Smith, Annick, 1936-
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Smith, Annick, 1936-
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Smith, Annick, 1936-
Smith, Annick
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Smith, Annick
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Annick Smith is a writer and filmmaker whose work deals primarily with the literature and history of Montana, memoir, travel, and environmental issues. Born in Paris, France, in 1936, she grew up in Chicago, Illinois. Since 1964, she has lived in Montana, where her husband, David Smith taught at the University of Montana. After his death, she stayed on their rural homestead and raised their four sons. Annick Smith has worked as a high school teacher, a book editor for the University of Washington Press and and editor for The Montana Business Quarterly. She is known for her film credits, which include Heartland, based on Elinore Pruitt Stewart's Letters of a Woman Homesteader, co-producer of Robert Redford's adaptation of Norman Maclean's A River Runs Through It, and associate producer of Peacock's War. Smith is a founding board member of the Sundance Film Institute in Utah. In Missoula, she founded the Hellgate Writers, a literary center. She has participated in numerous workshops and conferences. Smith and William Kittredge edited The Last Best Place, a best selling Montana anthology. In addition to her books, Homestead and Big Bluestem, her numerous articles, poems, and stories have appeared in Audubon, Outside, National Geographic Traveler, Story and other magazines and journals.
Annick Smith is a writer and filmmaker whose work deals primarily with the literature and history of Montana, memoir, travel, and environmental issues. Born in Paris, France, in 1936, she grew up in Chicago, Illinois. Since 1964, she has lived in Montana, where her husband, David Smith taught at the University of Montana. After his death, she stayed on their rural homestead and raised their four sons. Annick Smith has worked as a high school teacher, a book editor for the University of Washington Press and and editor for The Montana Business Quarterly. She is known for her film credits, which include Heartland, based on Elinore Pruitt Stewart's Letters of a Woman Homesteader, co-producer of Robert Redford's adaptation of Norman Maclean's A River Runs Through It, and associate producer of Peacock's War . Smith is a founding board member of the Sundance Film Institute in Utah. In Missoula, she founded the Hellgate Writers, a literary center. She has participated in numerous workshops and conferences. Smith and William Kittredge edited The Last Best Place, a best selling Montana anthology. In addition to her books, Homestead and Big Bluestem, her numerous articles, poems, and stories have appeared in Audubon, Outside, National Geographic Traveler, Story and other magazines and journals.
A list of her publications includes:
- Smith, Annick, co-editor. The Last Best Place: Montana Anthology.Helena: Montana Historical Society, 1988.
- Smith, Annick. Homestead.Minneapolis, MN: Publishers Group West, 1995.
- Smith, Annick. Big Bluestem: Journey into the Tall Grass.Tulsa, Okla.: Council Oak Books, 1996.
- Smith, Annick, editor. Headwaters: Montana Writers on Water and Wilderness.Missoula : Hellgate Writers, 1996.
- Smith, Annick. In This We Are Native: Memoirs and Journeys.Guilford, Conn.: The Lyons Press, 2001.
A list of her films includes:
- Heartland. Produced by Wilderness Women, 1979.
- Peacock's War. Produced by Earthrise Entertainment, 1989.
- A River Runs Through It. Produced by Allied Filmmakers, 1992.
Annick Smith is a writer and filmmaker whose work deals primarily with the literature and history of Montana, memoir, travel, and environmental issues. Born in Paris, France, in 1936, she grew up in Chicago, Illinois. Since 1964, she has lived in Montana, where her husband, David Smith taught at the University of Montana. After his death, she stayed on their rural homestead and raised their four sons. Annick Smith has worked as a high school teacher, a book editor for the University of Washington Press and and editor for The Montana Business Quarterly. She is known for her film credits, which include Heartland, based on Elinore Pruitt Stewart's Letters of a Woman Homesteader, co-producer of Robert Redford's adaptation of Norman Maclean's A River Runs Through It, and associate producer of Peacock's War . Smith is a founding board member of the Sundance Film Institute in Utah. In Missoula, she founded the Hellgate Writers, a literary center. She has participated in numerous workshops and conferences. Smith and William Kittredge edited The Last Best Place, a best selling Montana anthology. In addition to her books, Homestead and Big Bluestem, her numerous articles, poems, and stories have appeared in Audubon, Outside, National Geographic Traveler, Story and other magazines and journals.
A list of her publications includes:
- Smith, Annick, co-editor. The Last Best Place: Montana Anthology.Helena: Montana Historical Society, 1988.
- Smith, Annick. Homestead.Minneapolis, MN: Publishers Group West, 1995.
- Smith, Annick. Big Bluestem: Journey into the Tall Grass.Tulsa, Okla.: Council Oak Books, 1996.
- Smith, Annick, editor. Headwaters: Montana Writers on Water and Wilderness.Missoula : Hellgate Writers, 1996.
- Smith, Annick. In This We Are Native: Memoirs and Journeys.Guilford, Conn.: The Lyons Press, 2001.
- Smith, Annick, co-editor. The Wide Open: Prose, Poetry, and photographs of the Prairie. Lincoln: U of Nebraska Press, 2008.
A list of her films includes:
- Heartland. Produced by Wilderness Women, 1979.
- Peacock's War. Produced by Earthrise Entertainment, 1989.
- A River Runs Through It. Produced by Allied Filmmakers, 1992.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/120053693
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q4769193
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n88137969
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n88137969
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Languages Used
eng
Zyyy
Subjects
American literature
Authors, American
American literture
A River Runs Through It (Motion picture)
Authors
Conservation efforts
Environmental concerns
Gold mines and mining
Heartland (Motion picture)
Natural history
Natural history
Natural history in literature
Natural history literature
Nature
Nez Percé Indians
Novelists
Osage Indians
Storytelling
Nationalities
Americans
Activities
Occupations
Legal Statuses
Places
Oklahoma
AssociatedPlace
West (U.S.)
AssociatedPlace
Hawaii
AssociatedPlace
Blackfoot River (Mont.)
AssociatedPlace
Montana
AssociatedPlace
Oklahoma
AssociatedPlace
Montana
AssociatedPlace
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