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Reading Group Guide Spotlight
Spotlight on: Reading Group Guide Revolutionary Road Author: Richard Yates Born February 3, 926, in Yonkers, NY; died of Name: Richard Yates emphysema and complications from minor Born: 926 surgery, November 7, 992, in Birmingham, AL; son of Vincent M. (a sales executive) and Ruth (Maurer) Yates; married Sheila Bryant, 948 (divorced, 959); married Martha Speer, 968 (divorced, 974); children: Sharon, Monica, Gina. Military/Wartime Service: U.S. Army, 944-46. Career: United Press Association, New York City, financial reporter, 946- 48; Remington Rand, Inc., New York City, publicity writer, 948-50; freelance public relations writer, 953-60; New School for Social Research, New York City, teacher of creative writing, 959-62; Columbia University, New York City, teacher of creative writing, 960-62; United Artists, Hollywood, screenwriter, 962; U.S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy, Washington, DC, speech writer, 963; University of Iowa, Iowa City, lecturer, 964-65, assistant professor of English, 966- 92; Columbia Pictures, Hollywood, screenwriter, 965-66; Wichita State University, writer in residence, 97-72; taught at Harvard Extension, Columbia University, and Boston University. Awards: Atlantic Firsts award, 953; National Book Award nomination for Revolutionary Road; Guggenheim fellowship, 962, 98; American Academy Grant, 963; National Institute of Arts and Letters grant, 963 and 975; Creative Arts Award, Brandeis University, 964; National Endowment for the Arts grant, 966, and award, 984; Rockefeller grant, 967; Rosenthal Foundation award, 976; National Magazine Award for Fiction, 978, for “Oh, Joseph, I’m So Tired.” Writings: Novels: Revolutionary Road, Atlantic-Little, Brown, 96. A Special Providence, Knopf, 969. Disturbing the Peace, Delacorte, 975. -
Not Your Mother's Library Transcript Episode 11: Mamma Mia! and More Musicals (Brief Intro Music) Rachel: Hello, and Welcome T
Not Your Mother’s Library Transcript Episode 11: Mamma Mia! and More Musicals (Brief intro music) Rachel: Hello, and welcome to Not Your Mother’s Library, a readers’ advisory podcast from the Oak Creek Public Library. I’m Rachel, and once again since Melody’s departure I am without a co-host. This is where you would stick a crying-face emoji. Luckily for everyone, though, today we have a brand new guest! This is most excellent, truly, because we are going to be talking about musicals, and I do not have any sort of expertise in that area. So, to balance the episode out with a more professional perspective, I would like to welcome to the podcast Oak Creek Library’s very own Technical Services Librarian! Would you like to introduce yourself? Joanne: Hello, everyone. I am a new guest! Hooray! (laughs) Rachel: Yeah! Joanne: So, I am the Technical Services Librarian here at the Oak Creek Library. My name is Joanne. I graduated from Carroll University with a degree in music, which was super helpful for libraries. Not so much. Rachel: (laughs) Joanne: And then went to UW-Milwaukee to get my masters in library science, and I’ve been working in public libraries ever since. I’ve always had a love of music since I've been in a child. My mom is actually a church organist, and so I think that’s where I get it from. Rachel: Wow, yeah. Joanne: I used to play piano—I did about 10 years and then quit. (laughs) So, I might be able to read some sheet music but probably not very well. -
Daniel Green
DANIEL GREEN 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS RADICAL REALISTS “Like Life: Radical Realism and the Fiction of Sam Pink” (5) “Reinforcing Hard Reality: Stephen Dixon” (14) “Sincerity and the Surface: On Nicholson Baker” (19) “Not Somewhere or Anywhere” (Ottessa Moshfegh) (26) “Entering Cross River” (Rion Amilcar Scott) (30) “Contextualized Naturalism: The Artfulness of Russell Banks's Affliction” (36) “Sleights of Hand” (Philip Roth) (46) REGRESSIVE REALISTS “Richard Powers I: Forsaking Illusions” (50) “Lost in the Woods: Richard Powers, The Overstory” (58) “Safely Familiar” (Denis Johnson) (63) “Getting At The Thing Itself” (Kent Haruf” (66) “Endless Talk” (Richard Ford) (71) “Killing the Joke” (Lorrie Moore) (80) “Until the Movie Comes Out” (Richard Russo) (84) “Illusions of Substance” (Charles Baxter) (89) 3 PREFACE The underlying assumption of most of my critical writing has been that, far from representing a tangential, eccentric practice (as much of current literary culture would have it), “experimental” fiction in fact provides an indispensable service in helping to keep the literary resources of fiction refreshed. Often this entails contrasting such fiction with a conventionalized or exhausted realism, which despite the interventions of fabulists and postmodernists (not to mention the efforts of many genre writers) remains more or less the default preference in both American fiction and general-interest literary criticism. But the problem with a blanket critique of realism, especially from the years after World War II, and even more especially -
