Tag Archives: Author Days

Happy Birthday, Pushkin!

Today, the Free For All celebrates the birthday of the Shakespeare of Russian Literature, would-be revolutionary, and all-round romantic, Alexander Pushkin!

Alexander Pushkin by Orest Kiprensky, 1821
Alexander Pushkin by Orest Kiprensky, 1821

Pushkin was born on this day in Moscow, 1799.  His parents were part of the extensive Russian nobility, but his great-grandfather was Abram Gannibal, a slave who had been brought to Russia from what is now Cameroon, and had been freed by Peter the Great, and who had grown up within the Tsar’s household.  Pushkin would attribute not only his love of freedom to his great-grandfather, but also his dark, curly hair.

images (6)From a young age, Pushkin knew he wanted to be a poet, as well as a social reformer.  He was inspired by the Greek Revolution against the Ottoman Empire (the same revolution in which Byron died), and, though a civil servant, eagerly wrote and spoke out on the most radical of issues, including revolution, which quickly got him transferred to all the backwater areas of Russian government.  Though bored out of his wits by his work, and increasingly lonely without the balls and parties of Russian high society, these isolated posts gave Pushkin plenty of time to write, to join the Freemasons (in 1820), and to become good friends with the Decembrists (not the musical group…the revolutionary group that was plotting to overthrow the Tsar.

Pushkin never took part in the 1825 Decembrist Uprising (legend says as he was leaving to join them, a black cat crossed his path, and the highly superstitious Pushkin decided it was an omen and stayed home).  However, his comrades within the Decembrists kept handwritten copies of many of his political poems, and when they were arrested, Pushkin’s name was immediately linked to the group.  Though he was allowed to return to St. Petersburg after having a face-to-face meeting with Tsar Nicholas I, Pushkin was placed under police watch, was unable to travel, and could publish nothing without extensive police censorship for the next five years.

793b79fd97e82d59da838f70cb2e42a6Nevertheless, Pushkin’s star was on the rise.  His plays and poems were winning him fame across Russia, and his charming wit, ribald jokes, and shameless flirting made him the first person to be invited to any event in Russian society.  It was at one of these parties, in 1828, that Pushkin met Natalya Goncharova, then 16-years-old, and reportedly one of the most beautiful women in Moscow (one of Pushkin’s sketches of her is to the left).  He fell in love immediately (granted, he seemed to have done that fairly often), but it took a great deal to convince the very hesitant Natalya to marry him, in 1831.

Like all good 19th century artists, Pushkin was falling deeper and deeper into debt, and his frequent clashes with the Powers That Be made his life a bit of a topsy-turvy one.  He was willing to deal with it all with his customary charm, style, and bawdy good humor.  But the one thing he couldn’t tolerate was his wife’s unhappiness–even when it came as a result of a potential affair with another man.

Romantics say that there is no one more devoted than a reformed rake, and Pushkin is the man who proves that saying.  Though he called Natalya his “113th love”, and wasn’t above gently mocking her in his letters, she was his muse, and the person he held above all others.  “Without you,” he wrote Natalya, “I would have been unhappy all my life.”

Natalya Pushkina, 1849
Natalya Pushkina, 1849

So when Natalya’s heart was broken by Georges D’Anthes, her brother-in-law, and reportedly one of the best shots in the Russian Army, Pushkin very publicly challenged him to a duel.  D’Anthes fired first, hitting Pushkin in the abdomen.  Pushkin–who had already fought a few duels in his time–managed to get up and fire, but only lightly wounded D’Anthes in the shoulder.  Though honor may have been served, Pushkin’s wound was a fatal one, and he died after two days of agony.

Georges D'Anthes, and his amazing hair.
Georges D’Anthes, and his amazing hair.

Even in death, Pushkin proved to be a threat to the establishment–his funeral, and the public mourning over his death was so strong and widespread that the government feared widespread unrest, and abruptly moved his funeral into a smaller church in order to discourage the crowds.  It wasn’t until 1880 that a statue to the great man was unveiled in Moscow.

