Susan’s Almanac Project for November 9, 2018

By |2018-11-09T13:15:44+00:00November 9th, 2018|

It’s the birthday of the Confessional poet Anne Sexton (1928-1974, #diedtooyoung), who began writing poetry seriously as a way to cope with mental illness and who became one of America’s most respected poets, winning the Pulitzer in 1967 for her volume, Live or Die. Sexton was born in Newton, Massachusetts, and had an unhappy (and [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for November 8, 2018

By |2018-11-08T15:00:27+00:00November 8th, 2018|

It’s the birthday of Sir Kazuo Ishiguro (b. 1954), who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2017 (back when they were still awarding those) and who is best known for the novel The Remains of the Day (1989), narrated by the quintessential English butler, Stevens, as he looks back on his life and his [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for November 7, 2018

By |2018-11-07T14:47:07+00:00November 7th, 2018|

It’s the birthday of the French author Albert Camus (1913-1960, #diedtooyoung), best known for his novels The Stranger (1942) and The Plague (1947) and for his essay The Myth of Sisyphus, in which he founded the philosophy of Absurdism, which asserts that humans should persistently search for meaning in an inherently meaningless world, which is [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for November 6, 2018

By |2018-11-06T14:17:38+00:00November 6th, 2018|

It’s the birthday of two Pulitzer Prize-winning novelists, Colson Whitehead (b. 1969) and Michael Cunningham (b. 1952); today we talk about Whitehead, whose 2016 alternative history novel The Underground Railroad won the National Book Award for Fiction, the Pulitzer, the Carnegie Medal for Fiction, and was a #1 New York Times bestseller. The Underground Railroad [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for November 5, 2018

By |2018-11-05T15:37:17+00:00November 5th, 2018|

It’s the birthday of playwright and actor Sam Shepard (1943-2017), whose plays explored the concept of the American West in new and “hallucinatory” ways in which “the only undeniable truth is that of the mirage” (Ben Brantley, “Sam Shepard, Actor and Pulitzer-Winning Playwright, Is Dead at 73,” NY Times, July 31, 2017). He wrote over [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for November 1, 2018

By |2018-11-01T14:58:49+00:00November 1st, 2018|

Today is November 1st, the first day of NaNoWriMo, or National Novel Writing Month, in which participants are challenged to write 50,000 words of a novel in one month. That comes to about 1,667 words a day, or 6.67 typed pages a day—which qualifies as insanely fast writing, especially when sustained over a 30-day period. [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for October 31, 2018

By |2018-10-31T14:29:19+00:00October 31st, 2018|

It’s the birthday of the great lyric poet who wrote: “Beauty is truth, truth beauty,—that is all Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know.” (To which math and science reply, “Preach.” See an interesting article on this here.) John Keats (1795-1821) was born in London, the oldest of four. His father ran [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for October 30, 2018

By |2018-10-30T15:07:01+00:00October 30th, 2018|

It’s the birthday of Fyodor Dostoyevsky (1821-1881), known as one of the greatest novelists in history and one of the greatest influences on all of 20th century literature. (You may know him from such works as Crime and Punishment, 1866; The Idiot, 1869; and The Brothers Karamazov, 1880.) Considered one of the most brilliant psychological [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for October 29, 2018

By |2018-10-29T13:42:39+00:00October 29th, 2018|

It’s the birthday of British novelist, industrialist, and eccentric Henry Green (1905-1973), real name Henry Vincent Yorke, once famously called by The Paris Review a “writer’s writer’s writer.” You won’t have heard of him (five life points to you if I’m wrong), so here are a few folks who have: W.H. Auden called Green “the [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for October 26, 2018

By |2018-10-26T13:34:59+00:00October 26th, 2018|

It’s the birthday of author and former Jesuit priest John L’Heureux (b. 1934), many of whose short stories and novels explore themes of divine intervention (or interference), sanctification, and the miraculous in ordinary human lives. L’Heureux was born in South Hadley, Massachusetts, to an engineer and a secretary, the second of two children. He trained [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for October 25, 2018

By |2018-10-25T13:19:33+00:00October 25th, 2018|

It’s the birthday of Anne Tyler (b. 1941), an immensely popular novelist who never intended to be a writer. She’s written 22 novels and is best known for novels about family relationships in all their glory and dysfunction, such as Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant (1982), The Accidental Tourist (1985), and the Pulitzer-winning Breathing Lessons [...]

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