Michael Pritchett

Michael Pritchett is an American author best known for his novel The Melancholy Fate of Capt. Lewis.[1][2][3] Pritchett teaches at the University of Missouri in Kansas City. He is a graduate of the University of Missouri and holds a Masters of Fine Arts in creative writing from Warren Wilson College. He won a Dana Award in 2000.

His fiction has been anthologized in well-known journals, including Passages North, Natural Bridge and New Letters.

Published works

  • Pritchett, Michael (2007). The Melancholy Fate of Captain Lewis. Unbridled Books. pp. 416. ISBN 978-1-932961-41-6.
gollark: I mean, how do people manage to mess this stuff up? I hesitate to say that I could do better about presumably very complex things, but it seems like a lot of the time the phone network is terrible and even I could do better at designing it.
gollark: Apparently there's yet *another* issue with phone network stuff (https://www.rtl-sdr.com/eavesdropping-on-lte-calls-with-a-usrp-software-defined-radio/) because apparently the designers/implementors are... idiots, so far as I can tell?
gollark: It does exist, but if people keep going "well it's not real anyway" a lot as if it's already gone, that will not really help.
gollark: ... no.
gollark: I think I'm somewhat safer than average due to running my phone without Google services and carefully monitoring apps' location use, but the phone network also leaks location data horribly.

References

  1. Amy Woods Butler, St. Louis Post Dispatch, Nov. 25, 2007
  2. Joseph B. Frazier, Book Explores Meriwether Lewis, San Francisco Chronicle Nov. 9, 2007
  3. Seattle Times Review

Ron Charles, Washington Post review 11/4/07.



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