Entertainment Industry, 1908-1980 Theme: Residential Properties Associated with the Entertainment Industry, 1908-1980
LOS ANGELES CITYWIDE HISTORIC CONTEXT STATEMENT Context: Entertainment Industry, 1908-1980 Theme: Residential Properties Associated with the Entertainment Industry, 1908-1980 Prepared for: City of Los Angeles Department of City Planning Office of Historic Resources October 2017 SurveyLA Citywide Historic Context Statement Entertainment Industry/Residential Properties Associated with the Entertainment Industry, 1908-1980 TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface 1 Contributors 1 Theme Introduction 1 Theme: Residential Properties Associated with the Entertainment Industry 3 Sub-theme: Residential Properties Associated with Significant Persons in the Entertainment Industry, 1908-1980 13 Sub-theme: Entertainment Industry Housing and Neighborhoods, 1908-1980 30 Selected Bibliography 52 SurveyLA Citywide Historic Context Statement Entertainment Industry/Residential Properties Associated with the Entertainment Industry, 1908-1980 PREFACE This theme is a component of SurveyLA’s citywide historic context statement and provides guidance to field surveyors in identifying and evaluating potential historic resources relating to residential properties associated with the entertainment industry. Refer to www.HistoricPlacesLA.org for information on designated resources associated with this context (or themes) as well as those identified through SurveyLA and other surveys. CONTRIBUTORS The Entertainment Industry context (and all related themes) was prepared by Christine Lazzaretto and Heather Goers, Historic Resources Group, with significant guidance and input from Christy -
PLAGUED by FIRE the Dreams and Furies of Frank Lloyd Wright by Paul Hendrickson
News from Contact: James Meader Vintage Books Executive Director of Publicity A Division of Penguin Random House 212-414-3492 | [email protected] NOW IN PAPERBACK — September 22, 2020 PLAGUED BY FIRE The Dreams and Furies of Frank Lloyd Wright by Paul Hendrickson Frank Lloyd Wright has long been known as a rank egotist who held in contempt almost everything aside from his own genius. Harder to detect, but no less real, is a Wright who fully understood, and suffered from, the choices he made. This is the Wright whom Paul Hendrickson reveals in this masterful biography: the Wright who was haunted by his father, about whom he told the greatest lie of his life. And this, we see, is the Wright of many other neglected aspects of his story: his close, and perhaps romantic, relationship with friend and early mentor Cecil Corwin; the eerie, unmistakable role of fires in his life; the connection between the 1921 Black Wall Street massacre in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and the murder of his mistress, her two children, and four others at his beloved Wisconsin home. In showing us Wright’s facades along with their cracks, Hendrickson helps us form a fresh, deep, and more human understanding of the man. With prodigious research, unique vision, and his ability to make sense of a life in ways at once unexpected, poetic, and undeniably brilliant, he has given us the defining book on Wright. For more information please contact: James Meader | Executive Director of Publicity | 212-414-3492 | [email protected] PLAGUED BY FIRE • Paul Hendrickson A Vintage Books Trade Paperback • On Sale 9/22/2020 624 pages • $18.00 • ISBN: 9780804172882 Vintage Books, A Division of Penguin Random House • 1745 Broadway New York, NY 10019 PRAISE FOR PLAGUED BY FIRE “A vast, sweeping book. -
Introduction
NOTES INTRODUCTION 1. Nathanael West, The Day of the Locust (New York: Bantam, 1959), 131. 2. West, Locust, 130. 3. For recent scholarship on fandom, see Henry Jenkins, Textual Poachers: Television Fans and Participatory Culture (New York: Routledge, 1992); John Fiske, Understanding Popular Culture (New York: Routledge, 1995); Jackie Stacey, Star Gazing (New York: Routledge, 1994); Janice Radway, Reading the Romance (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina, 1991); Joshua Gam- son, Claims to Fame: Celebrity in Contemporary America (Berkeley: Univer- sity of California Press, 1994); Georganne Scheiner, “The Deanna Durbin Devotees,” in Generations of Youth, ed. Joe Austin and Michael Nevin Willard (New York: New York University Press, 1998); Lisa Lewis, ed. The Adoring Audience: Fan Culture and Popular Media (New York: Routledge, 1993); Cheryl Harris and Alison Alexander, eds., Theorizing Fandom: Fans, Subculture, Identity (Creekskill, N.J.: Hampton Press, 1998). 4. According to historian Daniel Boorstin, we demand the mass media’s simulated realities because they fulfill our insatiable desire for glamour and excitement. To cultural commentator Richard Schickel, they create an “illusion of intimacy,” a sense of security and connection in a society of strangers. Ian Mitroff and Warren Bennis have gone as far as to claim that Americans are living in a self-induced state of unreality. “We are now so close to creating electronic images of any existing or imaginary person, place, or thing . so that a viewer cannot tell whether ...theimagesare real or not,” they wrote in 1989. At the root of this passion for images, they claim, is a desire for stability and control: “If men cannot control the realities with which they are faced, then they will invent unrealities over which they can maintain control.” In other words, according to these authors, we seek and create aural and visual illusions—television, movies, recorded music, computers—because they compensate for the inadequacies of contemporary society. -