Today, though, we get to celebrate all of Pushkin’s genius, from his deeply romantic side, embodied in Eugene Onegin, perhaps the most famous poem in Russian literature, to his love for the dark, gothic, and mystical, to his prolific and utterly enchanting letters.  I, personally, cannot recommend Pushkin highly enough (I was a Russian major in college because I had…have…an enormous literary crush on the man), but there is plenty of pleasure to be found, even for the uninitiated.  Here are some super places to get started:

3486864Eugene Onegin:  I know I have brought up this book one too many times around here already, but seriously….it’s wonderful.  Onegin is a jaded, cynical, self-absorbed Byronic hero who wins the heart of Tatiana, an innocent, but fiercely independent and free-spirited young woman (Pushkin writes some darned good heroine, particularly considering the time period in which he was writing).  Their meeting becomes a catalyst for tragedy and self-revelation in rhyme that is so emotional and so smart and so moving that you’ll get swept away by it.  Also, thanks to a passage in this poem that gave rise to a long-standing rumor that Pushkin had a foot fetish.  You’ll have to read it to judge for yourself!

1968059Collected Stories: Pushkin was a gifted story-teller no matter the medium, and his short stories still have the power to captivate, to intrigue, and to scandalize to this day.  Some of these stories deal with elements of Russian folklore and mythology, some make fun of Russian society in Pushkin’s day, particularly the hypocrisy of the upper classes and government (and many of which still ring true today), and some are out-and-out, NSFW romps that gave a number of people in my Russian language classes fits of hysteria.  The really fascinating part is that even these ribald tales are so well-written and clever and funny that it’s impossible not to cherish them.

Happy Birthday, Mo Willems!

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Today, the Free For All is positively gleeful to be celebrating the birthday of children’s author, cartoonist, and guy-who-has-all-the-jobs-I-ever-wanted, Mo Willems!

2371232Mo Willems was born today near Chicago, and began drawing when still a toddler.  However, as he noted, even at the age of four, he was monumentally annoyed by grown-ups who pretended to appreciate his work out of respect for his age.  So he started writing funny stories to accompany his drawings, realizing that not even grown-ups could fake a belly laugh.   After graduating from Tisch, he traveled around the world, drawing a cartoon a day (which became a book entitled You Can Never Find a Rickshaw When It Monsoons.

Following his return, Willems became a cartoonist for Sesame Street  and Nickelodeon, while also performing stand-up and recording essays for the BBC (seriously, All The Jobs….).  And while those gigs were all pretty successful, including the show Codename: Kids Next Door, on which Willems served as the head writer for four seasons, he left TV in 2003 in order to focus on his writing career.

2266602Willems’ children’s books have that remarkable ability to appeal not only to their younger target audience, but to adults–and critics, as well.  The New York Times Review of Books called his Pigeon “one of this decade’s contributions to the pantheon of great picture book characters.”  Three of his books have been awarded the Caldecott Honor for “most distinguished American children’s picture book”: Don’t Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus! (2004), Knuffle Bunny: A Cautionary Tale (2005), and Knuffle Bunny Too: A Case of Mistaken Identity (2008).  Trixie, the heroine of both Knuffle Bunny books, incidentally, is based on Willems’ own daughter, who was the main drive to get him to find a career which would let him work at home and have lunch with his daughter every day.  “Trixie is funny.”   He observed in an interview with the Springfield News,  “My books aren’t quite as good as her jokes.”

2974151Along with these honors, Willems’ Elephant and Piggie books have also won the Theodor Seuss Geisel Award  for “author(s) and illustrator(s) of the most distinguished book for beginning readers published in English in the United States during the preceding year” in 2008 and 2009, and have won honors every year since 2011.  In addition, my goddaughter thinks that they are great, and that, frankly, is the highest praise that I can give to a children’s book.

3463134Anyone who has been anywhere near the Circulation Desk when one of Willems’ books comes in will know that time stops, and we all have to stop for a second and appreciate the delightfully quirky premises,  heartfelt humor, and joyful exuberance that fills the pages of all his works, particularly The Pigeon Needs a Bath! (and this is coming from someone who is slightly terrified of pigeons, so you can imagine what it takes for me to say this).  So, on this somewhat gloomy day, why not take a few moments to savor Mo Willems’ work at the Library, or by perusing the website run by The Pigeon himself!

Celebrating the Shirley Jackson Awards!

