Showing posts with label Author. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Author. Show all posts

Collegiate Foothills

For the aspiring writer, there are many valleys and hills and other landscape metaphors that he must cross.  One decision he must make is the route he plans to take in his formal education: what college and what major.  Is it worth the investment of time and money to study creative writing in college?  do you need to? So let's look at successful writers and their decisions about their education:

  • Ray Bradbury: His formal education never went farther than his high school diploma.

  • Dan Brown: He graduated from Phillips Exeter, his high school, and continued into Amherst college.

  • Meg Cabot: She attended Indiana University.  She made a point not to study writing there because a young man, whom would later become her husband, said that, "studying creative writing as a major sucks the love of writing out of you ". Taking his advice she studied studio art instead, however she did take a few workshops in creative writing.

  • John Grogan:  Went to Central Michigan University and graduated with a double major in English and Journalism.

  • Daniel Keyes: After he finished his service in the U.S. Maritime Service, he Graduated from Brooklyn college with a B.A. in Psychology.

  • Stephen King: Graduated from the University of Maine with a bachelors in English.  He wrote a weekly column for his college newspaper while he studied there.

  • Jean Kwok:  After moving to America from Hong Kong, Jean attended Harvard and graduated with honors in English and American Literature.  She went on to get a masters in fine arts at Columbia.

  • Stephenie Meyer: Graduated from Brigham University in Utah with a bachelors in English.

  • Jodi Picoult: Studied Creative writing at Princeton, then continued to get a masters in education at Harvard.

  • Nicolas Sparks: He graduated from his high school as valedictorian.  Then he went to Notre Dame on a track scholarship and majored in Business finance.

Of course, there are many more writers, but from the lot we have there is an array of stories.  However, English seems to be the most popular.  Though school and learning the technicalities of writing is important, learning through life is even more important.  Even in the strangest fiction, life is the basic subject matter.  (I already wrote about learning through life in my post An Education).  Ray Bradbury, mentioned above, is very adamant about this also calling himself a "student of life".  Yet you can be a student of life and a student of the book simultaniously.  It's just that the value of learning from what's around you is often overlooked.
No writer is the same as they come from so many different types of backgrounds.  What you choose in your education will affect that.  In the end, I believe it doesn't matter what you get your degree in, so long as it's something you enjoy and if possible practical.  Because you do need some means to pay for your writing habit.  The diploma on the wall, whatever it may be, won't get you published.  It's the things you learn and apply to your writing that will.

References:
http://www.stephenking.com/the_author.html
http://www.stepheniemeyer.com/bio.html
http://www.nicholassparks.com/AboutNicholas.asp?PageID=1
http://www.megcabot.com/about-meg-cabot/frequently-asked-questions-about-meg-cabot/#college
http://www.jodipicoult.com/JodiPicoult.html#kudos
http://www.raybradbury.com/bio.html
http://www.danbrown.com/
http://www.jeankwok.com/author.shtml
http://www.johngroganbooks.com/marley/about.html
http://www.danielkeyesauthor.com/dksbio.html

Shaking It Up With Shakespeare

  When someone says Shakespeare, I automatically think: Romeo and Juliet, Julius Caesar, a lot of other plays, and hundreds of sonnets. He is the never dying presence in English studies in school. His old fashion way with English opened me to new old vocabulary (you saucy fellow). This very dead playwright has a strong influence in our world. This is because he is a classic and he is rightly so. When I had to first read some of his work, I was under the misconception that anything written by some guy in the late 1500s would be stiff and dull. After getting past the funky words, I was surprised. His work was comical, entertaining, and moving. Also his sonnets are very witty and amusing. It's amazing that writing hundreds of years old can still be appreciated. Over such a time gap, people understand humor and emotion the same way.

  What makes a piece of writing a classic? What keeps it from disappearing in the chasm of time? I think it's when something appeals to the deepest parts of the human spirit, the part that seems to remain constant despite social trends and changing environment. When it reveals a certain truth that lures readers of all ages. I believe that's how a piece of work becomes immortal, a classic. Shakespeare’s work isn’t alone, as there are hundreds of beautiful classic pieces of literature out there: Moby Dick, 1984, Atlas Shrugged, Wuthering Heights, Grapes of Wrath, The Odyssey, Tom Sawyer, and much more. Then there is what is yet to come.  What writers create today may become the classics of tomorrow.

What do you think makes something a classic? And what are your favorite classics?

Tribute to Mr. Orwell


    George Orwell, which was actually his pen name, was an English writer during the first half of the twentieth century. He was a journalist and novelist who wrote about politics and linguistics. Though you might not recognise his name, you might be aware of a term that he influenced. Terms like "Thought Police" and "Big Brother" were from his novel 1984 and became popular terms in common language.
   As a writer, he is a great inspiration to me. I've read Animal Farm and 1984, both of which he's written and both of which I will treasure in my heart. Though I say that I treasure them in my heart, they are not warm and cuddle. Both left me devastated at the end. To me, though. that's part of their charm because it is marveling how the they were so deeply moving. I've also read a few of his essays. One that I particularly enjoyed was "Why I Write".  As the title implies, the essay is about how he feels about being a writer. 
   He was a very talented man, who's works will remain classics.  So if anyone is looking for a new book to read, and if you haven't already, give one of Mr. Orwell's writings a try.