Skip to main content
Toggle navigation
W
illa
C
ather
A
rchive
Writings
Books
Letters
Short Fiction
Nonfiction
Journalism
Interviews, Speeches, and Public Letters
Life
Chronology
Geographic Chronology
Biographies
Brief Biographical Sketch
Longer Biographical Sketch
Willa Cather: A Literary Life
by James Woodress
Scholarship
Bibliography of Translations
Bibliography of Cather's Reading
Calendar of Letters
Scholarly Journals
Cather Studies
The Mowers' Tree
Images & Multimedia
Image Gallery
Audio
Movie
Community
Events
Public Outreach
Cather @ UNL
Connect with Us
Tours
About
Introduction
In the News
Staff
Citing the Cather Archive
Search
Search full site text:
Return to Main Bibliography
One of Ours
Alfred A. Knopf, 1922
"He both loved and hated to come home. He was always disappointed, and yet he always felt the rightness of returning to his own place."
Editions
First Edition
Published by Alfred A. Knopf on September 8, 1922.
First English Edition
Published by William Heinemann Ltd. in October 1923.
Autograph Edition
Published by Houghton Mifflin Co. in 1937.
Scholarly Edition
Published by University of Nebraska Press in 2007. Historical Essay and Explanatory Notes by Richard Harris; Textual Essay and Editing by Frederick M. Link with Kari A. Ronning
Related material available on the
Willa Cather Archive
Interviews
Fiction Recalls Violinist Lost in War: An Interview with Willa Cather
Published in
New York Herald
on December 24, 1922 and collected by L. Brent Bohlke in
Willa Cather in Person: Interviews, Speeches, and Letters
.
Today's Novels Give Much Hope to Miss Cather
Published in
New York World
on May 21, 1923 and collected by L. Brent Bohlke in
Willa Cather in Person: Interviews, Speeches, and Letters
.
Scholarship
Willa Cather's
One of Ours
, Edith Wharton's
A Son at the Front
, and the Literature of the Great War
By Julie Olin-Ammentorp,
Cather Studies
Volume 8
Advertising Cather during the Transition Years (1914-1922)
By Erika Hamilton,
Cather Studies
Volume 7
Willa Cather and Her Public in 1922
By Janis P. Stout,
Cather Studies
Volume 7
Antithetical Icons? Willa Cather, Ernest Hemingway, and the First World War
By Steven Trout,
Cather Studies
Volume 7
Culture and the "Cathedral": Tourism as Potlatch in
One of Ours
By Debra Rae Cohen,
Cather Studies
Volume 6
The "Enid Problem": Dangerous Modernity in
One of Ours
By Pearl James,
Cather Studies
Volume 6
"Squeezed into an Unnatural Shape": Bayliss Wheeler and the Element of Control in
One of Ours
By Celia M. Kingsbury,
Cather Studies
Volume 6
Recreation in World War I and the Practice of Play in
One of Ours
By Mark Robison,
Cather Studies
Volume 6
"As Green as Their Money": The Doughboy Naïfs in
One of Ours
By Mary R. Ryder,
Cather Studies
Volume 6
"Poisonous Reticence": Modernist Experience and Expression in
One of Ours
By Catherine D. Holmes,
The Mower's Tree: The Newsletter of the Cather Colloquium
, Spring 2004
Wagner, Place, and the Growth of Pessimism in the Fiction of Willa Cather
By Philip Kennicott,
Cather Studies
Volume 5
Willa Cather and World War I: A Symposium in Review
By Josh Dolezal,
The Mower's Tree: The Newsletter of the Cather Colloquium
, Spring 2003
A New View of Cather's Enid Royce
By Richard Harris,
The Mower's Tree: The Newsletter of the Cather Colloquium
, Spring 2003
from
From "The Namesake" to
One of Ours
: Willa Cather on War
By Steven Trout,
The Mower's Tree: The Newsletter of the Cather Colloquium, Spring 2003
Willa Cather's
One of Ours
and the Iconography of Remembrance
By Steven Trout,
Cather Studies
Volume 4
Willa Cather and Dorothy Canfield Fisher: Rift, Reconciliation, and
One of Ours
By Mark J. Madigan,
Cather Studies
Volume 1