Sunday May 15, 2022
Loren Eiseley: Every Writer’s Writer, Every Human’s Human
Biographical Bytes from Bala: Laurel Hill West Stories #008
Loren Eiseley grew up in a troubled family on the plains of Nebraska and drifted across the American West on trains during the Great Depression. Yet during his life he earned 36 honorary degrees and was one of the most respected researchers, educators, and writers in the country. He was Benjamin Franklin Professor of Anthropology and History of Science, and the curator of the Early Man section at the University of Pennsylvania Museum. Like Henry David Thoreau, his writings on man and nature are treasured to this day. When Eiseley died in 1977, many people felt as though they had lost a close personal friend, even if they never met him. Science-fiction author Ray Bradbury remarked that he "is every writer's writer, and every human's human ... One of us, yet most uncommon ..."
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