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Readers of the Free For All will know that I am rather an enormous fan of dark fantasy, horror, and all the odd things that boggle and beguile the imagination.  So it was, naturally, with great interest that I read of this years nominations for the Shirley Jackson awards, which were established in 2007 specifically to celebrate specifically those creepy, unsettling, imaginative, and somehow wondrous books that keep us up and night…for a number of reasons.

ShirleyJackThough her work was popular during her lifetime, Shirley Jackson’s novels only really began to get the attention and appreciation they deserve after her death in 1965.  Part of the reason for this may be because Jackson’s stories are so ambiguous that readers were desperate to get a simple explanation of what they meant, rather than appreciating their full effect, and the skill it took to produce such an unsettling effect on readers.  When her short story “The Lottery” was published in the New Yorker in 1948, it produced, quite literally, a flood of letters, that Jackson herself described as full of “bewilderment, speculation, and old-fashioned abuse”.

Another part of the reason for the late recognition of Jackson’s genius was that she refused to talk about her work–or talk at all to the many requests for interviews or sound bites that poured in.  As her husband, acclaimed editor Stanley Edgar Hyman explained after her death, “she consistently refused to be interviewed, to explain or promote her work in any fashion, or to take public stands and be the pundit of the Sunday supplements. She believed that her books would speak for her clearly enough over the years.”  As a result, any number of odd stories popped up to fill Jackson’s personal silence…that the darkness in her stories were the result of her own personal neurosis…that she was a recluse…that she herself was mad….

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The truth of the matter was that Jackson was a lovely lady, and, by all accounts, she and her husband were loving parents and very friendly hosts, and dedicated readers (their personal library was estimated at over 100,000 volumes).  But Jackson was also a perspicacious individual who was deeply conscious of what was going on in the world around her.  One of her first literary successes was the novel Hangsamanpublished in 1951 (and a short story called “The Missing Girl“, which wasn’t published until well after her death), a book that was deeply influenced by the (still unsolved) disappearance of a Bennington College sophomore named Paula Jean Weldon, which Jackson developed, adding her own experiences of her years at Bennington College, and her knowledge of the area where Weldon was said to have vanished (her family owned a house very nearby).  Later, she used news about the Cold War, America’s growing and pernicious xenophobia, and worldwide fears of nuclear and atomic energy to create stories as inspiration for her works.  She was actually delighted that “The Lottery” was banned in the United States because, she said, it meant that the government had finally realized what the story was really about.

2663371It was her uncanny ability to turn her readers’ fears against them, and to manipulate their own very real feelings of insecurity as the basis for her work that made Jackson such a noteworthy–and unsettling–storyteller.  Anyone who has read The Haunting of Hill House, and felt that ghostly hand creep into their own will know precisely of what I speak.  And, since 2007, when her estate established an award in her name, it is precisely these kinds of works that are honored with recognition from the Shirley Jackson Award.

The Shirley Jackson Award celebrates “outstanding achievement in the literatdownload (2)ure of psychological suspense, horror, and the dark fantastic”–and the nominees very frequently address the very real fears that permeate our own society, just as Jackson did in her own work.  This year is no different.  It’s remarkable to see how a diverse selection of authors grapple with issues of homosexuality and identity, racism, feminism, ageism, abuse, love, hatred, in ways that are beautifully human, terrifyingly real, and chillingly imaginative.  What’s even more interesting is how many small, independent, and diverse publishers are recognized in these years nominees.  More than most literary awards, which, as we’ve noted, tend to stick to the tried and true, the Shirley Jackson Awards are on the cutting edge of publishing, writing, and social issues, and, for that–not to mention the fact that these stories are all cracking good reads–they are definitely worth some attention.

Here is a list of the nominees…we are working to get some more on the shelves of the Library, but if there are titles below without a link, feel free to give us a call or stop by and we’ll find them for you in the meantime!

