Paul Horgan
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Paul Horgan was an American author of fiction and non-fiction, most of which was set in the Southwestern United States. Born in Buffalo, New York, in 1903, he moved to Albuquerque, New Mexico in 1915. He later attended New Mexico Military Institute in Roswell where he formed a lifelong friendship with fellow classmate, later artist Peter Hurd. He later served as the school's librarian for a number of years. He first came to prominence when he won the Harper Prize in 1933 for The Fault of Angels, one of his books not set in the Southwest. He twice won the Pulitzer Prize for History, first in 1955 with Great River: The Rio Grande in North American History and then once again in 1976 with Lamy of Santa Fe.
Other works
Fiction
- No Quarter Given
- The Habit of Empire
- A Lamp on the Plains
- Give Me Possession
- Memories of the Future
- The Return of the Weed
- Figures in a Landscape
- The Devil in the Desert
- One Red Rose for Christmas
- The Saintmaker's Christmas Eve
- Humble Powers
- Toby and the Nighttime
- The Peach Stone: Stories from Four Decades
- Main Line West, 1936
- Far from Cibola, 1936
- The Common Heart, 1942
- A Distant Trumpet, 1951
- Things as They Are, 1951
- Everything to Live For, 1968
- Whitewater
Nonfiction
- Men of Arms
- From the Royal City
- New Mexico's Own Chronicle (with Maurice Garland Fulton)
- The Centuries of Santa Fe
- Rome Eternal
- Citizen of New Salem
- Conquistadors in North American History
- Peter Hurd: A Portrait Sketch from Life
- Songs After Lincoln
- The Heroic Triad, 1954
- Approaches to Writing