Showing posts with label hunter thompson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hunter thompson. Show all posts
Friday, July 20, 2012
Woody Guthrie's Unpublished Novel
Movie star Johnny Depp and historian Doug Brinkley (who, in 1994, drove a busload of teenaged students across the country to Albany in order to meet William Kennedy) are coediting folksinger Woody Guthrie's as-yet-unpublished novel, House of Earth, for publication in 2013.
The unlikely pair published an essay about the forthcoming book earlier this month in the New York Times:
"Endemic poverty is a theme that Guthrie would turn to full-bore in House of Earth. The narrative follows the lives of two hardscrabble farmers, Tike and Ella May Hamlin, living in the cap rock country of West Texas, 'that big high, crooked cliff of limestone, sandrock, marble and flint, that runs between and is the line that divides the lower west Texas plains from the upper north Panhandle plains.' The impoverished couple, it seems, live in biological harmony with the land. A scorching lovemaking scene on a hay bale viscerally represents the fertility ritual. Yet they can’t keep the bizarre weather out of their shabby home, and Tike — Guthrie’s alter ego — starts espousing the gospel of adobe." More.
Brinkley visited the Institute in 1998 to introduce Hunter S. Thompson, and again in 1999 to discuss William Kennedy's career as a journalist as part of a presentation for the Associated Writing Programs (AWP), and to discuss his bestselling 1998 book on Jimmy Carter, The Unfinished Presidency: Jimmy Carter's Journey Beyond the White House. Read More......
The unlikely pair published an essay about the forthcoming book earlier this month in the New York Times:
"Endemic poverty is a theme that Guthrie would turn to full-bore in House of Earth. The narrative follows the lives of two hardscrabble farmers, Tike and Ella May Hamlin, living in the cap rock country of West Texas, 'that big high, crooked cliff of limestone, sandrock, marble and flint, that runs between and is the line that divides the lower west Texas plains from the upper north Panhandle plains.' The impoverished couple, it seems, live in biological harmony with the land. A scorching lovemaking scene on a hay bale viscerally represents the fertility ritual. Yet they can’t keep the bizarre weather out of their shabby home, and Tike — Guthrie’s alter ego — starts espousing the gospel of adobe." More.
Brinkley visited the Institute in 1998 to introduce Hunter S. Thompson, and again in 1999 to discuss William Kennedy's career as a journalist as part of a presentation for the Associated Writing Programs (AWP), and to discuss his bestselling 1998 book on Jimmy Carter, The Unfinished Presidency: Jimmy Carter's Journey Beyond the White House. Read More......
Friday, December 9, 2011
On Hunter Thompson: "I never called him a swine."
Bill Kennedy on the Bat Segundo Show today talks about turning down his friend Hunter S. Thompson for a job at the San Juan Star in 1959 (you may already know the story but fans of both never get tired of it):
Correspondent: [Hunter S. Thompson] said, “He refused to hire me. Called me swine, fool, beatnik. We go way back.” But I also know that he wrote you a quite hubristic letter. How did you two patch things up after this early exchange of invective and all that?
Kennedy: Well, I never called him a swine.
Correspondent: (laughs)
Kennedy: It’s possible in a letter, in later years, I might have called him a swine. But that was his terminology. More.
Labels:
authors,
bat segundo,
books,
hunter thompson,
journalism,
William Kennedy
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