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Welcome to Nick's List. Here, teacher Nick Otten shares his thoughts
about the wealth of books and movies he consumes. As he says, he picks
up "All kinds of books. All kinds of movies. One often leads me to the
other."
We pick up his intellectual journey with the most recent addition
first and link (at the top of the story) to what he's read and watched
in March. In March, you'll discover the variety that catches his fancy.
He covers lots of titles, but definitely check out what this teacher of
a few decades has to say about the first "Gossip Girl" novel.
Look for additions to the list every Monday.
Book 12
She
Stoops to Conquer
Oliver Goldsmith,
1773
[A used textbook
from 1924, long out of print, from the basement of Left Bank Books -- the book shown is of an edition available on Amazon.]
A classic British
comedy of the standard variety: Boy and girl meet and misunderstand
each other, while Dad gets angry and Mom, here a merely silly Aunt,
makes plans. Oh! will they ever get to marry? Of course, all to be
worked out in the final scene. The play is actually still funny. When it was written, the playwright was trying to save England
from “sentimental comedy” and create theater in
which people would actually laugh. You can tell easily: He
includes “Ha-ha-ha” in the dialog about 20 times.
This was in an era when people said, in print, such things as
“Nothing can authorize a laugh.”
MOVIE 31
thirteen
(Catherine
Hardwicke, 2003, 99 m.)
Not an easy movie
to watch. In fact, on the first try, I didn’t finish. It’s
way more real than any adult wants the world of a 7th-grader
to be. Holly Hunter plays a well-meaning but failing divorced mom,
left alone with two teenagers while the
dad is long gone on an ego-trip career.
Enter one bad seed, Evie (Nikki Reed), who takes over the vulnerable life of
Tracy (Evan Rachel Wood), who goes from sweet
little straight-A girl to bad-bad thing in just four months. The movie made me
think of Kids (1995), which was nearly
sickening in its gruesome view of teen-age American life — that was a story
of an amoral NYC boy. This is a story of
a nice California girl, who has been suppressing deep
feelings about Mom and Dad and Mom’s
questionable lifestyle and semi-rehabbed boyfriend.
And when Evie, the insidious new sexy-girl,
is introduced, Tracy utterly falls to her
ruin. Her story, all too familiar-sounding
to students of
Raising Ophelia and Mean Girls, is a
horrifying picture of modern American
life. The realism is earned: Director
Hardwicke wrote the story with actress
Nikki Reed, who was herself the origin of
Tracy.
MOVIE 30
The
Miracle Worker
(Arhur
Penn, 1962, b&w, 106 m.)
What
an absolute powerhouse of movie-making. I remember
that, when I first saw this movie, I almost could
not bear to sit still through some of the
frightening scenes of realistic-looking
violence — not the silly technicolor
kind of nonsense so common in any
Hollywood movie, for instance, a pair of
beautiful people racing hand-in-hand from a
gigantic explosion and then diving a few feet into
safety, as though a ball of fire bigger than a building might be a thing that
you could luckily sidestep. Instead, The
Miracle Worker shows a young woman repeatedly
wrestling a spoiled child back into her dining room
chair. A spoiled, totally uncivilized, blind and
deaf child who is utterly intelligent and
angry — now there’s a frightening
prospect. This is one of the two
or three movies that every prospective
teacher should be required to watch and
discuss (along with The Prime of Miss
Jean Brodie and, for high school teachers,
Election). How could you not be frightened?
This story looks like an inside-out version of Psycho,
a black-and-white nightmare that slowly
turns saner and safer. The poetic power of
b&w used with expressive cuts and montages
reminds me of some other fearsome stories, like Night
of the Hunter and Touch of Evil. I
can even remember looking at the light in Patty
Duke’s eyes in closeup and thinking,
What beautiful blue eyes! You are not likely to see a
more powerful pair of interlocked performances, both
Oscar winners, than Anne Bancroft as Helen
Keller’s half-blind teacher and Patty
Duke as Keller. What a stunning
collection of talent:
Arther Penn, who went on to make Bonnie
& Clyde, Little Big Man, etc., William Gibson (not the author of Neuromancer),
Anne Bancroft, who became the first screen
MYLF and new kind of American icon in The
Graduate, and, of course, Patty Duke, age 16, who
became the youngest Oscar winner to date.
Book 11
Remarkable
Words with Astonishing Origins
John Train,
Clarkson N. Potter Inc, NY, 1980.
This little
64-page book is remarkable and astonishing. Though I’ve
re-read it twice, I’m always shocked at the wealth of
information I’ve forgotten — weird, fascinating
stuff that you could not possibly predict: ketchup comes
from China, and Japanese tempura was really about the locals
seeing the Portuguese eating fish at certain times (tempora is
“times” in Portuguese), and Kellogg originally was
Kill-hog (a hog butcher) and kangaroo meant “I
don’t know,” and you wouldn’t believe where he
can go with cab and salary and pocket handkerchiefand venom. Even the categories of words in the Table of
Contents can stop you: Disorders, Pejoratives, Terms of Multitude,
Surprising Family Names, etc. The book is a treasure trove that
stays surprising, no matter how many times you read it.
