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-   -   Books Ok for the high brow crowd what books you are reading (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=137161)

Bowser 10-22-2010 06:41 PM

I had sworn off Stephen King, but bought Under the Dome anyway, kind of as a last chance thing. I'm probably about 1/10th of the way through, and it has been thoroughly enjoyable thus far. Lots o' grisly death, with a fair amount of humor thrown in.

yhf 10-22-2010 06:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Reaper16 (Post 7108407)
The University of Alabama.

Right on. A buddy of mine is getting piled higher and deeper at Temple. Hard to imagine he is left in charge of a class.

NewChief 10-22-2010 06:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Reaper16 (Post 7108407)
The University of Alabama.

I thought you were at UAB or somewhere? I didn't realize you were truly sucking on the Crimson Teat.

patteeu 10-22-2010 07:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NewPhin (Post 7108464)
I thought you were at UAB or somewhere? I didn't realize you were truly sucking on the Crimson Teat.

Clearly a sell-out. ;)

Reaper16 10-22-2010 07:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by yhf (Post 7108447)
Right on. A buddy of mine is getting piled higher and deeper at Temple. Hard to imagine he is left in charge of a class.

I feel the same way. It is hard to imagine that I am in charge of part of the education of people's sons and daughters.

Quote:

Originally Posted by NewPhin (Post 7108464)
I thought you were at UAB or somewhere? I didn't realize you were truly sucking on the Crimson Teat.

UAB? **** no. I'm in a serious ****ing program. Prestige and shit.

Also, hogs are for eating, not cheering on.

Jenson71 10-22-2010 07:35 PM

I didn't know you were actually teaching, Reaper. I thought you were just in a MFA program. Or do they let a lot of them actually teach?

Reaper16 10-22-2010 07:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jenson71 (Post 7108541)
I didn't know you were actually teaching, Reaper. I thought you were just in a MFA program. Or do they let a lot of them actually teach?

Teaching is how we earn our funding. At big state schools there are a lot of freshmen that need to take required Freshmen-level Composition classes. As far as teaching goes, 'Bama allows its MFAs to teach all sorts of classes during their time in the program. I will eventually be able to teach honors comp, intro to creative writing, more advanced creative writing classes, etc.

Jenson71 10-25-2010 04:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GloryDayz (Post 7106433)
War and Peace..

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jenson71 (Post 7106441)
Really? Tell us about this experience. How much of it do you read in a day? How long do you think it will take you? Does it draw you in right away? How heavy is it on the historical details of the battles?

I bet you're not actually reading it. :sulk:

Jenson71 10-25-2010 04:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Reaper16 (Post 7108574)
Teaching is how we earn our funding. At big state schools there are a lot of freshmen that need to take required Freshmen-level Composition classes. As far as teaching goes, 'Bama allows its MFAs to teach all sorts of classes during their time in the program. I will eventually be able to teach honors comp, intro to creative writing, more advanced creative writing classes, etc.

Yeah, I guess one of the things about going to small--medium sized schools is that you don't get taught by grad students, which is something most people would probably figure is an advantage in default.

Are you still focused more on the travel/food writing?

NewChief 10-25-2010 04:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Reaper16 (Post 7108574)
Teaching is how we earn our funding. At big state schools there are a lot of freshmen that need to take required Freshmen-level Composition classes. As far as teaching goes, 'Bama allows its MFAs to teach all sorts of classes during their time in the program. I will eventually be able to teach honors comp, intro to creative writing, more advanced creative writing classes, etc.

As an MA, I was always stuck teaching Freshman Composition. It's what got me into teaching, though. I always thought I wanted to be a professor, and I entered graduate school with that goal in mind. Turns out that I enjoyed my hours teaching much more than my hours researching.

'Hamas' Jenkins 10-25-2010 04:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jenson71 (Post 7118426)
Yeah, I guess one of the things about going to small--medium sized schools is that you don't get taught by grad students,

This is not true.

Reaper16 10-25-2010 04:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jenson71 (Post 7118426)
Yeah, I guess one of the things about going to small--medium sized schools is that you don't get taught by grad students, which is something most people would probably figure is an advantage in default.

Are you still focused more on the travel/food writing?

Define "small--medium sized schools." I did my undergrad at Northwest Missouri State University (enrollment in the 7,000s) because I wanted an undergrad experience where I wasn't taught by grad students.

As for what I write: I'd say half of what I write about is about culture and foodways. The other half can be wide-ranging. The two pieces I'm working on now that are closest to being ready to send out for publication are about a specific wall & the way high school friends drift apart, and about addiction rehab programs in America.

Slayer Diablo 10-25-2010 04:51 PM

"Man and His Symbols" edited & introduced by Carl Jung

blaise 10-25-2010 05:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Reaper16 (Post 7108409)
Hell yes. August Wilson's "century cycle" is one of the greatest literary achievements of all time, IMO. Tremendous work.

Jitney is one of my favorite plays. I like the way he moves from different times of day, and how he can get you to sense the lives of the characters outside the stage. When I read it I can see the city outside the stage, which is just so skilled on his part.
I'm also about to start a book called Kaufman & Co., which has plays George Kaufman wrote with Edna Ferber, Moss Hart, Ring Lardner, and Morrie Ryskind.
It has a couple of musicals, though, which I'll skip. I don't really like reading musicals. I'm planning to start with June Moon because he wrote it with Ring Lardner, and Lardner's book "You Know Me Al" is a personal favorite of mine.

damaticous 10-25-2010 05:23 PM

The girl who played with fire
and
NFL Unplugged


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