In 1922, the Western writer and novelist Owen Wister postulated an interesting thesis: that America's most famous "writers" were not primarily writers at all, not in the way that (for example) Shakespeare was.
From Molière to America
In 1922, the Western writer and novelist Owen Wister postulated an interesting thesis: that America's most famous "writers" were not primarily writers at all, not in the way that (for example) Shakespeare was.