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  1. Hace 6 días · Click to read Garrison Keillor and Friends, a Substack publication with hundreds of thousands of subscribers. This newsletter will include observational humor, gratitude, small doses of advice, memories of heroic persons I knew up close, reminiscence about ordinary life back before Twitter and thoughts about American life and other pleasures.

  2. Hace 5 días · Read the latest columns by Garrison Keillor, the former host of A Prairie Home Companion and a witty commentator on American life. Topics include politics, culture, health, and humor.

  3. Posted on June 29, 2024 - Writer's Almanac. On this day in 1921, Edith Wharton became the first woman to receive the Pulitzer Prize, for her novel The Age of Innocence. Sinclair Lewis’s Main Street won the first vote, but it was considered too offensive by some prominent Midwesterners.

  4. Hace 4 días · Garrison Keillor and A Prairie Home Companion return home to the Fitzgerald Theater, St. Paul. It’s the old radio show back where it started in St. Paul in 1974. Guy Noir, Duane’s Mom, Powdermilk, American Duct Tape, Amalgamated Coffee, and the little town that time forgot, except it hasn’t actually. With Rich Dworsky and a fine band, Pat ...

  5. Hace 5 días · In Cheerfulness, veteran radio host and author Garrison Keillor reflects on a simple virtue that can help us in this stressful and sometimes gloomy era. Drawing on personal anecdotes from his young adulthood into his eighties, Keillor sheds light on the immense good that can come from a deliberate work ethic and a buoyant demeanor.

  6. 27 de jun. de 2024 · Garrison Keillor's Blog. June 27, 2024. The story of my life, a brief version. My bio in 100 words is as follows: My parents were in love with each other, had six kids, I was third, an invisible child. I had no interest in crashing into people so didn’t play football or hockey and avoided brain damage. I dabbled in poetry and when I was 14, I ...

  7. Hace 1 día · The creator and host of the program, Garrison Keillor, later confided that he had no nostalgic intent, but took the name from “The Prairie Home Cemetery” in Moorhead, MN. His explanation is both self-effacing and humorous, much like the program he went on to host, with some sabbaticals and detours, for the next 42 years.