Thursday, September 21, 2006

Posthumous publication? What's that, you say? Well, posthumous means something that happens after someone's death ... so a posthumous publication is a work printed after a person's death.

Now that we have this straight, you'll be happy to know that a posthumous book by J.R.R. Tolkien (1892-1973), author of The Lord of the Rings, is going to be published in the Spring of 2007. The Children of Hurin is an epic tale about the elves and dwarves featured in many of Tolkien's stories. 

Tolkien began the saga in 1918, but never finished it. For the past 30 years, his son Christopher Tolkien, has been working on finishing the tale, using his father's manuscript and notes.

"It has seemed to me for a long time that there was a good case for presenting my father's long version of the legend of The Children of Hurin as an independent work, between its own covers," Christopher Tolkien said in a statement. (Bits and pieces have been published in the past.)

We're sharing this good news with you on what turns out to be the anniversary of the day in 1937 when Tolkien published his first novel, The Hobbit.

The back story of his novel is pretty interesting--while working as a professor at Oxford, Tolkien used to work an extra job grading exams during the summer. One day, he was so bored that he wrote the following line on a blank page of a student's exam: "In a hole in the ground lived a hobbit."

From The Writer's Almanac:

"Tolkien later said that he had no idea where the word "hobbit" came from. It had just popped into his head, out of nowhere. He was intrigued by it and decided to write a story to find out what a hobbit might be. In the story that resulted, he wrote a description of hobbits that said, in part, "[Hobbits] are (or were) a little people, about half our height, and smaller than the bearded Dwarves. ... They are inclined to be fat in the stomach; they dress in bright colours (chiefly green and yellow); wear no shoes, because their feet grow naturally leathery soles and thick warm brown hair like the stuff on their heads (which is curly); have long clever brown fingers, good-natured faces, and laugh deep fruity laughs (especially after dinner, which they have twice a day when they can get it)."

Tolkien had been thinking for years about an imaginary place he called Middle-Earth full of dwarves, elves, and wizards. He decided that his story would concern a hobbit in this world named Bilbo Baggins who goes on an adventure to help steal a treasure from a dragon named Smaug, and along the way discovers a magical ring that turns him invisible. Tolkien wrote the book by hand, sitting on a tiny bed in his attic, finishing it sometime around the mid-1930s.

He showed it to a few friends, but he had no intention of publishing it until a former student of his got a job at a publishing house and began pestering him to give her the manuscript. He finally relented, and it came out on this day in 1937."

I told you it was a neat back story!


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Sandhya    Posted by
Sandhya
on 9/21/2006
11:19 AM
 Wednesday, September 20, 2006
According to a well-worn proverb, a picture is worth a thousand words. In the September 2006 issue of Writing, we published a photograph of a red-eyed tree frog (Agalychnis callidryas) which was taken on a rainy day by photographer Michael Durham. We asked you to write a story about this frog -- to give it a name, describe its surroundings, and imagine the events that brought it to this moment. Your story could be 50 words, 100 words, the proverbial 1,000 words--or more. Here is one of our favorite submissions.

Croaky The Frog

- Story by Andrea Nielsen-George, Grade 7

It was a great day in the Amazon until Croaky the rain forest frog came into the trees and told everyone the bad news. "Everyone, everyone! The weather has just been announced!"

 

"Well, Croaky what is the news?" asked all the animals of the forest. 

 

Trying to catch his breath, Croaky answered, "King Lion said that there is to be some rain today!"

 

Everyone looked at him as their faces dropped.

 

Sally Spider said sarcastically, "Croaky, if you haven't noticed, this is a rainforest.”

 

Mary Moth said, "Yeah, it rains here everyday."

 

All the animals turned around and left Croaky by himself. Croaky thought that everyone would thank him, but instead they were aggravated with him.

 

Croaky went to go find a leaf big enough to cover him. "Ah-ha," he said to himself. "This is a huge leaf. It will do for the storm."


# (15)#

StudentWriter    Posted by
StudentWriter
on 9/20/2006
11:05 AM
 Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Today is Talk Like a Pirate Day! Invented in 1995 by two friends, John Baur and Mark Summers, this day celebrates “the spirit of adventure and the human need to engage in the act of discovery.” It also provides a painless way of expanding your vocabulary. Aye, really!

 

Here are a few handy expressions you may want to use today:

 

If you want to agree with someone: Aye!

In other words: Yes. 

 

If you want to say hello to your buddy: Ahoy matey!
# (14)#

Sandhya    Posted by
Sandhya
on 9/19/2006
4:44 PM

Editor's note - Recent news has come out that states that this man is not the man in the famous photo. More to come in a future blog post.

Do you know this man?

Sure you do! His name is Carl Muscarello. Carl was the sailor in 1945 who celebrated VJ Day by planting one on a nurse named Edith Shain in the middle of Times Square. The photo, taken by Alfred Eisenstaedt became an instant classic when Life Magazine published it.

That was over 60 years ago. Today, Carl is 80 years old, but he's still as full of energy as he was back then!

Recently, two men broke into Carl's Florida home. One of the burglars ran away while the other one started swinging a golf club at Carl's son. Carl grabbed the intruder and put a chokehold on him. He then brought the man to the floor and held him down until the police came.

"I often happen to be at a strange place at a strange time," Muscarello said.

Once a hero, always a hero.


# (7)#
Bryon    Posted by
Bryon
on 9/19/2006
11:21 AM


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