Recent Posts
Friday, March 27, 2015
INSPIRATION: Elizabeth Cotten
Posted by
Schwets
Thursday, March 19, 2015
LISTEN: Otis Redding
Posted by
Schwets
Gray days got me in the mood for soul.
Turn up Otis and try a little tenderness.
Friday, January 9, 2015
WRITERS: Nom de Plume
Posted by
Schwets
Our favorite authors aren't who
they seem … or maybe they are?
Pseudonyms, pen names, or nom de
plume are pretty interesting. Why do
writers choose to do it? Millions of
different reasons: make a name more marketable or memorable, hiding one’s
gender, distancing oneself from the work.
Anyhoo … Here are some writers who
also wrote under a pseudonym:
The Brontë sisters all had one: Anne Brontë wrote as Acton Bell, Charlotte Brontë preferred the name Currer Bell, Emily Brontë kept with the theme and chose to be Ellis Bell. I’m glad their sibling devotion stretched into their pen names.
Benjamin Franklin used a bunch of pen names: Alice Addertongue, Anthony Afterwit, Benevolus, Busy Body, Caelia Shortface, Martha Careful, Polly Baker, Richard Saunders (of Poor
Richard’s Almanac fame), Silence Dogood (we’ve all seen
National Treasure).
Everyone’s favorite Russian
playwright, Anton Chekhov also published as Antosha Chekhonte.
L. Frank Baum (itself a pen name. The "L" stands for Lyman) wrote a series of
novels for gals called “Aunt Jane’s Nieces” as Edith Van Dyne to cash in on the
Anne of Green Gables craze.
Sylvia Plath published The Bell Jar under her pseudonym Victoria Lucas to protect people she knew and loved.
J.K. Rowling (again, a pen name. She's really Joanne Kathleen) often writes
follow-up Harry Potter-related stories under various pseudonym, however, she
adopted Robert Galbraith to publish her Cormoran Strike series, presumably
after her first post-Harry novel was poorly received. Also famously, it was leaked that Galbraith
was Rowling shortly after the first Strike novel was published (to boost
sales??)
The Queen of Crime, Agatha Christie used the nom de plume Mary Westmacott. The name gave her the freedom to explore different genre of writing without letting her mystery fans down.
This goes the other way 'round, too. Sometimes we know the pen name better than we know the given name:
Ayn Rand was born Alisa Zinov'yevna Rosenbaum
Woody Allen is Allen Stewart Konigsberg
George Sand was the pen name of Amandine Lucie Aurore Dupin
George Eliot was the pen name of Mary Ann Evans
Theodor Seuss Geisel better known as Dr. Seuss
Franklin W. Dixon was a name used by a bunch of authors to write the Hardy Boys series, but the first person to use the name was Leslie McFarlane
Mary Poppins' creator, P. L. Travers was the chosen stage name of Helen Goff
He was born Eric Arthur Blair, but we know him better as George Orwell
And, last but certainly not least, Samuel Langhorne Clemens, aka Mark Twain
Thursday, January 8, 2015
LISTEN: Jenny Lewis
Posted by
LargeMarge
I was watching Troop Beverly Hills last night on Netflix - so good.
Realized Hannah Nefler was not just Jenny Lewis, she was the Jenny Lewis.
Did everyone know this but me?
This chick has got it!
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