The Dead Writers Round-Up: 4th-8th January

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At ASPL, one of the refrains that you will hear echoing in the background like a parade ground tattoo is that we love dead writers. They are, after all, the reason that we came to be such insatiable reader-writers. How their very existence in a world full of untold possibilities helped us make the journey from there to here is the stuff for another story. Today, we are here to launch a new feature in their honor called, perhaps a bit too straightforwardly, The Dead Writers Round-Up. This is a glorified birth-and-death type of history for those of you interested in such niche oddities. The haphazard nature of the life and death cycle gives us some interesting juxtapositions; perhaps proving that, if viewed in just a certain way, the Fates have a sense of humor. Or that we are lit geeks to the extreme. Either way, please enjoy this first edition of The Dead Writers Round-Up.

  • Max Eastman was born on 1/4/1883. “The defining function of the artist is to cherish consciousness.”
  • Albert Camus died on 1/4/1960. “A guilty conscience needs to confess. A work of art is a confession.”
  • T.S. Eliot died on 1/4/1965. “Anxiety is the hand maiden of creativity.”
  • Christopher Isherwood died on 1/4/1986. Isherwood wrote the novel ‘Goodbye Berlin’ (1939), which in turn was made into a Broadway play (‘I am a Camera’ by John Van Druten) before eventually being immortalized on both stage and screen as ‘Cabaret’ .
  • Frances (Fanny) Burney died on 1/6/1840. Although a celebrated novelist and playwright during her own very long lifetime, today she is best known for keeping a private journal for an astonishing 70 years.
  • Carl Sandburg was born on 1/6/1878. The Illinois-born poet was friends with Marilyn Monroe the last few years of her life.
  • Kahlil Gibran was born on 1/6/1883. “All our words are but crumbs that fall down from the feast of the mind.”
  • Alan Watts was born on 1/6/1916. “A myth is an image in terms of which we try to make sense of the world.
  • Zora Neale Hurston was born on 1/7/1891. “It’s a funny thing, the less people have to live for, the less nerve they have to risk losing nothing.”
  • John Berryman died on 1/7/1972. “I am so wise I had my mouth sewn shut.”
  • Wilkie Collins was born on 1/8/1824. The Victorian novelist is best known for his immensely popular mystery novels, ‘The Woman in White’ and ‘The Moonstone’.
  • Storm Jameson was born on 1/8/1891. The English writer lived to be 95.
  • Paul Verlaine died on 1/8/1896. “Tears fall in my heart like the rain on the town.”

A Year in Books/Day 4: Thorndike Century Junior Dictionary

William Alexander Craigie
Image via Wikipedia-William Craigie.
  • Title: Thorndike Century Junior Dictionary A Child’s Dictionary of the English Language Revised Edition
  • Author: E.L. Thorndike
  • Year Published: 1942 (a revision of the original 1935 edition/published by E.L. Thorndike)
  • Year Purchased: This copy was purchased new in 1942 for my 10-year-old Grandmother.
  • Source: This book was handed down to me by Grandma when I was 5.
  • About:The dictionary was compiled by E.L. Thorndike and 2 very impressive advisory committees, whose lists included Sir William Craigie (the third editor of the Oxford English Dictionary).
  • Motivation: I started reading dictionaries (quickly followed by any reference book within the grasp of my thin fingers) shortly before starting school. I have read entire volumes during otherwise boring road trips. I still prefer the tactile, almost sensuous quality of well-worn reference pages over the most comprehensive on-line compendium. Someone should coin a phrase for that special quality one feels when meandering through a dictionary; how the heart races when the eyes skip, so quickly, from word to word, roaming over territory new and old. E.L. Thorndike’s great work for schoolchildren made that possible for me.
  • Times Read: Countless.
  • Random Excerpt/Page vi: “To make a dictionary that comes near to this ideal requires not only adequate knowledge of the English language, but also expert scientific knowledge of children’s minds, and their needs in reading, hearing, and using words. It also requires ingenuity and thoughtfulness for every detail of every word.”
  • Happiness Scale: Off the charts.