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Tag Archive for ‘Don’t Know Much About Literature’

“Beam me IN, Scotty” –Library Visits with Author Kenneth C. Davis

AN OPEN LETTER TO LIBRARIANS— “BEAM ME IN, SCOTTY!” Apologies to Captain Kirk and Star Trek.  I know it’s really, “Beam me UP, Scotty.” For more than 20 years, I have been traveling the country to visit libraries, bookstores, museums, schools and librarian conferences to share my love  for history, geography and all the subjects [...]

Happy Birthday, Harper Lee

Born April 28, 1926 in Monroeville, Alabama –Nelle Harper Lee, author of To Kill a Mockingbird. If you only publish one book, may as well make it a good one. For Harper Lee it was To Kill A Mockingbird (1960),  the story of Scout Finch, a girl growing up in a small Southern town.  Scout [...]

Don’t Know Much About® Poetic Last Lines

It’s the final week of National Poetry Month. So fittingly, here’s a Pop Quiz on some notable closing lines of poems.   “Nevermore!” It might be difficult to end a poem on a more dramatic note than Edgar Allen Poe did in “The Raven.”  Can you name the poets who created these ending lines?  Bonus [...]

Poetry Pop Quiz #2

In honor of National Poetry Month in April, I posted a quiz on poetic first lines earlier this month. Here is another. (If you’ve been following my Poem of the Day posts all month on my Facebook page or on Twitter, you should recognize several of these. All are worth reading. Or rereading!) “Gather ye [...]

Don’t Know Much About® Poetic First Lines

“April,” as T.S. Eliot told us, “is the cruellest month.” It is also National Poetry Month. That idea was inaugurated in 1996 by the Academy of American Poets. So to test your poetic wits, a quick Pop Quiz on some famous first poetic lines… Then go read the whole poems. “Let us go then, you [...]

Don’t Know Much About® “Lewis Carroll”

“O frabjous day” Hard to believe, but the author of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland had a reputation for being dull and uninspiring at his day job: Mathematics Lecturer at Oxford University. But when Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, born on January 27, 1832, mathematician, took on the pen name “Lewis Carroll,” he dreamed up fantastical stories that [...]

Don’t Know Much About® Poe

On the anniversary of his birth in 1809, a quick quiz in honor Edgar Allen Poe. Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1849) wrote some of the darkest, strangest poems and stories in the English language.  His narrators, who generally speak in the first person, have led many readers to confuse Poe with his deeply disturbed characters: opium [...]

The N-word is for “Nonsense”

A work that aspires, however, humbly, to the condition of art should carry its justification in every line. The great novelist Joseph Conrad wrote those words in a literary manifesto called “A Preface to the Nigger of the ‘Narcissus.’ ” Oops, I mean “Slave of the Narcissus.” Or should it be “The Children of the [...]

TODAY IN HISTORY: The “Negro Riots” in Watts

It started with a “DWB”– “driving while black.” On August 11, 1965, an all-too-frequent stop of a young black man exploded into one of the worst urban riots in American history. Where: Watts was a rundown district of shabby houses built near the highway approaching Los Angeles International Airport. Ninety-eight percent black, Watts was stewing [...]

TODAY IN HISTORY: Don’t Know Much About® Tocqueville in America

Happy Birthday, Monsieur Tocqueville (born July 29, 1805; died April 16, 1859) Observing a Choctaw tribe—the old, the sick, the wounded, and newborns among them—forced to cross an ice-choked Mississippi River during the harsh winter, Alexis de Tocqueville once wrote, “In the whole scene, there was an air of destruction, something which betrayed a final [...]