UNCORK YOUR CORN What I Think of for the Kindly Wish
Pa|e Two Chicago Sunday Tribune Looking at Hollywood Newfoundland's New Airport with Ed Sullivan A Big Help The Revolt to Ocean GANDAR LAKE o f Ann Flying BYy WAYNE THOMIS Sothern kNE OF THE least known airports in the world— By ED SULLIVAN o the Newfoundland flying Hollywood. field, situated in the midst of \S A RESULT of her fine job 500 square miles of virgin tim- in " Trade Winds/' which berland on the bleak little tri- she followed up with angle of rocks and scrub brush "Maisie," youthful and attrac- in the mouth of the bay of the tive Ann Sothern is the talk of St. Lawrence river—is destined the town. She should be the soon to become one of the ALTITUDE OF 540 FEET KEEPS RUNWAYS CONTAIN PAVING EQUAL talk of the town, because she world's most important aviation FIELD CLEAR OF FOG gambled $50,000 and a year of terminals. TO 100 MILES OF 20 FT. HIGHWAY her movie career on the propo- The field that has just been s i t i o n that Hollywood was completed after nearly three wrong and she was right. She years of heroic work by a crew Newfoundland's new airport as seen from the air. came close to starving, but she of more than 1,000 men, is to be won, and that, as the rabbit the jump-off point for most of or roughly 2,100 miles to C said, is a tale of importance. the east-bound trans-Atlantic don, the big international a Miss Sothern is a rarity in this airliners and the initial port of port of entry outside Londo town because she refuses to be arrival for most of the ocean air England. -
Dead Zone Back to the Beach I Scored! the 250 Greatest
Volume 10, Number 4 Original Music Soundtracks for Movies and Television FAN MADE MONSTER! Elfman Goes Wonky Exclusive interview on Charlie and Corpse Bride, too! Dead Zone Klimek and Heil meet Romero Back to the Beach John Williams’ Jaws at 30 I Scored! Confessions of a fi rst-time fi lm composer The 250 Greatest AFI’s Film Score Nominees New Feature: Composer’s Corner PLUS: Dozens of CD & DVD Reviews $7.95 U.S. • $8.95 Canada �������������������������������������������� ����������������������� ���������������������� contents ���������������������� �������� ����� ��������� �������� ������ ���� ���������������������������� ������������������������� ��������������� �������������������������������������������������� ����� ��� ��������� ����������� ���� ������������ ������������������������������������������������� ����������������������������������������������� ��������������������� �������������������� ���������������������������������������������� ����������� ����������� ���������� �������� ������������������������������� ���������������������������������� ������������������������������������������ ������������������������������������� ����� ������������������������������������������ ��������������������������������������� ������������������������������� �������������������������� ���������� ���������������������������� ��������������������������������� �������������� ��������������������������������������������� ������������������������� �������������������������������������������� ������������������������������ �������������������������� -
Addition to Summer Letter
May 2020 Dear Student, You are enrolled in Advanced Placement English Literature and Composition for the coming school year. Bowling Green High School has offered this course since 1983. I thought that I would tell you a little bit about the course and what will be expected of you. Please share this letter with your parents or guardians. A.P. Literature and Composition is a year-long class that is taught on a college freshman level. This means that we will read college level texts—often from college anthologies—and we will deal with other materials generally taught in college. You should be advised that some of these texts are sophisticated and contain mature themes and/or advanced levels of difficulty. In this class we will concentrate on refining reading, writing, and critical analysis skills, as well as personal reactions to literature. A.P. Literature is not a survey course or a history of literature course so instead of studying English and world literature chronologically, we will be studying a mix of classic and contemporary pieces of fiction from all eras and from diverse cultures. This gives us an opportunity to develop more than a superficial understanding of literary works and their ideas. Writing is at the heart of this A.P. course, so you will write often in journals, in both personal and researched essays, and in creative responses. You will need to revise your writing. I have found that even good students—like you—need to refine, mature, and improve their writing skills. You will have to work diligently at revising major essays. -