The nominees for the 2015 Shirley Jackson Awards are:

NOVEL

Eileen, Ottessa Moshfegh (Penguin Press)
Experimental Film, Gemma Files (ChiZine Publications)
The Glittering World, Robert Levy (Gallery)
Lord Byron’s Prophecy, Sean Eads (Lethe Press)
When We Were Animals, Joshua Gaylord (Mulholland Books)

NOVELLA

The Box Jumper, Lisa Mannetti (Smart Rhino)
In the Lovecraft Museum, Steve Tem (PS Publishing)
Unusual Concentrations, S.J. Spurrier (Simon Spurrier)
The Visible Filth, Nathan Ballingrud (This Is Horror)
Wylding Hall, Elizabeth Hand (PS Publishing-UK/Open Road Media-US)

NOVELETTE

“The Briskwater Mare,” Deborah Kalin (Cherry Crow Children, Twelfth Planet Press)
“The Deepwater Bride,” Tamsyn Muir (Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, July-August 2015)
“Even Clean Hands Can Do Damage,” Steve Duffy (Supernatural Tales #30, Autumn)
“Fabulous Beasts,” Priya Sharma (Tor.com, July 2015)
“The Thyme Fiend,” Jeffrey Ford (Tor.com, March 2015)

SHORT FICTION

“A Beautiful Memory,” Shannon Peavey (Apex Magazine)
“Hungry Daughters of Starving Mothers,” Alyssa Wong (Nightmare)
“Seven Minutes in Heaven,” Nadia Bulkin (Aickman’s Heirs)
“The Dying Season,” Lynda E. Rucker (Aickman’s Heirs)
“Wilderness,” Letitia Trent (Exigencies)

SINGLE-AUTHOR COLLECTION

The Bazaar of Bad Dreams, Stephen King (Scribner)
The End of the End of Everything, Dale Bailey (Arche Press)
Get in Trouble, Kelly Link (Random House)
Gutshot, Amelia Gray (FSG Originals)
The Nameless Dark – A Collection, T.E. Grau (Lethe Press)
You Have Never Been Here, Mary Rickert (Small Beer Press)

EDITED ANTHOLOGY

Aickman’s Heirs, edited by Simon Strantzas (Undertow Publications)
Black Wings IV, edited by S.T. Joshi (PS Publishing)
The Doll Collection, edited by Ellen Datlow (Tor)
Exigencies, edited by Richard Thomas (Dark House Press)
Seize the Night, edited by Christopher Golden (Gallery)

Happy Birthday, Mary Wollstonecraft!

“It is time to effect a revolution in female manners…and make them, as a part of the human species…For man and woman, truth, if I understand the meaning of the word, must be the same… Women, I allow, may have different duties to fulfil; but they are human duties, and the principles that should regulate the discharge of them, I sturdily maintain, must be the same.”
(Mary Wollstonecraft, A Vindication on the Rights of Women, Chapter III)

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Today we celebrate one of the first feminists in modern Western history, a woman whose remarkable life and impressive intellect were forgotten for nearly a century, and woman whose work is still surprisingly relevant to this day–Mary Wollstonecraft, who was born this day in 1759.

In her most famous work, A Vindication on the Rights of WomenWollstonecraft essentially argued that men and women were born and meant to be equals, but that society, and its refusal to train women’s brains and bodies properly, were forcing women into a subservient role, and ensuring that they would never be anything more than a pretty face.  It wasn’t appreciated until much later how much of her writings were inspired by her own life, and her incredibly difficult childhood.

images (3)Wollstonecraft was the the second of the seven children of Edward John Wollstonecraft and Elizabeth Dixon.  Though the family was initially financially comfortable, her father squandered most of the money on speculative investments and, later, alcohol, including inheritance money that should have gone to Mary.  He was abusive, as well, and Mary as a teenager often lay on the floor outside her mother’s bedroom at night to ensure that her father couldn’t get inside.  Things changed for the better when Mary was introduced to Frances (Fanny) Blood, who encouraged her to improve her life through education, and gave her all the personal and intellectual support she could not get at home.

Mary determined to become self-supportive around the age of nineteen, and, after working as a ladies maid for several years, opened a school with Fanny Blood in Newington Green in London (that’s right…Mary Wollstonecraft and I were neighbors!).  The school was a rousing success, but Fanny and her husband soon moved to Portugal in the hopes of improving Fanny’s health, and Mary abandoned the school to help care for her until her death in 1787.

