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A Believing People

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A Believing People: Literature of the Latter-day Saints, edited by Richard H. Cracroft and Neal E. Lambert, and published in 1974, was "the first significant anthology of the literature of the Latter-day Saints"[1] and began the establishment of the field of Mormon literature as a legitimate discipline, and remains, according to A Motley Vision in 2012, " the only comprehensive Mormon Literature anthology ever published."[2] Cracroft and Lambert released an anthology with a more modern focus, 22 Young Mormon Writers, the following year.

Included authors

The collection includes works of many sorts (letters, poetry, sermons, etc.), mostly from LDS authors, but also some by those friendly to the Mormons (e.g. Thomas L. Kane) or with early-life connections (e.g. Ina Coolbrith) or similarly tangential relationships. Authors are listed in order of inclusion; if an author is included more than once in the anthology, they are listed only at their first appearance. Works without a listed author are not reflected in this list.

References

  1. ^ Eugene England. "[Volume 15:3 (Spring 1975) A Believing People: Literature of the Latter-day Saints]." BYU Studies.Volume 15:3 (Spring 1975). Accessed May 26, 2013.
  2. ^ Larson, Kent. "Sunday Lit Crit Sermon: Richard H. Cracroft on what makes a poem ‘Mormon’." A Motley Vision. Sept. 23, 2012. Accessed May 26, 2013.