John Steinbeck

Top 25 Favorite Writers

Much like for my favorite movies, here is a list of my Top 25 favorite writers.

  1. Vladimir Nabokov
  2. Ray Bradbury
  3. JRR Tolkien
  4. Kurt Vonnegut
  5. Douglas Adams
  6. Mark Twain

The rest in alphabetical order by last name:

  • Robert Benchley
  • Charlotte Brontë
  • Emily Brontë
  • Albert Camus
  • Raymond Chandler
  • Umberto Eco
  • William Gibson
  • Spalding Gray
  • Franz Kafka
  • Jack Kerouac
  • Milan Kundera
  • George Orwell
  • Dorothy Parker
  • Edgar Allan Poe
  • Muriel Spark
  • Bram Stoker
  • Jules Verne
  • Edith Wharton
  • HG Wells

Honorable Mentions

  • Jane Austen
  • Jorge Luis Borges
  • George Carlin
  • Philip K Dick
  • James Ellroy
  • Ernest Hemingway
  • Ursula K Le Guin
  • James Joyce
  • Stephen King
  • Herman Melville
  • Flannery O’Connor
  • William Shakespeare
  • Mary Shelley
  • Neal Stephenson
  • John Steinbeck
  • Hunter S Thompson
  • Virginia Woolf
  • Oscar Wilde
  • PG Wodehouse
  • Emile Zola

Crazy cool stuff 10-21-09

Closing a bunch of tabs. This was a particularly good couple of days for cool things to link to.

Jacket Copy: “Balloon boy story is right out of Edgar Allan Poe”

The Balloon Boy story may have been a hoax, but it if was, the Heene family is in good company. No less than Edgar Allan Poe had an entirely fictional account of a balloon voyage published in 1844 in the Sun newspaper.

A.V. Club Interview: “Alton Brown”

There have been [topics they wanted to do a show on but couldn’t] and there are, and most of those have to do with boundaries set by what Food Network wants to show and doesn’t want to show. You know, they’re not gonna let me do a show about rabbit, because they don’t want to think about killing the little bunnies. There probably won’t be a Good Eats episode on, you know, anything glandular.

LA Galaxy Blog: “Landon Donovan Named Honda Player of the Year and Player of the Decade”

In addition to being named the Player of the Year, Donovan was also named the Honda Player of the Decade. This honor comes as little surprise as he had won the Player of the Year award in six (2002, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2008, 2009) of the last 10 years.

BBC Sport: “Republic face France in play-offs”

The Republic of Ireland will have to beat former World Cup winners France over two legs if they are to make it to the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.

Giovanni Trapattoni’s side drew the 1998 champions for the play-offs to be played on 14 and 18 November and will play at home first.

Cyclelicious: “Bikes On Board: Stuttgart cog railroad”

German commuter trains have rush hour restrictions for bikes on board that many Americans who travel by train and bike are familiar with. “Die Zacke” cog railroad between Marienplatz in South Stuttgart to Degerloch, however, features this fantastic platform just for bikes.

BBC News: “At the centre of time”

Without it international travel would be in turmoil and calling friends in faraway places at the right time impossible. Exactly 125 years after the Greenwich Meridian line was drawn, how and why did Britain become the centre of time?

San Bernardino Sun: “Mayor unveils two-story globe design for SBIA”

A spiffy two-story world globe was unveiled Monday at San Bernardino International Airport as a symbol of world travel and sophistication in the city’s plans.

The 19-foot objet d’art sits inside a 30-foot-wide fountain in front of the soon-to-be-completed passenger terminal on Leland Norton Way, said Steve Silver of TranSystems, who designed and engineered the globe.

NY Times: “One Reporter’s Lonely Beat, Witnessing Executions “

Of all the consequences of shrinking newsrooms, one of the oddest is this: Fewer journalists are available to watch people die. But Michael Graczyk has witnessed more than 300 deaths, and many of those were people he had come to know.

Jacket Copy: “Happy birthday, Ursula K. Leguin”

Today is Ursula K. Le Guin’s 80th birthday. The multiple-award-winning writer is best known for “The Wizard of Earthsea” and is thought of for her science fiction, although she has crossed many boundaries.

[…] “I’m following Tolkien’s prescription for fantasy creation. You are making a world out of words, and the only thing that’s going to hold it together is its inner consistency.

“Writing science fiction and fantasy allow you to back off a little bit, to try to find the problems that always come back, that we never solve. Like gender relations, war — once there’s more than 50 of us living in one place we seem to have war.

If Charlie Parker Was a Gunslinger, There’d Be a Whole Lot of Dead Copycats: “Heroes of American Literature #17”

John Steinbeck smoking and reading.