Mary Wollstonecraft's green circle on the site of her school, Newington Green, London
Mary Wollstonecraft’s green circle on the site of her school, Newington Green, London

Though a gifted educator, Mary decided that she was done scrabbling for money and being at the mercy of other people to provide her with a living.  Taking an enormous financial and social risk, she decided to become an author, a career that very few women chose at that time.  She moved to London, and became a trusted and valued member of a number of intellectual circles, making friends with Samuel Johnson and Thomas Paine, among others.  Following the end of an affair with the (married) artist Henry Fuseli, Mary moved to France, eager to be a part of the intellectual, as well as the political revolution that was fomenting there (she had proposed to share Henry, but apparently Mrs. Fuseli was not agreeable to such a proposal.).

It was around this time that Mary penned A Vindication on the Rights of Women, published in 1792, which was a follow-up to her 1790 pamphlet A Vindication on the Rights of Man, in which she argued against class divisions and the aristocracy and championed the Republican sentiments that were spreading across the newly-founded United States and France.

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It was her passionate argument for women, however, that made Mary famous.  In A Vindication on the Rights of Women, she rejected outright the notion that women’s minds were incapable of rational thought or unfit to be educated, and that their bodies were too weak to allow them to work, or be independent from men.  As she describes, “Fragile in every sense of the word, [women] are obliged to look up to man for every comfort… I am fully persuaded that we should hear of none of these infantile airs, if girls were allowed to take sufficient exercise, and not confined in close rooms till their muscles are relaxed, and their powers of digestion destroyed.”

She argued that “females…are made women of when they are mere children”, meaning that girls were taught from a very young age that their only worth lay in physically attracting a man.  The result was that women were forced to remain like children for the rest of their lives.  It was not their natural inclination to be so, but the way in which they were brought up:

False notions of beauty and delicacy stop the growth of their limbs and produce a sickly soreness…and thus weakened …how can they attain the vigour necessary to enable them to throw off their factitious character?—where find strength to recur to reason and rise superiour to a system of oppression, that blasts the fair promises of spring? This cruel association of ideas, which every thing conspires to twist into all their habits of thinking, or, to speak with more precision, of feeling, receives new force when they begin to act a little for themselves; for they then perceive that it is only through their address to excite emotions in men, that pleasure and power are to be obtained. Besides, the books professedly written for their instruction, which make the first impression on their minds, all inculcate the same opinions. Educated then in worse than Egyptian bondage, it is unreasonable, as well as cruel, to upbraid them with faults that can scarcely be avoided…when nothing could be more natural, considering the education they receive, and that their ‘highest praise is to obey, unargued’—the will of man.

This is not to say that Wollstonecraft’s work was and remains utterly unassailable–A Vindication on the Rights of Women is full of class and gender assumptions, many the result of religion, that date the work considerably.  But her argument for the absolute equality of human beings remains a remarkable and moving statement that, largely, is still relevant today.

godwinMary had her first daughter, Fanny, with an American named Gilbert Imlay, whom she met in France.  They were never married (though they claimed to be so that Mary could escape the Revolutionary government in France), and Imlay soon dropped out of Mary’s life, leading to a very serious battle with depression.  Several years later, in 1797, she married the writer and philosopher William Godwin (pictured at left), and the two moved into adjoining houses so that they could maintain their complete independence, and frequently corresponded by letter.  Their marriage, by all accounts, was a happy one, but it was also brief.  Mary died of septicemia following the birth of her second daughter, Mary (who would become the author of Frankenstein).  

Following her death, Godwin published Mary’s unfinished memoirs, titled Memoirs of the Author of A Vindication of the Rights of Woman.  Though Godwin honestly believed that Mary’s shockingly honest memoirs were the best way to memorialize her, the book was considered so scandalous (talking, as it did about her love affairs, single motherhood, depression, and suicide attempts, in very frank and thoughtful terms), that her reputation was demolished.  It would be nearly a century before anyone seriously studied Mary’s works.  However, in 1892, Millicent Garrett Fawcett, a prominent suffragette, wrote in an introduction to A Vindication on the Rights of Women, calling Mary the founder of the women’s movement.   But don’t take her–or my–word for it.  In honor of her birthday, have a look through Mary Wollstonecraft’s surprising and insightful work today (you can find the full transcription of the work here) and see for yourself!

