time and the River. Published in 1935, it was an even greater success than his first book. However, this time the people of Asheville were even more upset because they weren’t included in the story at all.
Wolfe published a short story, Chickamauga, in 1937, set during the Civil War Battle of the same name. Shortly after, he returned back to Asheville for the first time since his first book was published.
Moving tributes poured in following Wolfe’s sudden death, including Time, which wrote, “of all American novelists of his generation, he was the one from whom most had been expected.” In the years following his death, Wolfe’s publisher released three books he’d written before his death: The Web and the Rock (1939), You Can’t Go Home Again (1940), and The Hills Beyond (1941). Several authors have cited Wolfe as an inspiration, including Jack Kerouac and Ray Bradbury.
33¢ Thomas Wolfe
Literary Arts Series
City: Asheville, NC
Quantity: 53,000,000
Printed by: Ashton-Potter (USA) Ltd
Printing Method: Lithographed
Perforations: 11
Color: Multicolored
Birth Of Thomas Wolfe
Wolfe was the youngest of eight siblings. His father was a stone carver and his mother ran a series of boarding houses, eventually becoming a successful real estate speculator. Wolfe grew up in one of these boarding houses until he went to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1916.
There, Wolfe was a member of the Dialectic Society and edited the school newspaper, The Daily Tar Heel. He won the Worth Prize for Philosophy for his essay, The Crisis in Industry. Wolfe took playwriting courses and wrote two plays that were performed by the school’s acting troupe.
Wolfe soon began to realize that his writing style was more geared toward fiction than plays, so he began writing his first novel, Look Homeward, Angel. Set in a fictional small town based on his hometown of Asheville, the book was a largely autobiographical story of his childhood, reflecting a young man’s struggle in a small town.
Wolfe spent the next four years writing a sequel, Of Time and the River. Published in 1935, it was an even greater success than his first book. However, this time the people of Asheville were even more upset because they weren’t included in the story at all.
Wolfe published a short story, Chickamauga, in 1937, set during the Civil War Battle of the same name. Shortly after, he returned back to Asheville for the first time since his first book was published.
Moving tributes poured in following Wolfe’s sudden death, including Time, which wrote, “of all American novelists of his generation, he was the one from whom most had been expected.” In the years following his death, Wolfe’s publisher released three books he’d written before his death: The Web and the Rock (1939), You Can’t Go Home Again (1940), and The Hills Beyond (1941). Several authors have cited Wolfe as an inspiration, including Jack Kerouac and Ray Bradbury.