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The Writer's Almanac from Monday, June 17, 2013
The Writer's Almanac from Monday, June 17, 2013"The Swiss Family Robinson" by Ron Padgett, from How to Be Perfect. © Coffee House Press, 2007. ORIGINAL TEXT AND AUDIO - 2013 On this day in 1885, the Statue of Liberty arrived in New York Harbor on board the French frigate "Isere," a gift from France to the United States to commemorate the centennial and the friendship between the two countries that began during the American Revolution. The statue arrived in 350 individual pieces and would not be erected for another four months. It's the birthday of novelist and journalist John Hersey, born in Tientsin, China, to missionary parents in 1914. After graduating from Yale, he served as a foreign correspondent for Time and Life. He was commissioned by The New Yorker to write a piece on the aftermath of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima in 1945. He structured his reporting through personal narratives, focusing on the experiences of six people living in Hiroshima at the time of the explosion. The article, titled "A Noiseless Flash," was 31,000 words long, and the editors devoted the entire space of the issue to it. When it hit newsstands in August of 1946, it immediately sold out, and it was published as Hiroshima soon after. Hersey's novels include The Wall (1950), The War Lover (1959), and A Bell for Adano (1944), which won thePulitzer Prize. It's the birthday of poet Ron Padgett, born in Tulsa, Oklahoma (1942). When he was growing up, Oklahoma was a dry state, and his father made a living as a bootlegger. Padgett read voraciously as a child and began jotting down poems in spiral notebooks when he was 13. He went to Columbia University and studied at the Sorbonne in France on a Fulbright scholarship. His poetry collections include Tulsa Kid (1979), Poems I Guess I Wrote (2001), and most recently, How Long (2011). It's the birthday of the avant-garde composer Igor Stravinsky (1882), born in Oranienbaum, near St. Petersburg, Russia. His first major success as a composer was a ballet based on a Russian folk tale, called The Firebird (1909). It was wildly popular, and he traveled all over Europe to conduct it. He then got an idea for a ballet about a pagan ritual in which a virgin would be sacrificed to the gods of spring by dancing herself to death. Stravinsky composed the piece on a piano in a rented cottage, and a boy working outside his window kept shouting up at him that the chords were all wrong. When Stravinsky played part of the piece for director of the theater where it would be performed, the director asked, "How much longer will it go on like that?" Stravinsky replied, "To the end, my dear." He titled the piece The Rite of Spring. At its premiere in 1913 in Paris, the audience broke out into a riot when the music and dancing turned harsh and dissonant. The police came to calm the chaos, and Stravinsky left his seat in disgust, but the performance continued for 33 minutes and he became one of the most famous composers in the world. Be well, do good work, and keep in touch.® July 19, 2024 – 7:00PM A Prairie Home Companion’s 50th Anniversary Tour with Garrison Keillor with Guests including HEATHER MASSE, RICHARD DWORSKY with HOWARD LEVY, CHRIS SIEBOLD, LARRY KOHUT, and our Radio Actors, SUE SCOTT, TIM RUSSELL & FRED NEWMAN. If you are a paid subscriber to The Writer's Almanac with Garrison Keillor, thank you! Your financial support is used to maintain these newsletters, websites, and archive. If you’re not yet a paid subscriber and would like to become one, support can be made through our garrisonkeillor.com store, by check to Prairie Home Productions, P.O. Box 2090, Minneapolis, MN 55402, or by clicking the SUBSCRIBE button. This financial support is not tax deductible.
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