Shakespeare’s 400th: A Global Celebration

We chatted yesterday about the enormous influence Shakespeare had on the English language, and how his birthday is a good time celebrate not necessarily his age, but his modern cultural influences.

A recent production of Macbeth.  On stilts.  From the Edinburgh Festival.
A recent production of Macbeth. On stilts. From the Edinburgh Festival.

Today, I thought it might be fun to realize how much Shakespeare’s work has influenced not just the English-speaking world, but the entire population of this vast and diverse planet.  This year, the 400th anniversary of his death, has seen a huge number of productions of the Bard’s great work, in venues ranging from a garden in Kabul to a restaurant in Mumbai; and in formats as diverse as the people who perform them, including using Brazilian circus performers who help tell the tale of Romeo and Juliet and a Maori tradition war dance (known as a Haka) to interpret Troilus and Cressida.  Check out their journey to the Globe Theatre in London right here:

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You can check out the full range of incredible performances and performers at the website  Year of Shakespeare, which has tirelessly documented the various invocations of the Great Man’s work across the planet, many of which have been, or will be, performed at the Globe Theatre in London.

553405_10150849381308231_126328634_nWhat’s remarkable about these performance is the ways in Shakespeare is not just the fact that his work has inspired humans across the planet, and clearly continues to do so, but also in ways in which his work is invoked to tell modern stories about contemporary experiences, as well.  In Pakistan, actors use The Taming of the Shrew as way to explore the difficulties encountered by Pakistani women in today’s society (a picture of their performance at the Globe is to the left).  Bahgdad’s Iraq Theater Company staged a version of Romeo and Juliet to reflect contemporary rifts in society.  Check out a talk from the director below:

A Polish production of Macbeth has used the concept of insanity to look at all those ostracized and isolated from society, including drug addicts and gangsters, implicitly questioning not only Macbeth’s motivations, but our own.  A theater troupe from South Sudan–the newest country on the globe– has translated Cymbeline into Juba Arabic for the first time ever, and incorporated contemporary local slang and indigenous folklore, as a way of bringing Shakespeare’s story closer and closer to the current lived experience of its actors.  You can watch the incredible labor of love that this project is in the video below:

This week, Radio Free Europe released a video of Hamlet’s immortal “To be or not to be” soliloquy, performed by actors from countries across the former Soviet Union, each in their own native language.  Check it out in the clip below:

 

What is wondrous about all these performances is how intensely personal, how deeply felt, and how powerfully insightful each of these performances, and the countless others going on this year, truly are.  These are not the dull recitations of a man dead for four centuries…they are the living, breathing embodiment of a contemporary culture, using the words and tales handed down, generation by generation, from a remarkable storyteller.  These aren’t simply lines on a page–they have become the words through which actors, directors, and viewers around the world have spoken a truth about their own experiences, providing a voice to people who have so long been voiceless, and representation for those who might otherwise be overlooked, and uniting people around the world with plots and characters as real and recognizable today as they were in the 17th century.

That is nothing short of remarkable.  And it is the power that Shakespeare’s tale still have, and the freedom they have given to so many, that we are celebrating when we celebrate Shakespeare.  So check out Year of Shakespeare, and celebrate with us, wherever you are, and in whatever language speaks to your heart.

Never “Too much of a good thing”…

We are a celebratory lot here at the Free For All, and one of the biggest parties taking place in the literary world this year is the celebration of Shakespeare’s 400th birthday this coming Saturday.

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There are any number of celebrations going on this time of year, from the Royal Shakespeare Company’s live performance of some of the Bard’s greatest hits on Saturday to Chicago’s month-long Shakespeare festival, to the Shakespeariad, a joint venture between the British Council and the Russian school children to get Shakespeare into as many classrooms as possible.  Or, you can come to the Library, and check out our very own marvelous collection of Shakespeare biographies, works, and analysis, some of which are on the Free For All Book Display right now!