Read a Pulitzer Prize-Winning Book
September 2020 Reading Challenge: Read a Pulitzer Prize-Winning Book Key for on which services the books are located: A = Axis 360 C = CloudLibrary H = Hoopla L = Libby O = Overdrive P = Print LP = Large Print eAudio = AudioCD = CD March by Geraldine Brooks (fiction) P, LP In a story inspired by the father character in "Little Women" and drawn from the journals and letters of Louisa May Alcott's father, a man leaves behind his family to serve in the Civil War and finds his beliefs challenged by his experiences. The Gulf: The Making of an American Sea by Jack E. Davis (non-fiction) P, C H A comprehensive history of the Gulf of Mexico and its identity as a region marked by hurricanes, oil fields, and debates about population growth and the environment demonstrates how its picturesque ecosystems have inspired and reflected key historical events. The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz (fiction) P, LT, O, L, O L Living with an old-world mother and rebellious sister, an urban New Jersey misfit dreams of becoming the next J. R. R. Tolkien and believes that a long-standing family curse is thwarting his efforts to find love and happiness. Late Wife by Claudia Emerson (poetry) P In Late Wife, a woman explores her disappearance from one life and reappearance in another as she addresses her former husband, herself, and her new husband in a series of epistolary poems. Though not satisfied in her first marriage, she laments vanishing from the life she and her husband shared for years. -
The Pulitzer Prize for Fiction Honors a Distinguished Work of Fiction by an American Author, Preferably Dealing with American Life
Pulitzer Prize Winners Named after Hungarian newspaper publisher Joseph Pulitzer, the Pulitzer Prize for fiction honors a distinguished work of fiction by an American author, preferably dealing with American life. Chosen from a selection of 800 titles by five letter juries since 1918, the award has become one of the most prestigious awards in America for fiction. Holdings found in the library are featured in red. 2017 The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead 2016 The Sympathizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen 2015 All the Light we Cannot See by Anthony Doerr 2014 The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt 2013: The Orphan Master’s Son by Adam Johnson 2012: No prize (no majority vote reached) 2011: A visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan 2010:Tinkers by Paul Harding 2009:Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout 2008:The Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz 2007:The Road by Cormac McCarthy 2006:March by Geraldine Brooks 2005 Gilead: A Novel, by Marilynne Robinson 2004 The Known World by Edward Jones 2003 Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides 2002 Empire Falls by Richard Russo 2001 The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay by Michael Chabon 2000 Interpreter of Maladies by Jhumpa Lahiri 1999 The Hours by Michael Cunningham 1998 American Pastoral by Philip Roth 1997 Martin Dressler: The Tale of an American Dreamer by Stephan Milhauser 1996 Independence Day by Richard Ford 1995 The Stone Diaries by Carol Shields 1994 The Shipping News by E. Anne Proulx 1993 A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain by Robert Olen Butler 1992 A Thousand Acres by Jane Smiley -
Looking at Hollywood with Ed Sullivan
P.~. Tw. Chic ••• Saaday Trihaae Looking at Hollywood with Ed Sullivan l DclYid Ni.•.•n Rudy Vcd1ee D. FClirbcmb Jr. RlchGrd Gr •• ne Jimmy St.wGrt Joe Sch.nck on the coast and he has loads brothers, three of them, are don't believe that there will be of dough. Or how about some- married. So are Jack Haley, Jack any reaction whatsoever. The thing in writers or directors- Benny, George Burns, Frank studio bosses are of the opinion Norman Krasna, Rouben Ma· McHugh, Al Jolson, Bert Wheel· that a performer who is married moulian, Bob Risklnd, Carl er, Bob Hope, Fred Allen, Frank happily is better liked by the Laemmle Jr., Eddie Sutherland, Morgan, George Jessel. Their public and gains solid prestige. Austin Fairman? Uh-huh, you marriage rating is high. want Gable or Robert Taylor- Perhaps we shouldn't indulge • • • you will have to take that up in any such broad generality. There are one hundred argu- with Miss Lombard or Miss W. C. Fields, Edgar Bergen, Mil· ments in support of this idea. Stanwyck, ma'am. Can I Inter- ton Berle, and Edward Everett Gable was tremendous at the est you in a nice, swingy band Horton are comics who are root- box office while he was married. leader? Guy Lombardo, Abe loose and fancy-free. So, too, is So was W1lliam Powell. Bing Lyman, Skinnay Ennis. Hal Ken Murray. Charlie Butter- Crosby as a married man and Kemp? No, a lady came and worth is getting a divorce, or a father has gained in popular- got him just the other day.