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・ Lyman Reservoir
・ Lyman Run State Park
・ Lyman S. Ayres
・ Lyle Overbay
・ Lyle Owerko
・ Lyle Peters
・ Lyle Phair
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・ Lyle R. Wheeler
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Lyle Saxon
・ Lyle School of Engineering
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・ Lyle Shelton
・ Lyle Shelton (Australian lobbyist)
・ Lyle Skinner
・ Lyle Smith
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・ Lyle Sturgeon
・ Lyle Talbot
・ Lyle Taylor


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Lyle Saxon : ウィキペディア英語版
Lyle Saxon

Lyle Saxon (1891–1946) was a respected New Orleans writer and journalist who reported for ''The Times-Picayune''.
==Life==
Saxon was born on September 4, 1891, either in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, or in Bellingham, Washington, while his mother was traveling away from home; the early history of his life is "as evasive as the histories that frustrated Saxon in writing ''Old Louisiana''".〔James W. Thomas (1991). ''Lyle Saxon: A Critical Biography''. Summa Publications, Inc.. ISBN 978-0-917786-83-9, pg 1〕 It is possible that his parents, from distinguished families with connections to Baton Rouge and New Orleans, were unmarried; Saxon said little about his background and early years, and never met his father.〔 He was raised, however, in Baton Rouge, and made frequent trips to New Orleans throughout his early life, where his paternal uncle and grandmother lived.〔James W. Thomas (1991). ''Lyle Saxon: A Critical Biography''. Summa Publications, Inc.. ISBN 978-0-917786-83-9, pg 10〕
Saxon moved to New Orleans not long after college in 1914 or 1915 and, after moving again several times, settled there permanently in 1918.〔James W. Thomas (1991). ''Lyle Saxon: A Critical Biography''. Summa Publications, Inc.. ISBN 978-0-917786-83-9, pg 15-18〕 Saxon lived in the French Quarter at 612 Royal St. starting in 1918;〔James W. Thomas (1991). ''Lyle Saxon: A Critical Biography''. Summa Publications, Inc.. ISBN 978-0-917786-83-9, pg 30〕 Sherwood Anderson, William Faulkner, Roark Bradford, and Edmund Wilson visited.
He was an ardent student of the history of New Orleans and wrote six books on the subject. His most popular titles include "Fabulous New Orleans" recounting the city's celebrated past as set against his memories of his first Mardi Gras during the turn of the 20th century: "Gumbo Ya-Ya", an amazing and absolutely marvelous compilation of native folk stories from Louisiana, including the Loup Garou and the Lalaurie House: and "Old Louisiana", a local bestseller from its introduction in 1929.
Saxon’s fiction included short stories; “Cane River” was published in The Dial magazine, edited by Marianne Moore, and his 1937 novel “Children of Strangers” sold well.
He was a director to the Federal Writers' Project, WPA guide to Louisiana.〔
He is buried at Magnolia Cemetery (Baton Rouge, Louisiana).

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