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Blog: Galley Cat (Mediabistro) (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: John Steinbeck, Maya Angelou, Vladimir Nabokov, William Faulkner, Banned Books Week, William Golding, H. G. Wells, Khaled Hosseini, Libraries, censorship, Add a tag
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Books, Music, John Steinbeck, musical theater, pipe dream, Rodgers and Hammerstein, *Featured, Cannery Row, Theatre & Dance, Broadway musicals, Ethan Mordden, Sweet Thursday, Add a tag
The seventh of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s stage works, Pipe Dream came along at a particularly vulnerable time in their partnership. After the revolutionary Oklahoma! (1943) and Carousel (1945)—with, above all, two of the most remarkable scores ever heard to that point—they disappointed many with Allegro (1947).
The post Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Pipe Dream appeared first on OUPblog.
Blog: Galley Cat (Mediabistro) (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Authors, Stephen King, Emily Dickinson, John Steinbeck, H.P. Lovecraft, Agatha Christie, Daniel Handler, Victor Hugo, Michael Crichton, Honoré de Balzac, Add a tag
At the beginning of a new year, many people often make resolutions to follow a healthy diet. mental_floss compiled a list of the “favorite workday snacks” of nine different authors. Jurassic Park novelist Michael Crichton enjoyed ham sandwiches while We Are Pirates author Daniel Handler enjoys raw carrots.
The other seven writers include Agatha Christie, Victor Hugo, Honoré de Balzac, John Steinbeck, Stephen King, Emily Dickinson, and H.P. Lovecraft. What do you think? Which snacks help you to stay focused while you’re writing?
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Add a CommentBlog: Perpetually Adolescent (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Tracey Allen, haul, john howard, The Menzies Era, Book News, classics, Stephen King, Christmas Books, Holiday Reading, james patterson, John Steinbeck, Pulitzer Prize, Oscar Wilde, dean koontz, frankenstein, mary shelley, the picture of dorian gray, robinson crusoe, penguin classics, Daniel Defoe, Add a tag
As I pack away my Christmas tree for another year, I took stock today of my Christmas haul of books. I’m planning on reading more classics in 2015 and was fortunate enough to receive a few beautiful clothbound editions for Christmas. I hope you too were lucky enough to receive a book or two at Christmas time, […]
Add a CommentBlog: Galley Cat (Mediabistro) (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: John Steinbeck, J.D. Salinger, Infographics, Harper Lee, Add a tag
Have you ever made a bucket list for books? Gumtree.com has created an infographic called “12 Books You Should Read Before You Die.”
Some of the classic titles being featured include The Catcher in The Rye by J.D. Salinger, Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, and To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. We’ve embedded the entire graphic after the jump for you to explore further. (via The Mile Long Bookshelf)
(more…)
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Add a CommentBlog: PowellsBooks.BLOG (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Tom Rachman, Original Essays, Charles Dickens., Leo Nikolayevich Tolstoy, Paul Kennedy, Literature, George Orwell, William Shakespeare, john steinbeck, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Evelyn Waugh, Ernest Hemingway, Harper Lee, Gustave Flaubert, Add a tag
Naming a novel is painstaking, agonizing, delicate. But does the title matter? It certainly feels consequential to the author. After several years' battle with your laptop keyboard, after 100,000 words placed so deliberately, you must distill everything into a phrase brief enough to run down the spine of a book. Should it be descriptive? Perhaps [...]
Blog: Galley Cat (Mediabistro) (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Maurice Sendak, Google, John Steinbeck, Jane Austen, Roger Hargreaves, James Franco, Chris O'Dowd, Add a tag
Google has created a Doodle to celebrate John Steinbeck’s 112th birthday. Throughout his writing career, Steinbeck penned many beloved works including East of Eden, Of Mice & Men, and the Pulitzer Prize-winning title, The Grapes of Wrath.
To this day, Steinbeck is a widely respected and read author. According to SFGate, the organizers behind the Steinbeck Festival plan to celebrate the 75th anniversary of The Grapes of Wrath at this year’s event. In April, the Of Mice & Men play starring James Franco and Chris O’Dowd will open on Broadway.
