


Occurrence Owl Creek Bridge and Other StoriesĪn Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge: Short StoryĪn Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge - Classic Illustrated EditionĪn Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge and Other Stories (Dover Thrift Editions)Īn Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge and Other Stories (Tantor Unabridged Classics)Īn Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge: And Other StoriesĪn Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge (Annotated) The Yellow Wallpaper, The Fall of the House of Usher, An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge : Horror OmnibusĪn Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge: A Short Story Set in the Civil War Era (Annotated)Ĭollection of books: The Devil's Dictionary, An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge, The Damned Thing, Can Such Things Be? Write It Right: A Little Blacklist of Literary Faults, Fantastic Fables AND OTHERĪmbrose Bierce : An Occurrence at Owl Creek BridgeĪn Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge: By Ambrose Bierce - IllustratedĪn Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge (translated) - Un incidente en el Puente de Owl Creek (traducido): A Dual-Language Book (English and Spanish Edition) - Un Libro en dos Idiomas (Edición en Inglés y Español)

He disappeared in their company in late December of 1913, somewhere in the Chihuahua region of Mexico.Sales Rank Publication Date Lowest New PriceĪn Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge Illustrated He joined Pancho Villa’s army in 1913, there to observe their efforts in the Mexican Revolution. His biting pieces of journalism were his calling card in those days, but he spent several years engaged in fiction writing as well. He worked in England from 1872 to 1875, then returned to San Francisco where he remained for many years.

After the war, he travelled west with the military, stopping in San Francisco where he resigned his commission and became a journalist. Bierce fought in a number of prominent battles-including the Battle of Shiloh and the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain, where he suffered a terrible heat injury-and his experiences formed the basis of many of his later stories (including “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge”). Ambrose Bierce was born in Ohio, the tenth of thirteen children whose names all famously began with the letter “A.” He began his career working for an abolitionist printer and enlisted in the Union Army at the start of the U.S.
