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The Lizard Woman,Used
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Review The prose of Frank Waters seems almost as timeless as the Southwest of which he writes so elegantly and so eloquently. The Lizard Woman is the story of a journey, and of a discovery. It is a brief, but powerful and compelling story.Jerry Keenan, Colorado Libraries Product Description The novel was begun in 1926, when I was twentyfour years old and working as a telephone engineer in Imperial Valley, on the CaliforniaBaja California border. During my stay there I made a horseback trip down into the littleknown desert interior of Lower California. After having lived all of my early years in the high Rockies of California, I was unprepared for the vast sweep of sunstruck desert with its flat wastes, clumps of cacti, and barren parchedrock ranges. Its emotional impact was so profound, I was impelled to give voice to it with pencil and paper. Frank WatersFirst published in 1930 under the title Fever Pitch, The Lizard Woman is Frank Waters first novel. It foreshadows a theme central to Waters later work: that we must attune our spirits to the land to fully understand our places in the natural order. From the Back Cover First published in 1930 under the title Fever Pitch, The Lizard Woman is Frank Water's first novel. It foreshadows a theme central to Waters' later work: that we must attune our spirits to the land to fully understand our places in the natural order. Waters once made a long trip on horseback deep into Mexico, and this is knitted up in his wellwrought story of The Lizard Woman. About the Author Frank Waters (19021995), one of the finest chroniclers of the American Southwest, wrote twentyeight works of fiction and nonfiction.
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