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Add a CommentBlog: Guide to Literary Agents (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: kurt vonnegut, Harper Lee, What's New, There Are No Rules Blog by the Editors of Writer's Digest, WD Magazine, Alex Palmer, General, Fun, Stephen King, John Steinbeck, Add a tag
by Alex Palmer
Plenty of acclaimed and successful writers began their careers working strange—and occasionally degrading—day jobs. But rather than being ground down by the work, many drew inspiration for stories and poems from even the dullest gigs. Here are 10 of the oddest odd jobs of famous authors—all of them reminders that creative fodder can be found in the most unexpected places.
#1.
Kurt Vonnegut managed America’s first Saab dealership in Cape Cod during the late 1950s, a job he joked about in a 2004 essay: “I now believe my failure as a dealer so long ago explains what would otherwise remain a deep mystery: Why the Swedes have never given me a Nobel Prize for Literature.”#2.
John Steinbeck took on a range of odd occupations before earning enough to work as a full-time writer. Among his day jobs: apprentice painter, fruit picker, estate caretaker and Madison Square Garden construction worker.#3.
Stephen King served as a janitor for a high school while struggling to get his fiction published. His time wheeling the cart through the halls inspired him to write the opening girls’ locker room scene in Carrie, which would become his breakout novel.#4.
Harper Lee worked as a reservation clerk for Eastern Air Lines for more than eight years, writing stories in her spare time. This all changed when a friend offered her a Christmas gift of one year’s wages, with the note, “You have one year off from your job to write whatever you please.” She wrote the first draft of To Kill a Mockingbird within the year.#5.
J.D. Salinger mentioned in a rare interview in 1953 that he had served as entertainment director on the H.M.S. Kungsholm, a Swedish luxury liner. He drew on the experience for his short story “Teddy,” which takes place on a liner.#6.
Before joining the likes of Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg, William S. Burroughs worked as an exterminator in Chicago. It served as a handy metaphor years later in his novel Exterminator!#7.
Richard Wright worked as a letter sorter in a post office on the south side of Chicago from 1927 to 1930, while he wrote a number of short stories and poems that were published in literary journals.#8.
Before his writing career took off, William Faulkner also worked for the Postal Service, as postmaster at the University of Mississippi. In his resignation note, he neatly summarized the struggle of art and commerce faced by many authors: “As long as I live under the capitalist system I expect to have my life influenced by the demands of moneyed people. But I will be damned if I propose to be at the beck and call of every itinerant scoundrel who has two cents to invest in a postage stamp. This, sir, is my resignation.”#9.
T.S. Eliot worked as a banker, serving as a clerk for Lloyds Bank of London for eight years. The job must have been a bummer—he composed passages of The Waste Land while walking to work each day.#10.
Sometimes, an odd job can actually lead to opportunity. Poet Vachel Lindsay was interrupted as he dined at a hotel restaurant in Washington, D.C., by a busboy who handed him some sheets of poetry. At first irritated by the young man, Lindsay was quickly impressed by the writing. When he asked, “Who wrote this?” the busboy replied, “I did.” Langston Hughes was about to get his big break. is the author of Literary Miscellany: Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Literature and Weird-O-Pedia: The Ultimate Book of Surprising, Strange, and Incredibly Bizarre Facts about (Supposedly) Ordinary Things.
This piece originally ran in Writer’s Digest magazine. For more from WD, check out the latest issue
—which features an exclusive dual interview with Anne Rice and Christopher Rice, and a feature package on how to improve your craft in simple, effective ways—in print, or on your favorite tablet.Add a Comment
Blog: Galley Cat (Mediabistro) (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Adaptation, John Steinbeck, Gary Ross, Jennifer Lawrence, Anna Culp, Add a tag
Jennifer Lawrence will star in a new adaptation of John Steinbeck’s East of Eden.
The Hunger Games director Gary Ross will develop the project and Anna Culp will executive produce. Literary agency McIntosh & Otis negotiated the deal with Universal Pictures/Imagine Entertainment, re-optioning the rights that the studio acquired in 2004. Sample the famous novel at this link:
Set in the rich farmland of California’s Salinas Valley, this sprawling and often brutal novel follows the intertwined destinies of two families—the Trasks and the Hamiltons—whose generations helplessly reenact the fall of Adam and Eve and the poisonous rivalry of Cain and Abel.