It’s easy, sometimes, to think of Shakespeare as antiquated, to remember how difficult it was read Macbeth in high school, or to think of his performances in black and white.  And all that makes it difficult to realize that Shakespeare’s work in an integral part of the new stories we are telling today.  Not only are his characters and plots (star-crossed lovers, duplicitous friends, greedy underlings) all ones to which we can still readily relate, but his use of words revolutionized the English language.  If you’ve ever told someone that a thing is a “foregone conclusion”, or that they are sending you “on a wild goose chase”, or that you are “lonely” or “uncomfortable”….heck, if you’ve ever told a knock-knock joke, you are invoking Shakespeare in the most modern way possible.

The Independent recently published a list of words and phrases to which we owe Shakespeare our thanks.  Have a look, and then come in and check out some of his plays–on paper or on dvd–and see for yourself just how powerful these works still are!

bb8a1d4a248005c667f9229e6cbae8c2– “Fancy-free” – A Midsummer Night’s Dream

– “Lie low” – Much Ado About Nothing

– “Send packing” – Henry IV

– “Foregone conclusion” – Othello

– “A sorry sight” – Macbeth

– “For goodness sake” – Henry VIII

– “Good riddance” – The Merchant of Venice

– “Neither here not there” – Othello

– “Mum’s the word” – Henry VI, Part II

– “What’s done is done” – Macbeth

– “Break the ice” – The Taming of the Shrew

– “Scuffle” – Antony and Cleopatra

– “Catch a cold” – Cymbeline

– “Uncomfortable” – Romeo and Juliet

– “Manager” – A Midsummer Night’s Dream

– “Devil incarnate” – Titus Andronicus

– “Dishearten” – Henry V

– “Eventful” – As You Like It

– “New-fangled” – Love’s Labour’s Lost

– “Hot-blooded” – King Lear

– “Eaten out of house and home” – Henry IV, Part II

– “Rant” – Hamlet

– “Knock knock! Who’s there?” – Macbeth

– “With bated breath” – The Merchant of Venice

– “Laughable” – The Merchant of Venice

– “Negotiate” – Much Ado About Nothing

– “Jaded” – King Henry VI

– “A wild goose chase” – Romeo and Juliet

– “Assassination” – Macbeth

– “Too much of a good thing” – As You Like It

– “A heart of gold” – Henry V

– “Such stuff as dreams are made on” – The Tempest

– “Fashionable” – Troilus and Cressida

– “Puking” – As You Like It

– “Dead as a doornail” – Henry VI, Part II

– “Not slept one wink” – Cymbeline

– “The world’s mine oyster” – The Merry Wives of Windsor

– “Obscene” – Love’s Labour’s Lost

– “Bedazzled” – The Taming of the Shrew

– “In stitches” – Twelfth Night

– “Addiction” – Othello

– “Faint-hearted” – Henry VI, Part I

– “One fell swoop” – Macbeth

– “Vanish into thin air” – Othello

– “Swagger” – Henry V

– “Own flesh and blood” – Hamlet

– “Zany” – Love’s Labour’s Lost

– “Give the devil his due” – Henry IV, Part I

– “There’s method in my madness” – Hamlet

– “Grovel” – Henry IV

– “Lonely” – Coriolanus

– “Unreal” – Macbeth

– “Salad days” – Antony and Cleopatra

– “Spotless reputation” – Richard II

– “Full circle” – King Lear

– “Epileptic” – King Lear

– “Arch-villain” – Timon of Athens

– “Bloodstained” – Titus Andronicus

– “All of a sudden” – The Taming of the Shrew

– “Come what, come may” – Macbeth

Happy Birthday, Gogol!

“The longer and more carefully we look at a funny story, the sadder it becomes.”

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So wrote Nikolai Gogol in his novel Dead Souls, and I can think of no fitter tribute to him that his own observation.  Gogol, born on this day in 1809, is considered one of the pioneers of Russian letters, who brought Surrealism and gothic horror to the nation’s literature in a way no one had before, and continues to inspire writers, composers, and readers to this day for his ability to make you laugh, cry, and squirm, all at the same time.

Gogol was born the Ukrainian village of Sorochyntsi, to parents of Polish descent.  His father, who passed when Gogol was 15 was an amateur playwright, which may have given Gogol the idea to begin writing himself.  He was not popular by any means as a young man (his fellow students apparently referred to him as a “mysterious dwarf”), but he came away from those years with the resolve to keep writing, and to achieve lasting fame through his works.

detail-of-the-monument-to-nikolay-gogol-in-st-petersburgHis wishes were very soon achieved.  His short stories, which first documented life in rural Ukraine, and his poems, which were Romantic idylls by and large, met with enormous public success.  Gogol had always loved history, and worked as much of his homeland’s past into his stories as possible, eventually enrolling in University at St. Petersburg to study history.  He wrote several successful plays during this time, but it was after he left Russia to travel around Europe (especially Italy) that he began to produce the masterpieces for which he is remembered today.  These writings, including Dead Souls, which was intended to be a re-telling of Dante’s Inferno, are deeply satirical, viciously funny, and deeply, sometimes painfully insightful.

Gogol suffered from severe depression (it is assumed that he may have suffered from manic depression or bipolar disorder), and it took an enormous toll on his person, his relationships, and his work.  He burned large portions of his writing more than once–towards the end of his life, he burned the entire manuscript for the second part of Dead Souls, and later said that the Devil played a practical joke on him and made him destroy the book.  Soon after this, he took to his bed and refused all food, finally dying nine days later in agony.

51JIBDUkuvL._SY344_BO1,204,203,200_What he did leave us, however, is a body of work that changed Russian literature.  Gogol had a unique ability to take the events, the people, and the stories of the day, and present them in the most fantastical light possible, turning the mundane into something fascinating, wonderful, and, often weirdly unsettling.  Though his work fell into relative obscurity in the 19th century, he was ‘rediscovered’ after the First World War by modernists who realized just how progressive and powerful his work really was.  Since then, his work has remained at the forefront of Russian–and, indeed, world literature.

So, if you’re looking for something definitely different to read this week, I can’t recommend Gogol more highly.  Be sure to wish him a happy birthday as you do.  I have a feeling he’d appreciate it knowing he finally achieved his goals.

Here are some suggestions to get you started:

1179810Dead SoulsGogol’s only surviving novel is one of the most significant–and oft-debated–works of 19th century literature.  This tale follows the journeys of Pavel Ivanovich Chichikov, an enigmatic traveler who calls on a number of landowners and civil servants in order to add to his collection of “dead souls”.  The story, you see, is set just after the emancipation of serfs in Russia, and Gogol’s book is very much a commentary on what the practices of slavery and ownership can do to society.  But for all that it is a political satire and a truly odd, picaresque novel, it is also quite readable and, in some places, genuinely funny.  It might not be the easiest of reads, but it absolutely worth the effort.

2181408The Overcoat: This is probably one of Gogol’s most accessible stories, and thus is the first introduction many students of literature have to Gogol (it certainly was for me).  It is also a perfect example of his later style: satirical, utterly impatient with bureaucracy and willful ignorance, and deeply empathetic with the people who are almost always overlooked by The System.  This story introduces us to one Akaky Akakievich Bashmachkin, an underpaid, overworked government clerk who spends his entire salary on the finest overcoat, dreaming of the day when he can stride through St. Petersburg in all his wintery glory.  But tragedy strikes…and then things get really weird…..

1888006Diary of a Madman:  This is my favorite of Gogol’s works, and the story that is guaranteed to make me curl up in a corner and hum quietly to myself after reading.  Trying to explain this story just doesn’t do it justice…A man who has been generally overlooked all his life gradually becomes convinced he’s secretly the King of Spain…and that he can communicate with a dog.  But Gogol makes his descent into madness so subtle, so realistic, and so…normal that by the end, you’re forced to wonder who, in this story, is really the crazy one…As you read this, keep an eye on the dates in the diary.  I’ll be over in the corner.

2880030The NoseDmitri Shostakovich, one of the foremost composers of the Soviet Era (indeed, of the 20th century in general) used Gogol’s bizarre little story about a man whose nose runs away and has adventures all around St. Petersburg as the inspiration for a short light opera.  Which is equally as bizarre, and surprisingly fun.  This opera was specifically written so that Shostakovich could prove that classic literature, and the medium of opera could be entertaining for the Proletariat, and it turns out he was right.  I took my Dad to see this opera once, and yes, it featured a six-foot-tall man wearing a giant nose costume dashing around the stage.  He says he enjoyed it.  He’s a really good sport that way.