Phew! That’s it. And Firefox should be feeling leaner as well. :)

Steinbeck's dubious ghosts

Cover of In Dubious Battle by John Steinbeck

John Steinbeck’s In Dubious Battle is a novel describing the Great Cotton Strike of 1933 by farm workers in the California Central Valley. I’ve not read it, but it has been criticized at times for the author’s choice to focus almost exclusively on white Okies rather than the Mexicans who formed three-fourths of the workers in the real event.

The Village Voice has an article by Tony Ortega, who began researching the question at the behest of his mentor, novelist Louis Owens. As he digs deeper, Ortega is stunned to realize that members of his own family, still living, were there during the historical strike.

It was in the small farm town of Pixley, for example, about two weeks into the shutdown, that the most harrowing event of the strike occurred. The organizers, who included a man named Pat Chambers and a woman named Carolyn Decker, had called for a meeting at a hall in town. So many strikers showed up, however, that many were unable to get inside. As the crowd tried to get word of what was going on in the meeting, someone managed to snap a couple of stunning photographs: About a dozen farmers with rifles in their hands were sneaking up on the Mexican workers.

The farmers opened fire on the unarmed crowd. Miraculously, only two men were killed; several other people were injured, including a woman. The gunmen then jumped into their cars and sped away, but were almost immediately pulled over by California Highway Patrol officers who had actually witnessed the attack (the farmers’ weapons were literally still smoking). The officers took the rifles and then told the men to go on home.

Read “Louis Owens and John Steinbeck’s Ghosts”, by Tony Ortega.

(Found via “John Steinbeck’s migrant workers” on the LA Times’ Jacket Copy blog.)

Why Dogs? (quotations)

Robert Benchley

“A dog teaches a boy fidelity, perseverance, and to turn around three times before lying down.”

Samuel Butler

“The great pleasure of a dog is that you may make a fool of yourself with him and not only will he not scold you, but he will make a fool of himself too.”

Charles Doran

“A man’s soul can be judged by the way he treats his dog.”

George Bird Evans

“I think we are drawn to dogs because they are the uninhibited creatures we might be if we weren’t certain we knew better.”

Edward Hoagland

“In order to really enjoy a dog, one doesn’t merely try to train him to be semi-human. The point of it is to open oneself to the possibility of becoming partly a dog.”

John Holmes

“A dog is not almost-human, and I know of no greater insult to the canine race than to describe it as such.”

Lonzo Idolswine

“My dog is usually pleased with what I do, because she is not infected with the concept of what I ‘should’ be doing.”

Franz Kafka

“All knowledge, the totality of all questions and all answers is contained in the dog.”

Rudyard Kipling

“When the Man waked up he said,
‘What is Wild Dog doing here?’
And the Woman said,
‘His name is not Wild Dog any more,
but the First Friend,
because he will be our friend
for always and always and always.’”

Milan Kundera

“Dogs are our link to paradise. They don’t know evil or jealousy or discontent. To sit with a dog on a hillside on a glorious afternoon is to be back in Eden, where doing nothing was not boring — it was peace.”

John Steinbeck

“I’ve seen a look in dogs’ eyes, a quickly vanishing look of amazed contempt, and I am convinced that basically dogs think humans are nuts.”

Miscellanea #5

(Miscellanea: A collection of miscellaneous matters; matters of various kinds (Webster’s 1913). Noteworthy tidbits gleaned from all over, sans commentary.)

Steinbeck, at Last, Welcomed Home
During his lifetime, John Steinbeck and his hometown became so estranged that the author once objected to the naming of a local school building after him because he figured it would be an excuse to cuss his name. Theirs was a troubled and mostly unforgiving relationship, one with spells of love and hate and most emotions in between…. (NY Times)

Briton returns book 42 years late
An ex-RAF serviceman has been rewarded with a cup of tea after returning a book to Malta 42 years late. (BBC News)

Salon Interviews Neal Stephenson
Salon has a great interview with Neal Stephenson, author of such science fiction favorites as Snow Crash, Cryptonomicon, and Quicksilver…. (Slashdot)

Things for me to catch up with
I had a romantic notion that I would keep a diary throughout all of last week, perhaps even blogging as I went, but the realities of running so far through somewhere so hot and inhospitable pretty much put an end to that…. As a sneak preview: it was over 120 degrees; I broke some bones in my ankle on the third day; most people were on heavy painkillers by the sixth… (Ben Hammersley’s Dangerous Precedent)

How Life Imitates Star Trek
40 years of invention inspired by Star Trek. Enterprise’s gadgets come back/down to earth. ‘In the 23rd century universe of Star Trek, people talked to each other using wireless personal communicators, had easy access to a vast database of information and spent hours gazing at a big wall-mounted video screen….’ (SF gate) (2020 Hindsight)

Olympic flame ceremony
Pictures from the ruins of Ancient Olympia in Hera as the Olympic torch is lit. (BBC Sport | Olympics 2004 | UK Edition)

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