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Add a CommentBlog: The Butterfly Heart (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: John Steinbeck, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Ray Bradbury, Elmore Leonard, Barbara Kingsolver, Chinua Achebe, Noo Saro Wiwa, Uncategorized, Dr. Seuss, Add a tag
The title of a book is so important – and not many people have titles as consistently good as Gabriel Garcia Marquez (in my humble opinion) – and I suppose that is linked to the fact that not many people write as well as he does (again … in my humble opinion..)
Think of these:
Love in the time of Cholera
One Hundred Years of Solitude
Chronicle of a Death Foretold
The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World
No-one writes to the Colonel
Memories of my Melancholy Whores.
The General in his Labyrinth
Other titles I like, from other authors
Up in Honey’s Room – Elmore Leonard
The Poisonwood Bible – Barbara Kingsolver
Of Mice and Men – Steinbeck
And to think that I saw it on Mulberry Street – Dr Seuss
Death is a lonely business – Ray Bradbury
Dandelion Wine – Ray Bradbury
Things Fall Apart – Chinua Achebe
Looking for Transwonderland – Noo Saro Wiwa
OK I’ll stop now … but it is a hard thing getting a title right, and it does matter!
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Blog: PowellsBooks.BLOG (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Crime, john steinbeck, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Christopher Isherwood, US History, Ernest Hemingway, Guests, Hilary Mantel, Patricia Highsmith, Monique Truong, Patrick Suskind, Amanda Vaill, Barnet Schecter, Chandler Burr, Esther Forbes, Kevin Baker, Paul Hendrickson, Simon Baatz, Will Schwalbe, Literature, Biography, Add a tag
I'm a big believer that books, like people, can have partners: there are pairs of books that complement each other and belong together. With some books, as soon as you mention one, someone is bound to mention the other. Obviously, this applies to sequels and prequels. If you say you like Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall, [...]
Blog: Galley Cat (Mediabistro) (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Authors, John Steinbeck, Letter Writing, Thomas Steinbeck, Add a tag
Novelist Thomas Steinbeck received a mountain of letters from his father, John Steinbeck. Over at The Hairpin, the son of the late Nobel Prize winning author talked about what he learned from these letters.
Follow this link to read a letter Steinbeck wrote about relationship advice. Thomas has written a number of books, most recently The Silver Lotus. Here’s an excerpt from the interview:
my father sent me this very long letter, and he had very tiny handwriting — he wrote by hand — and it was like an 18-page letter. It took me a week to decipher this thing, because of his handwriting, primarily. And when I got to the very end of it, I noticed at the very bottom, he said, “Son, I want to apologize. I would’ve sent you a note but I didn’t have the time!”
Meaning, that ultimately, the greatest amount of time in all writing is spent editing. My father said there’s only one trick to writing, and that’s not writing, that’s writing and rewriting and rewriting and rewriting. Like sculpture. I mean, the first thing off the top of your head isn’t the most brilliant thing you ever thought of. And then when you’re writing about it, when you want others to understand what you’re still talking about, then it really requires that you edit yourself really, really well, so that other people can comprehend it.
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JacketFlap tags: Interviews, General, James Thurber, Fun, Getting Published, John Steinbeck, writing quotes, Carl Sandburg, Harper Lee, What's New, Back to Basics, Craft & Technique, There Are No Rules Blog by the Editors of Writer's Digest, WD Magazine, Writer's Digest magazine, Add a tag
Every week, I spelunk into the Writer’s Digest archives to find the wisest, funniest, or downright strangest moments from our 92 years of publication.
Harper Lee’s birthday is tomorrow, so today I went on a hunt to find some Harper Lee quotes somewhere in our archives. I didn’t exactly troll up an entire interview (no surprise there, given her lack of media appearances since To Kill a Mockingbird was published*), but I did stumble on this gold mine from 1961.
For a cover story interviewing Lee and a slew of other writers—John Steinbeck, Rod Serling, Carl Sandburg, James Thurber—we posed the question, “What advice would you offer a person who aspires to a writing career?” and asked for a single response.
Here’s their writing advice. I’m in the process of geeking out and printing Sandburg’s right now so I can place it above my desk.
