“Before becoming a professional artist, Georgia O’Keeffe taught art to make a living. This book is a deep-dive into her several years of teaching school on the plains of Western Texas when she used letter-writing to sort out her feelings for art-making, for men, for family, for the open spaces of the American West, and for the heavy presence of daily war news and soldiers in the streets. Her letters candidly register the deep confusions, frequent joys, and unresolved contradictions of a highly independent young woman figuring out who she was and what she valued in life.”—Wanda M. Corn, author of Georgia O’Keeffe: Living Modern“Amy Von Lintel’s thoroughly researched, thoughtfully interpreted and contextualized, and deeply moving , Georgia O’Keeffe’s Wartime Texas Letters reveals just how layered and impactful World War I was across the United States and especially to artists from all disciplines. This book is vital to a better understanding of the artist we all think we know.”—Michael R. Grauer, author of Making a Hand: The Art of H.D. Bugbee"All my writing relies heavily on the research of scholars, and Amy von Lintel’s latest book revealing O’Keeffe’s wartime letters is a perfect example of the sort of meticulous and insightful writing and editing I depend on – engaging and scholarly." -Annabel Abbs, author of The Joyce Girl.