Karl Marlantes Reading New Book Matterhorn Tonite at Malaprops!

Posted in American Literature, History with tags , on May 20, 2011 by dakota1917

Malaprop’s Bookstore and Cafe in downtown Asheville has been a hallmark of literary advancement since 1982, specializing in materials pertaining to and crafted by local artists and writers.

Tonite, May 20, at 7PM, Vietnam veteran and author Karl Marlantes will be at Malaprop’s to read and discuss his most recent endeavor, Matterhorn: A Novel of the Vietnam War.  Marlantes served as a lieutenant in the United States Marine Corps during the Vietnam War, receiving numerous medals and commendations including two Purple Hearts and the Navy Cross.  First receiving a National Merit Scholarship to attend Yale University, Marlantes would later attend Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar.  This novel is based on Marlantes’ first hand experience in the jungles of Vietnam.

Matterhorn can be purchased at Malaprop’s in either paperback or hardcover editions, priced at $15.95 and $24.95 respectively.

For more information on Malaprop’s Bookstore and Cafe, visit www.malaprops.com.  If you are visiting Asheville, the store is locate at 55 Haywood Street, downtown.

Oscar Wilde Ends Stint in Jail

Posted in Demons, History, Horror/Suspense, Movie/Film Inspiration, Paranormal, World Literature on May 19, 2011 by dakota1917

Original cover page for Lippincott's Monthly containing Dorian Grey

On this date in 1897, Oscar Wilde, famed Irish author of The Picture of Dorian Gray and numerous other works, was released from prison after 2 years of hard labor.  Wilde was charged and sentenced for homosexuality, considered a crime in Victorian England.  Because of his treatment in England for his sexual preference, Wilde fled to Paris, where he died three years later of meningitis.

Most readers are probably familiar with Wilde’s novel The Picture of Dorian Gray. The premise of this work surrounds the characters of Dorian Gray, the artist Basil Hallward and Lord Henry Wotton.  Hallward is commissioned to paint a portrait of Gray.  Through his contact with Gray, Hallward becomes infatuated with Gray’s character and striking good looks.  After meeting Lord Henry, Gray embarks into a new world of hedonism, leading to Gray selling his soul to the Devil to ensure that the portrait of himself aged but his physical body did not, ensuring his immortality.  The portrait stands as a reminder to Gray of his sins of debauchery and hedonism, a picture of his tortured soul for all eternity. Read more »

“J’Accuse”–Emile Zola’s Impact on WikiLeaks

Posted in History, World Literature with tags , , on January 13, 2011 by dakota1917

What happens when the average citizen accuses a government of injustice?  What about when the same citizen leaks

Copy of original print, January 13, 1898

information that he is told that he shouldn’t, hoping that his accusations may elicit accountability?  These actions have been all over the news for the past months, following the highly publicized WikiLeaks scandal.  The idea of governmental accountability is a pressing issue around the world today.  Questions range on the grand spectrum from where and how our taxes are spent to the truth behind the existence of extraterrestrial intelligence.  On this day in 1898, French naturalist author Emile Zola accused the French President Felix Faure and his administration of a gross indecency against not only an individual French citizen but the French nation as a whole.  Entitled “J’Accuse (I Accuse)”, Zola’s open letter to the government was published as a front page article in future Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau’s liberal newspaper, L’Aurore. Read more »

Happy Birthday to Jack London

Posted in American Literature, Birthday Wishes, History, Movie/Film Inspiration with tags , , on January 13, 2011 by dakota1917

For the record, I’m a day late….

Jack London

I have to admit that I often choose author’s birthdays based on my own biases and personal preferences.  As any literary enthusiast can relate, we all have our favorite authors.  But there are certain names that hearken eras of life, often childhood memories, which have had a lasting impact.  This is what happens when I hear the name Jack London.  Traveler, gold prospector, partaker of fine alcoholic beverages, father, London wore many hats in life.  When I mention The Call of the Wild or White Fang, how do you feel?  Cold frosty winds chap my face, the frozen Five Rapids dangerously close to the left side of my dog sled, huskies straining under the weight of prospecting equipment and hardtack, braving the piercing jaws of frozen death for flakes of metal prized above life?  Are we dogs or are we wolves?  If we are dogs, what would cause us to become wolves?  Jack London’s name alone creates this vast landscape of struggle, death and greed that pulsates through my frontal lobe. Read more »

Huck Finn: Editing Out History or Expanding A Reading Base?

Posted in American Literature, History, Movie/Film Inspiration with tags , , , on January 6, 2011 by dakota1917

In recent news, New South Publishing has decided to release an amended and edited version of the Mark Twain classics The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, to be released in a single volume. This story follows the news of the release of Twain’s autobiography, set to be published on the centennial of Twain’s death.  Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer were required reads for many students in the United States. However, in recent years the novel has been omitted from numerous public school curricula and in some cases libraries due to an unfortunate racial slur that most readers would find offensive. An example of this usage is that Huck’s friend and fellow escapee Jim is refered to as N____r Jim. Although this is most certainly a deplorable racial slur, the term was unfortunately a ubiquitous term at the time of publication and beyond referring to a person of African-American decent.  Also on the chopping block stands the menacing antagonist of Tom Sawyer, Injun Joe.  ”Injun” is a bastardized version of Indian, which in itself a misrepresentation of Native American. Regardless of the fact, Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer are considered by many as the epitome of American literature. But how to approach these sensitive racial slurs? Does one simply edit them out, or does it stay in memory regardless of absence in print? Read more »

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.