As for our swag drawing, thanks to everyone who shared their thoughts on Janet Evanovich and outlining last week. We dipped a hand into the random WD swag hat, and a name emerged: Sharon Vander Meer. Sharon, can you email [email protected], ATTN: Zachary Petit, and I’ll send you a list of free books to choose from?
Happy Friday!
*Here’s to hoping it wasn’t because we cited Lee as the author of To Kill a Hummingbird. Oy. Some 50 years later, WD still regrets (and still heavily cringes at) the error. Sorry, Harper!
- For more quotes from writing legends—90, to be exact—read our 90-year retrospective here.
- Like what you read from WD online? Don’t miss an issue in print!
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Blog: The Other Aaron (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: teaching, john steinbeck, of mice and men, Add a tag
I love teaching Steinbeck's short novel (go ahead, call it a novella) of friendship and dreams during the Great Depression. Students tend to love it, too--at least those who read it.
And at just under 30, 000 words*, most students will give it a try.
Steinbeck's language is beautiful but straight-forward, his dialogue and voice spot on. Of Mice and Men is a great vehicle for teaching characterization, foreshadowing, and theme.
I love this book, and I'm fortunate to have the opportunity to read it every year.
*How would Steinbeck have pitched a 30K novel in today's publishing world? Would he have self-published on Kindle because the big 6 were looking for 100K novels? Sorry--couldn't help myself. But just think of the gap in American literature if Of Mice and Men never saw print.
Blog: The Cath in the Hat (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: John Steinbeck, quotations about writing for children, Add a tag
"Ideas are like rabbits. You get a couple and learn how to handle them, and pretty soon you have a dozen."
~ John Steinbeck
Blog: Galley Cat (Mediabistro) (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Celebrities, Authors, John Steinbeck, Betty White, Add a tag
How does television star Betty White avoid writer’s block? The same way as her old friend John Steinbeck.
We obtained a copy of her new book, If You Ask Me (set for a May 3 release)–and it has a whole chapter dedicated to “Writer’s Block.” White has already written a few books over her career, including The Leading Lady: Dinah’s Story and Here We Go Again: My Life In Television.
Here’s an excerpt from the upcoming book: “John Steinbeck, who was Allen [Ludden]‘s and my good friend, did his writing standing up at a drafting table–in long-hand, his white bull terrier, Angel, lyign across his feet. People always seem amazed that I write in long-hand. Well, if it’s good enough for Steinbeck, it’s good enough for me! I really can’t communicate to a machine–the thoughts want to go from my brain down my arm to my hand to the page.”
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Add a CommentBlog: Joe Silly Sottile's Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: blog, inspiration, John Steinbeck, habits, Jim Denney, Add a tag
- Write Daily
- Cultivate the Art of Solitude Amid Distractions
- Write Quickly and With Intensity
- Set Ambitious But Achievable Goals
- Focus!
- Finish What You Start and Submit What You Finish
- 0 Comments on Do You Want to Write and Blog More? as of 1/1/1900
Blog: disobedient writer (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Craft, John Steinbeck, In the Shadow of the Cypress, Thomas Steinbeck, Add a tag
I had the good fortune of meeting John Steinbeck’s son Thomas this weekend. He said a lot of inspiring things that will eventually make their way into future blog posts, but his fans have so distracted me that I must first dedicate a post to them.
The first one who caught my attention was a sweet old lady who needed help walking and carrying her books. I offered assistance. Less because I’m nice and more because I like old ladies. They’re like Yoda. I’d hoped she’d share a nugget of wisdom that would alter my worldview into something more…peaceful. She didn’t.
She ignored my outstretched arms and thrust her books at the event coordinator. Why? Because this was the inroad to Mr. Steinbeck. Not long afterward, I overheard my Yoda telling the star of the show that she knew someone who knew someone that lived on his dad’s old street.
“That’s an awkward introduction!” I wanted to yell. “You sound desperate!” But I had no supporters. Every person around me was clambering to get a piece of the Pulitzer Prize winner’s son.
