Afternoon Viewing: Sebastian Junger
Tuesday, June 7th, 2011From the WTOP Radio description:
WTOP’s Shawn Anderson and Hillary Howard speak to best-selling author and award-winning journalist Sebastian Junger about his experience covering war.
From the WTOP Radio description:
WTOP’s Shawn Anderson and Hillary Howard speak to best-selling author and award-winning journalist Sebastian Junger about his experience covering war.
From the Open Road description:
May has been designated both Jewish American Heritage Month and Latino Book Month. What better way to celebrate than with a new video featuring Open Road author Rafael Yglesias, who happens to be a product of both cultures? “Both my Cuban and Jewish heritages are equally significant to me,” explains Yglesias. Watch the well-known author of Fearless speak about his experience growing up in a half-Jewish, half-Latino family—”I tend to see many more similarities in those cultures than they see in each other”—and learn which family member Yglesias considers the most classic “Jewish mother” he ever met—it may surprise you!
UPDATE: Ms. Carroll has responded to an article in Dublin’s Metro Herald (reproduced here via Broadsheet.ie) with goodnessgraciousme outrage at the accusation of plagiarism.
“I wasn’t lifting expressions from TV shows - I haven’t even seen Sex and the City for years.”
Ms. Carroll asserts that we live in ‘a pop culture’ and that these expressions have creeped into everyday use.
“…who knows what is original anymore?”
The Metro Herald has expanded on the the list of awfully similar lines and scene set-ups to include excerpts from the American sitcom, Will & Grace, as part of the pop culture machine that seems to serve as a spoon-feeding Muse to Ms. Carroll’s efforts.
***
(originally posted May 23, 2011)
At the intersection of a reader’s nearly photographic memory and a chick-lit author’s quippy prose, we find a question that feels almost rhetorical: how is this okay?
Irish author, Claudia Carroll, is coming under scrutiny for passages in her novel, PERSONALLY I BLAME MY FAIRY GODMOTHER, passages that eagle-eyed reader-writer-blogger Charlee Iddon recognized as lifted, almost verbatim, from popular television and literature sources - ‘Sex and the City’, ‘Friends’, and the ‘Bridget Jones’ series.
From the post at Before Charlee’s 30:
Here are just a few examples, and believe me when I tell you, they are the tip of the iceberg:
Carroll writes:
My top tip is to destroy all photos of you as a couple where he looks hot and you look happy it could set the whole recovery process back months if you happen to stumble across it at a weak momentAnyone that watches Sex and the city will remember this line (book and show):
my top break up rule - destroy all pictures where he looks sexy and you look happy if you happen to stumble across it in a weak moment it could set the recovery process back by monthsCarroll: I’ve always thought the witch in Hansel and Gretel is a deeply misunderstood woman. She builds her dream home and two brats come along and eat it?
SATC: But the witch in Hansel and Gretel — she’s very misunderstood. I mean, the woman builds her dream house and these brats come along and start eating it
<snip>
Carroll: I think she realises that there’s rock bottom followed by another 500 feet of crap before you finally arrive at where I’m at right now.
Friends: I really thought I just hit rock bottom. But today, it’s like there’s rock bottom, then 50 feet of crap, then me
But no one watches Friends or Sex and the City any more do they? Oh they do? Well Carroll obviously doesn’t think that matters, but then they are American and she is Irish maybe she thinks it doesn’t count if they are on a different continent.
Oh no she also likes to plagiarise closer to home:
Bridget Jones: He’s just a big knob head with no knob
Carroll:
He’s a big nob head with no nob (oh but she left the K off, that makes it different surely? Erm NO!)
Plagiarism is a serious accusation and, on the surface, these similarities appear brazen. As the social media sites buzz with speculation, AuthorScoop will keep a cyber-eye out and will update with any response from Ms. Carroll’s camp (or any other interested party’s) as it becomes available.
From the University of Chicago description:
The new Joe and Rika Mansueto Library at the University of Chicago houses cutting-edge facilities for preservation and digitization of physical books, as well as a high-density underground storage system with the capacity to hold 3.5 million volume equivalents. With its soaring elliptical dome and prime location on campus, the Mansueto Library’s Grand Reading Room, which opened May 16, 2011, provides an inviting space for rigorous scholarship in an array of fields.
The author talks about her new book, True Prep:
The author discusses his most recent book, Eating Animals, at the Center of Contemporary Culture of Barcelona:
From the Open Road Media description:
Open Road is proud to publish the ebooks of Terry Southern (1924–1995), one of the great literary minds of the second half of the twentieth century.
His novels—including the bestselling cult classics Candy and The Magic Christian—established Southern as a literary and pop culture icon. He was also nominated for Academy Awards for his screenplays of Dr. Strangelove and Easy Rider.
Watch son Nile Southern, Fran Lebowitz, and J.J. Sullivan discuss the legacy of a man who is deeply embedded in the cultural bloodstream:
From the MacMillanChildrens YouTube description:
British fantasy author F.E. Higgins discusses her award-winning Young Adult novel, The Black Book of Secrets.
Author magazine talks to the historian and novelist:
The trailer for the upcoming documentary, “Hey, Boo: Harper Lee and To Kill a Mockingbird”:
Francine Lacqua interviews the best-selling author as part of Bloomberg Television’s “Eye to Eye” series:
A 2006 interview with the then-poet laureate of San Francisco.
From the SFunscriptedTV description:
One of America’s Greatest Living poets, Jack Hirschman is interviewed by host Art Bruzzone. Hirschman has been both a street poet and university professor. He is warm and engaging, a committed marxist. His recitation of a poem on homelessness in the last few minutes is especially moving.
The official trailer for Veronica Roth’s Young Adult novel:
From the MacmillanUSA description:
Former Sierra Leonean child soldier Ishamel Beah discusses why he wrote his memoir, A Long Way Gone.
A two-part interview with the Canadian fantasy, sci-fi and children’s writer:
The children’s author and illustrator talks about how she began her career:
From the Associated Press description:
A scholar who uncovered extensive Civil War records handwritten by Walt Whitman unveiled his findings Tuesday at the National Archives, saying they can reveal how the famous author’s work as a government clerk influenced his poetry and life.
An entertaining clip from last year, in which Christopher Hitchens and Salman Rushdie have some fun with classic literature titles: