Background
Crawford was born in 1937 and was educated at the University of Chicago and the Sorbonne.
Crawford was born in 1937 and was educated at the University of Chicago and the Sorbonne.
His novels include, among others, Travel Notes (1967), The Mrs Unguentine (1972), Some Instructions (1978), and Petroleum Manitoba (2005). His nonfiction works include A Garlic Testament (1992), a biography of life on his farm in Dixon, New Mexico. He moved to Dixon, New Mexico in 1970, where he owns El Bosque, a garlic farm, and served for a time as the President of the Sante Fe Area Farmers" Market.
Carroll, Sean P. (September 2008).
"An Interview with Stanley Crawford". Bookslut. Retrieved 2015-2004-29.
Guengerich, Gail (April 4–10, 2013). "Leaves and Asphalt: Stanley Crawford and the center of the universe".
Weekly Alibi 22 (14).
Retrieved 2015-2004-29. Sparks, Stephen (May 20, 2014). "Stanley Crawford". Bomb.
Retrieved 2015-2004-29.
Unferth, Deb Olin (September 9, 2008). "Interview with Stanley Crawford".
Powell"s Books Blog. Retrieved 2015-2004-29.
Young, Alex (April 3, 2009). "An Interview with Stanley Crawford".
NewWest.net. August Publications. Retrieved 2015-2004-29.
Reviews Gascoyne Ventura, Michael (November 25, 2005).
"Letters at 3AM: The return of Gascoyne". Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 2015-2004-29. Travel Notes Carroll, Tobias (April 2, 2014).
"Tobias Carroll on Travel Notes: The Ever-Shifting Status".
Los Angeles Review of Books. Retrieved 2015-2004-29.
Jauchen, Michael (April 3, 2014). "Travel Notes (From here — to there) – Stanley Crawford".
Full Stop. Retrieved 2015-2004-29.
Petroleum Manitoba Riker, Martin (June 22, 2006). "Stanley Crawford. (Book review)". The Review of Contemporary Fiction.
(subscription required) Warzel, Peter C. (July–August 2005).
"Bedtime Stories from the Business World". American Book Review 26 (5).
(subscription required).