A grown man virtually begged for the phone number of the career-groupie in attendance (otherwise known as a Steinbeck biographer). Is there anything more pitiful than stalking a stalker? I soon discovered yes. Because before long, some college-aged long-hair got in Mr. Steinbeck’s face and waxed poetic about his undying passion for the cypress tree (the cypress tree, folks) and isn’t that a coincidence? The word cypress appears in the title of Mr. Steinbeck’s first novel!
It depressed me.
I’ve been studying Buddhism recently because a major player in my novel misinterprets Eastern philosophies to tragicomic results. Perhaps I will suffer her fate. But for now, I hold dear a Buddhist teaching that has set me free: the accomplishments of those you hero-worship are within your potentiality.
We’re all a little guilty of hero-worship. I am obsessed with Kundera’s philosophical musings. Nabokov’s unrelenting prose. Guillermo Martinez’s conviction to thwart his characters’ goals to the brutal end.
Who do you hero-worship? Why? Now go accomplish it yourself!
Blog: Becky's Book Reviews (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: classics, adult fiction, John Steinbeck, 1945, Add a tag
Cannery Row. John Steinbeck. 1945. Penguin. 208 pages.
Cannery Row in Monterey in California is a poem, a stink, a grating noise, a quality of light, a tone, a habit, a nostalgia, a dream. Cannery Row is the gathered and scattered, tin and iron and rust and splintered wood, chipped pavement and weedy lots and junk heaps, sardine canneries of corrugated iron, honky tonks, restaurants and whore houses, and little crowded groceries, and laboratories and flophouses. Its inhabitants are, as the man once said, "whores, pimps, gamblers, and sons of bitches," by which he meant Everybody. Had the man looked through another peephole he might have said "Saints and angels and martyrs and holy men," and he would have meant the same thing.
I enjoyed this John Steinbeck novel. Steinbeck certainly has a way with words, details, and images. Even if what he is describing is more ugly than beautiful. He has a way of saying it so that it matters. So that you, the reader, care. It does help that this one has a good deal of humor. Not that humor is quite the way I'd put it. (Since early on, we see a suicide or two. But still. It's Steinbeck.)
What is Cannery Row about? It's about a surprise party gone wrong. And the men (and women) who come together to make everything right again in the end. Mack and a few of his friends want to do something nice for Doc, one of the town's favorite guys. They think the best way to say that they appreciate him is by throwing him a surprise party. But since they're always down on their luck (in other words low on cash, and not trustworthy enough to extend credit to) they're a bit stumped as to how to go about it. What plan will they come up with?
Lee Chong's grocery, while not a model of neatness, was a miracle of supply. It was small and crowded but within its single room a man could find everything he needed or wanted to live and to be happy--clothes, food, both fresh and canned, liquor, tobacco, fishing equipment, machinery, boats, cordage, caps, pork chops. You could buy at Lee Chong's a pair of slippers, a silk kimono, a quarter pint of whiskey and a cigar. You could work out combinations to fit almost any mood. The one commodity Lee Chong did not keep could be had across the lot at Dora's.
© Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews
Blog: Becky's Book Reviews (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: John Steinbeck, novellas, war, classics, adult fiction, World War II, Add a tag
The Moon is Down by John Steinbeck. 1942/1995. Penguin. 144 pages.
By ten-forty-five it was all over. The town was occupied, the defenders defeated, and the war finished.
A novella by John Steinbeck published in the spring of 1942. Set in an unnamed country, an unnamed town even, it features a conquering but-again-nameless army. Of course, it's easy to read between the lines, to see the setting as Northern Europe, and the conquering enemy as the Nazis. And the message of this one is fairly simple. Resist. Resist. Resist. Ordinary people can in very small ways make a difference.
The reader meets a handful of characters on both sides. We get a portrait of those town folks who have been conquered but are determined to fight for their freedom. We get a portrait of the soldiers, the invaders. These soldiers are not as heartless and cruel as evil as you might expect. The picture Steinbeck paints is more human, more complex than that. They are men. Ordinary men who have been given orders, who have been assigned a job to do. For the duration of the war, they have to turn off their emotions, or else go crazy trying to stay on top of them all. The mental crises these soldiers face as the war continues....well, it's disturbing. We see the effect of war on everybody concerned.