Book 10
‘1601’
Mark Twain, no
date (but probably 1938-39),
Here’s how
the entire actual title-page reads, (all centered):
MARK TWAIN’S
[Date, 1601.]
Conversation
As it was by the Social Fireside
in the Time of
the Tudors
Embellished
With an Illuminating Introduction
Facetious Footnotes and a Bibliography
By FRANKLIN J. MEINE
Privately Printed for
LYLE STUART . NEW YORK
An essay on Mark Twain’s
underground tale of dirty talk in Elizabethan times in a book of criticism I was reading was the first
time I’ve ever seen actual scholarly criticism of that odd
little story, so I stopped to re-read it. My copy comes in a
slipcase with a big label on it that says, “MARK TWAIN’S
DELIGHTFULLY WICKED MASTERPIECE.” A kind of thought-balloon
up in the corner says: “AT LAST! NOW YOU CAN READ THIS LONG
SUPPRESSED LITERARY CLASSIC!” At the bottom, the label adds,
“A SPECIAL COLLECTOR’S LIMITED EDITION.” All of
the copy on the slipcase label seems to be true. Around 1876, Mark
Twain had been doing research on the speech patterns of earlier
English life, and he was intrigued by the much bawdier vocabulary
in all classes, in clear contrast to the speech of Victorian life
in his own time. As a joke, he wrote a little 8-page pamphlet of
conversation between Queen Elizabeth and some courtiers and
writers. The bawdy result has two or three dozen of the nastiest
words you can think of, and the conversation starts out with some
wisecracks about passing gas and then turns to bawdy jokes about
prelates and girls. The whole thing really is laugh-out-loud funny
in spots — and he wrote it for his best friend: his pastor!
While the story uses all the standard “dirty words,”
including a few I would never, never use in decent company, he
clearly, conspicuously leaves out the king of four-letter English
words, the “F” word. My copy includes 60-plus pages of
interesting notes on the characters (Elizabeth, Walter Raleigh,
Ben Jonson, Shakespeare and a few more) and even includes an
elaborately detailed printing history of the book.
Book 9
All I Want
is Everything
Cecily von
Ziegasar, Little, Brown, NY, 2003.
The 3rd
volume in the Gossip Girl series, which is is so popular it has
already spun off another book series, the It Girl, plus the Gossip
Girl TV series, plus knock-offs by other authors, including, so
far, The Clique series and the A-List series. The Gossip Girl stories
don’t move any faster than a TV soap opera — volume 3
happens just one month after volume 1 — but so what? They’re
all about gossip, not progress. Anyway, all these kids are living
the logo-life, mostly mindlessly. They seem to be the literary
grandchildren of Holden Caulfield, except, of course, they are not
dealing with any dead little brothers or nervous breakdowns.
They’re more into bulimia and writing bad screenplays to get
into Yale, and staying stoned. They are
not really to be taken as gritty actual humans. When a
9th-grader would be getting raped in real life, in these
stories an older girl and a brother both show up to save the
situation and nobody seems at all bothered, least of all the girl. I’m frankly astounded at these high school seniors who stay
drunk and/or stoned almost round the clock, but who can then get
naked with each other and yet stay virginal or near-virginal. I
know these kids are supposed to be super-cool, but that’s some
discipline. It seems all but impossible. Anyway, I think two of these
is enough for me, but I can easily picture girls of all ages
devouring these things like chips with dip — along with
drinks, of course.
book 8
The
Annotated Classic Fairy Tales
ed. (& some
tr.) Maria Tatar, W. W. Norton, NY, 2002.
A big beautiful
hardback book, with 450 gorgeously illustrated pages. It seems to
be just now coming out, which makes no sense to me, but maybe I
missed it for six whole years. I love the Annotated series and buy
them whenever I find a new one. I must have six or so, including
Mother Goose, Walden, Huck Finn, Alice in
Wonderland, and Edgar Allan Poe — but I did
let Dracula get away. At first, this one bugged me a bit
because the illustrations are lined up in a row for
inspection, but not in chronological order. Confusing. And some of
the thumbnail-size pictures were so small I needed a magnifier to
look at them with any care. Also, the editor’s commentary
seemed to over-emphasize feminist readings and
under-emphasize the details I wanted explained:
How long is “twenty-two ells”? When was
the first of the famous fe-fi-fo-fums? But she won me over, and her
list of key writers, collectors and artist-illustrators at the back
of the book is a genuine service. It seems that the “father
of the illustrated children’s
book” is Walter Crane (1845-1915), and his work looks a lot like the best early newspaper cartoons. My favorite
book of his sort is still the earlier and similarly named Classic
Fairy Tales, by Opie and Opie, but this new book by Tatar is a
keeper, too.
Nick Otten teaches at Clayton High School and Webster University, is involved in theater and consumes massive quantities of film and literature. In his description of Nick's List, he says,
"For every single work, I’ll quickly post a brief commentary — each week, at least 1
book and 2 movies, usually more. Maybe a paragraph, maybe a page. Sometimes, not often, I
may go crazy and write some kind of extra, a page or so, on some movie or pair
of movies or some genre, actor, or something else, or how one book relates
to another or a movie or you or me or us. Such stuff will be just
one click away, guaranteed."
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