
UPRISINGS
I saw a book titled UPRISINGS and, thinking it was a
nonfiction account of revolutions and rebellions, I
purchased it. It was only after I got the book home
did I realize it was a book about baking with yeast.
One book title I never got right was Willy
Sutton's Memoirs of a Bank Robber. When Willy was
asked why he robbed banks, he repli4d "Because
that's where the money is.' Thus, I assumed
the title of his memoir was Where the Money is.
The actual title is Where the Money Was. That
makes much more sense, since once Willie Sutton
left the bank he took the money with him.
A very strange title is MY AUTOBIOGRAPHY by
Charlie Chaplin. What other person's autobiography
was he planning to write?
But then there is
My Autobiography of Carson McCullers by Jenn Shapland| Tin Househttps://tinhouse.com › book › was a finalist for the 2020 National Book Award in Nonfiction, and was long listed for the 2021 Andrew Carnegie Medal.
**
SEAN CONNERY TELLS ABOUT THE BIG BREAK HE RECEIVED
WHEN HE WAS 5 YEARS OLD
See the AFI honors Sean Connery.
About 5 minutes into his speech.
MICHAEL HERR & STANLEY KUBRICK Lately he (Kubrick) had been thinking of making a movie about the Holocaust. Kubrick bugged Herr every few weeks to read Hilberg, until finally Herr said, "I guess right now I just don't want to read a book called The Destruction of the European Jews." "No, Michael," Kubrick replied, "The book you don't want to read right now is The Destruction of the European Jews, Part Two." David Mikics. Stanley Kubrick: American Filmmaker. (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2020) ** POP QUIZ !.Who was the first American author to earn a million dollars through his writings? 2. Henry David Thoreau called this poet the greatest Democrat who ever lived. To whom was he referring? 3. Only two presidents of the United States published books of poetry. Who were they? 4.what great American novelist received a patent in 1873 for a self-pasting scrapbook? 5. What Nobel Prize winning author wrote for his high school newspaper under the byline Ring Lardner, Jr? (Answers below) ** EDMUND SPENSER Edmund Spenser Was not much of a fencer. Hence, sir, He wd with pen & ink prefer to toil, Dispensing with epee, saber & foil. LJP **
THE ACT OF READING
(The characters in Flaubert are like recipes in Escoffier, we are surprised to see how much is left out.) We read about Carbourg in Proust, and are unprepared for what we find when we actually get there. The act of reading is always a matter of a task begun as much as of a message understood, something that begins on a flat surface, counter or page, and then gets stirred and chopped and blended until what we make, in the end, is a dish, or story, all our own. Adam Gopnik. "Cooked Books" in The New Yorker (April 9, 2007) ** THE LOVE OF READING " I was a voracious reader. I loved the library. I loved bookstores. My mom had to kind of limit on it because I was flying through books so quickly. I love, love, love books." Gabrielle Union, author of the memoir You Got' Anything Stronger, quoted in "By the Book" (The New York Times Book Review (September 12, 2021) ** ANSWERS TO THE POP QUIZ L. JACK LONDON 2. WALT WHITMAN 3. JOHN QUINCY ADAMS and JIMMY CARTER. A reviewer in The New York Times wrote of President Carter that"...the very qualities that helped cripple him as a politician are also the qualities that make him a mediocre poet." 4.MARK TWAIN 5.ERNEST HEMINGWAY *** THOMAS HARDY Thomas Hardy— When he laughed wd go har-dee Har-hah, followed by a sorrow-filled sigh. Deep down he was a very serious guy. Louis Phillips
Good but PROOFREAD! (SEE “om” in “Love of Reading” and something missing in Connery?)
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Thank you
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Thank you for sending me your great Bits & Pieces and Sean Connery speech. Fabulous.Love,April
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Always good to hear from you
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Many good bits here! I even liked your weird Spenser poem. Love,Nancy
Nancy Markoe 202 494-6840
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Yes! ESP on Hardy
On Sun, Sep 12, 2021 at 9:57 PM PhillipsMiscellany wrote:
> louisprofphillips posted: ” UPRISINGS I saw a book titled UPRISINGS and, > thinking it was a nonfiction account of revolutions and rebellions, I > purchased it. It was only after I got the book home did I realize it was a > book about baking with yeast. One book title I never” >
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Thanks for once again providing your readers with the ingredients to make stories all our own.
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Thank you for your kind response.
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The Hardy’s har-dee-har-har is marvelously hilarious.
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THANK YOU!
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