How do I feel about this Steinbeck? I liked it. It reminded me of why I love Steinbeck. Of why I love the experience of reading Steinbeck. I love his descriptions, for example.
The paintings on the wall were largely preoccupied with the amazing heroism of large dogs faced with imperiled children. Nor water nor fire nor earthquake could do in a child so long as a big dog was available. (4)
Doctor Winter was a man so simple that only a profound man would know him as profound. (4)
Joseph habitually scowled at furniture, expecting it to be impertinent, mischievous, or dusty. In a world where Mayor Orden was the leader of men, Joseph was the leader of furniture, silver, and dishes. Joseph was elderly and lean and serious, and his life was so complicated that only a profound man would know him to be simple. (4-5)
This is a small book--a novella--about what it means to be a hero; what it is like to fight a war...whether you're a soldier or not.
© Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews
Blog: First Book (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Literacy, Lois Lowry, The Giver, learning disabilities, John Steinbeck, Books & Reading, LDOnline, LDonline.org, Of Mice and Men, Guest Blog Posts, Add a tag
Guest blogger Liana Heitin has taught students with special needs for the past five years as a public school teacher, reading specialist, and private tutor. She has a master’s degree in cross-categorical special education and is a freelance Web editor for LD OnLine, the leading website on learning disabilities and ADHD. LD OnLine offers research-based information and expert advice for parents, students, and educators. Liana’s writing has been featured in such publications as Education Week, teachermagazine.org, and the recent book, The Ultimate Teacher (HCI Books, May 2009).
Last week, on a whim, I began to re-read my favorite book from middle school: Lois Lowry’s The Giver. As I turned the pages, I kept expecting to have a new adult reaction to the story—to see the allegory as simple or recognize the protagonist’s dilemma as trite.
Instead, I experienced just what I had as a 6th grader. I felt the excitement of entering the science fiction world and exploring its rules. The main character’s curiosity and loss of innocence became my own once again. And upon reaching the abrupt ending, I had a familiar emotional rush—shock, a twinge of frustration, and ultimately satisfaction.
Lowry is an adept storyteller, but I’m pretty sure that’s not the only reason I reverted to my 6th grade self. When I first read The Giver, it changed me. It made me think and feel in a way words on pages never had—and guided me toward many other books, many more ideas and feelings. It made me into a reader. I will never outgrow The Giver because it was part of such a formative moment in my life.
A few years ago, I was teaching a gifted 9th grader with a learning disability in reading. Demetri had never finished a chapter book on his own. The two of us had been working on fluency for months, starting well below grade level, when I brought in Of Mice and Men. We began reading together, making slow but steady progress.
Over spring break, I asked Demetri to read at least five pages a night. I gave him a homework chart and a pep talk but worried he wouldn’t follow through—Demetri was a hard worker but some days it could take him 20 minutes to finish a page. He returned the next week and sat down, a quiet grin spreading across his face. “I finished it,” he said, and launched into an explanation of how the book had become a movie in his mind and he hadn’t been able to stop reading. “The end was such a surprise! I never would have guessed!” Of Mice and Men had changed Demetri, like The Giver had me. We began to make a list of other books he would enjoy.
Demitri was 15 years old when he found the book that inspired him—the one he’ll read with equal fervor and delight if he picks it up a decade or two down the road. Some people find their book at a younger age—and some unlucky readers never find it at all. If you know a child who hasn’t discovered her The Giver or Of Mice and Men, take the summer to explore topics and genres that interest her. Read together. Talk about your own favorite childhood books. Comb through library shelves. And guide your child toward the book that will turn him or her into a reader.
For more tips on summer reading and learning activities, particularly for students with learning disabilities, check out the LD Online Summer Beach Bag.
Add a CommentBlog: Beth Kephart Books (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Lisa Bishop, HarperTeen My Space blog, the writing process, John Steinbeck, Add a tag
My dear Seattle-transplanted-to-the-big-apple friend Lisa Bishop (over at HarperTeen) has posted some of my recent musings on process. Here again we meet up with the ever-wise John Steinbeck while bumping up against the ever-churning yours truly.
If you have some time, I hope you'll visit. You'll get to meet Anna Godbersen, Ellen Schreiber, Carol Snow, and Susan Juby while you are there.
http://www.myspace.com/harperteen
Blog: Beth Kephart Books (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Newsweek, best-seller, economic predestination, Robert Samuelson, writerly fame, John Steinbeck, The Grapes of Wrath, Add a tag
I have taken The Grapes of Wrath down from the shelf, and I am reading about that other great devastation that we as a country found ourselves in. Tom Joad and his woes. Dust like a dry, dirty cloud that has fallen and stayed. The pitch of power against the laboring masses. Uncertainty, heartache, panic.
Newsweek has a Robert J. Samuelson column this week called "Good Times Breed Bad Times." It begins by recalling the James Grant book The Trouble with Prosperity, summarizing it this way: "Grant's survey of financial history captured his crusty theory of economic predestination. If things seem splendid, they will get worse. Success inspires overconfidence and excess. If things seem dismal, they will get better. Crisis spawns opportunity and progress. Our triumphs and follies follow a rhythm that, though it can be influenced, cannot be repealed."
I never read The Trouble with Prosperity, but I have modulated my life according to its thesis—choosing that safe middle ground, buying a house with two bedrooms because, well, we only needed two, and putting nearly every dollar I made or had against the mortgage and my son's college fund. I live on the vaunted Main Line of Philadelphia (where gardens and farms still loll between trees, where the schools are good, where the communities are fine), and my decisions have frankly often set me apart. Smallified me, if you will. I lost a friend because of what I would not buy, because of what I did not have. She stopped inviting me to her parties.
I have, I realized, lived my literary life the same way. I have said no to TV and film adaptations of my nonfiction, shutting the door to some version of income and notoriety (but also, I thought and still think, opening the door to peace of mind). I have sought the right editor above the right advance in every case save for that of my second book, when I was enticed to go with a house that ultimately did not care about my future as a writer. Lesson learned. Mistake not to be repeated. All I've ever wanted as a writer is the chance to publish again, the chance to commune with other readers and writers, a reason to keep writing. I have wanted, desperately, sometimes consumingly, the editorial yes, we will publish this and you, and even now, 11 books in, it's not so easy.
Yesterday, reading the magnificent introduction to the Penguin Classics version of Steinbeck's book, I came upon these words from Steinbeck, which seem both timeless to me and extremely prescient. They are about writing, yes, but they are also about the way we live our lives, about the need, perhaps, not to want overly much. To be satisfied.
"I have always wondered why no author has survived a best-seller. Now I know. The publicity and fan-fare are just as bad as they would be for a boxer. One gets self-conscious and that's the end of one's writing."
Blog: Born to Write (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: john steinbeck, the ghost of tom joad, grapes of wrath, music, writing, bruce springsteen, bruce springsteen, john steinbeck, the ghost of tom joad, grapes of wrath, Add a tag
This is what happens after 1: overdosing on two drinks, linguini with white clam sauce, and a Veal Francaise at the The Park Side Restaurant in Queens, where tuxedos and GODFATHER-types meet, 2: a sinus headache, 3: a snoring husband ruining any chances of a good night's sleep and 4: the curse of having a television in your bedroom and a remote control to keep you company, jumping from channel to channel until your eyes rest upon a 4 AM showing of THE GRAPES OF WRATH and you know you're not going anywhere until the credits roll.
I think, therefore I write.
You have anything better for me to do with my time in the middle of the night?
Don't answer that unless your thoughts are PG-rated. ;>
And hell if I didn't think so hard that I turned to keyboard and screen. Damn you, wretched and tempest-tossed writers. Can never keep these things to yourselves, can you? ;>
Great Characters Make Great Stories. These are the books we remember. The characters that transcend the page. The iconic voices we carry with us, speaking to us from beyond the confines of the novel and remind us, time and again, why literature is a powerful link between generations. These are the voices that inspire me to write. To paint words into life, to connect reader to reader, to be "a little piece of a big soul." Not just for today but for tomorrow.
citycatinwindow introduced me to ARTISTS FOR LITERACY, an organization that promotes music inspired by great characters and great literature. Their mission is to make literature more accessible, to marry music and the written word in order to "open doors" to a more critical analysis of a book that might otherwise be daunting to a young reader.
TOM JOAD from John Steinbeck's GRAPES OF WRATH stands tall in my pantheon of literary heroic characters. His "I'll be there" soliloquy has moved many to tears, to action-- and to music. I know. Woody Guthrie was right there, compelled to create a homage to Tom Joad after Guthrie saw the movie, THE GRAPES OF WRATH. Fast forward to another great writer who found truth and beauty in this quintessential American literary hero. Enter Bruce Springsteen. (Ah, there's always a tie that binds my words to Mr. Springsteen.)
It may not be the first question I ever ask should I have the chance to have a one-on-one moment with my muse (and, should that day ever come, I highly doubt any intelligible sounds would make it past my quivering lips), but this writer would love to ask that writer what about Steinbeck's Joad inspired him to paint his musical portrait of the Joad character in Bruce's GHOST OF TOM JOAD. Steinbeck's novel identifies a cultural war that is seeped in the soul of the American dream. After stuttering and stammering for 23 minutes in Bruce's face, telling him what hismusic has meant to me (everything), oh how I would love to ask him: "How do you see your music as a source of characters questioning what is wrong and what is right in America? Who are your characters speaking to? The choir or the disenfranchised- the believers or the estranged and alienated? Are your characters uniquely American and why? Would you rather sing to the church or a confused, wandering congregation?"
I suspect this would be his answer:
Then I would fall faint to the floor.
And... end scene!
Speaking of Page Turners: Here's to 2008-- and to you and your characters and the life you give them. (Or is it the other way around?)
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: publishing, Business, Blogs, Current Events, digital, Media, A-Featured, Online Resources, schnittman, facing, reality, evan, raging, entitled, Add a tag
Evan Schnittman wrote an article for Publishing News last week entitled “Facing The Digital Reality.” Schnittman writes in his article that,
“…at the 500-year-old publishing house where I am employed book sales still make up the lion’s share of our income. Yet, as print-oriented as we may be, we have successfully launched many digital products - all into institutional and library markets. Until recently, however, the boundaries of e-content success seem to have stopped at journals, reference, and STM content in institutional and library markets.” (more…)
I remember reading it as one of my 10th grade english courses. Of Mice and Men was easily the best book we read that semester, and even the kids who usually bitched about having to read anything enjoyed it.
Even the movie adaptation was done pretty well. I might have to pick this one up again.
My step-daughter complained about having to read it this year, then cried while reading it. I'm not sure what that means. Did she like it or not? I haven't read it since high school but just finished Steinbeck's "The Wayward Bus". Took 90 pages to really get going, then took off.
I haven't read this since high school, but I did love it. Last year I started reading some of Steinbeck's other short work. Great stuff.
Interesting question about the length. It's hard to say, though I'd like to think publishers would recognize great work.
Tony S - It's a great refresher on Steinbeck's brilliance as a writer.
Everett - Those are good tears. Good honest tears.
Tony - I'd like to think the same, but... Have I mentioned Snooki's book deal?
That's what I love about teaching JH English -- getting to choose the books we read. We're in the middle of The Giver right now, which always brings up great discussion topics: "Uh...So there are 'birth mothers', but where are the 'birth fathers'?"
It makes you wonder just how many old books won't be published into day's market. Thank you for a great posting, Aaron.
Please don't mention Snooki's book deal. By the Gods I'll never comprehend that one. It goes to show fluff sells. Eats your soul up to think anyone would give her the caliber of having a brain.
Me? I'll keep my soul and sell it on other worthy ventures. Now back to a more worthwhile topic - Steinbeck.
As Tony said, I'd like to think the publishers would have recognized talent. Mice and Men, didn't need another 30,000 to endear to the heart of it's readers. Unfortunately in this day and age word count determines the format more than anything else may. (Hugs)Indigo
Milo - The Giver is a great book. Literature gives us the chance to tackle the big issues.
Jarmara - Thanks for reading. Most of the books we read in school are well under what most agents list as their word count ranges. Funny really...
Indigo - True, every word. ;)
I can only think of one book I would read every year, and I don't think they'll be teaching it in school ; )
Oh, you know how I feel about the novella. Mmmm
Also, Steinbeck, who may be the Best Writer Ever. Just saying.
Yep, I read it at school too. And I heart the novella.