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Daniel Johnston

The Battler by Ernest Hemingway Audio and Analysis

January 6, 2015 by Daniel Johnston Leave a Comment

The Battler by Ernest Hemingway was published in the short story collection In Our Time in 1925 and was the fourth story about Nick Adams, a semi-autobiographical character of Hemingway’s.

In The Battler Nick gets tricked by a man into coming close to him, in which case the man knocked him to the ground, even though there was really no logical reason for him to do it. Nick is mad and promises himself he’ll never let himself be taken advantage of it in that way again. When he meets a man along the road he tells him how he’ll attack him and return the favor the next time he gets a chance.

Soon, however, Nick learns that the man is very disfigured, with one ear missing, and discovers that the man is none other than Ad Francis, who was a famous boxing champion at one time. Ad explains how he is crazy, and invites Nick to eat with him and his negro friend Bugs.

They start to eat but Ad gets pretty upset, saying that Nick had no business being there and that is was uncalled for to come in and eat his food. He is about to attack Nick, but the negro manages to knock him unconscious before anything happens. The negro explains how he met Al in jail, and they hit it off, and how he pretends to be crazy even though he isn’t. He tells how Al took too many beatings, and then had his wife divorce him amidst rumors they were brother and sister. Now the ex-wife paid all their expenses so they could just roam around and do as they please.

The obvious message of the story is that Nick was young and wanted to fight, but then he met someone who had fought (not to mention gotten involved in women!) and was now disfigured and in bad shape. Plus it gives the reader a warning against women, since it was a woman who made him crazy in the end.

An interesting thing is that they talk about how completely crazy Al is, although he doesn’t appear to be that crazy. He does get mad at Nick for eating with them after he invited them himself, but only after Nick didn’t lend him his knife at the behest of the negro. Although things escalate quickly, it is not really unreasonable for him to be mad at Nick for not lending him something after Al is sharing his food with him. It’s not that Al is going out of reality, but that he has a lot of aggression and is willing to start a fight and inflict serious violence with only what most people would consider insignificant provocation. His imbalanced aggression is a result of his failure with women.

https://readersandwritersparadise.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/The-Battler-by-Ernest-Hemingway-Audio.m4a

Filed Under: audio, Ernest Hemingway, Short Story

Don’t Care High by Gordon Korman Review

January 4, 2015 by Daniel Johnston Leave a Comment

Don’t Care High by Gordon Korman is a wickedly good book, written back in 1985 when he was twenty two years old, just fresh out of college, and at around the height of his writing powers. It’s his first foray into Young Adult, but be prepared to be laughing up a storm and thinking about this book for a long time to come.

Summary

The book begins when Paul moves from “the boonies,” as his dad calls it, to the Big Apple. He’s going to school at Don Carey High School, but it’s not like any school he’s gone to before. In fact, the students have dubbed it Don’t Care High School because nobody cares. There is no interest or participation in anything. Students don’t care about having schedule mix-ups like five of the same foreign language class in a day or even having no schedule at all! The sign-up sheets on the walls are from the 1940s, and there are no sports teams or student government or anything like that.

Paul is lucky to meet Sheldon, however, a kid who just might actually care. He only transferred to the school in the middle of the previous year, so he still has a little ambition. For fun, he decides to get a kid named Mike Otis elected as school president, which is easy because no one else is running and the kid won’t even mind.

Unsurprisingly Mike wins, but he doesn’t do anything with his power. That’s up to Sheldon and Paul. Sheldon begins giving Mike credit for all the repairs and other nice things happening at the school, earning him a lot of popularity among students, even though they had nothing to do with it. When the school hears about it and removes Mike from president, though, then they’ve really done it. Mike is their president, and they’re going to do anything he says (or more accurately, anything Sheldon and Paul say he says).

Review

This is a fantastic book. The characters are awesome and real, with funny dialects and nicknames. There’s a kid named Wayne-O whose mission is to see how little he can be at every class and still pass. There’s a hilarious kid named Feldstein who is the locker baron of the school. He owns many of the lockers, and (until Mike Otis’s rise) is the most powerful kid in the school. He can deny you a locker if he wants, and in exchange for a locker you owe him food that you may have to give him at a time in the future of his choosing.

Paul’s family is off the wall, with a crazy aunt, a mother who is always going to take care of her, and a dad who doesn’t see him much until he decides to teach him New York City driving (even though it’s illegal to drive in New York until you’re 18 and Paul is only 16). There is a hilarious radio program led by Flash Food, who relishes talking about the inconveniences of “the greatest city in the world.” There are also insane neighbors who Paul watches and observes but doesn’t understand, a TV character named Steve who inspires him, and risk-taking (but accident avoiding) cabbies.

The best character, though, is Mike Otis. Despite being the most popular kid in school, he doesn’t understand a thing of what is going on. His school records are of buildings, phone numbers, and past addresses that don’t exist. His car is said not to be made by any known manufacture. What is with this guy?

Gordon Korman moved from Canada to New York to attend film school, and the theme of the Big Apple recurs in a few of his books. The theme of a tribute to New York and all its craziness is present throughout the book, right down to the end.

This book has Korman’s classic pairing of two best-friends, one of whom is crazy and adventuresome and the other who is more cautious, but goes along with it anyways. Sheldon is the crazy one, and Paul the more cautious. Sheldon does come up with some really outrageous ideas, and the combination works great in this book.

The only negative thing about this book is that kids who have read a lot of Korman’s books will notice that many other jokes found later in his books were simply copied from this one. Mike Smith, in The 6th Grade Nickname Gang, is Mike Otis with a slight name change and about a thousand times less mysterious and heroic. Schooled also has an election won by someone who is unsuspectingly nominated, and the school in that book is named C Average Middle School instead of Claverage Middle School. There are probably others, but the fact is that many of Korman’s jokes in later books were originally used in his earlier ones, where they are often deeper and even more funny and powerful.

Don’t Care High is a hilarious book that will also make you think. You’ll be laughing up a storm, but you also just won’t forget characters like Feldstein or Mike Otis. Don’t Care High students at the beginning probably wouldn’t have cared about a book written about them, but that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t!

Get Don’t Care High from Amazon

Filed Under: Gordon Korman

The Birthday Party by Katharine Brush Audio and Analysis

January 4, 2015 by Daniel Johnston Leave a Comment

The Birthday Party by Katharine Brush was published in The New York Times in 1946 and is still being read frequently today. It is just a tiny little story, in which an observer sees a man and his wife at a restaurant. The wife has a cake brought over to the man, but he doesn’t like it the public celebration and gets really embarrassed and upset. His wife is in turn very upset by his rebuffing and cries.

The Birthday Party gets readers thinking because there are a number of unanswered questions, it being such a short story and the perspective being thought of an unknowing observer. For example, why did the wife give the gift to her husband despite the fact that she surely must’ve known that he wouldn’t like it by this point in their marriage? She had to have known he would get upset and therefore did it intentionally, so a lot more is going on here.

Brush allows us to catch a glimpse of action and leaves us to wonder what might’ve been going on. It is not really a full-fledged story, but more of an exercise in the perspective of the observer, and certainly a good one.

https://readersandwritersparadise.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/New-Project-15.wav

Filed Under: audio, Katharine Brush, Observer Perspective

The Doctor and the Doctor’s Wife by Ernest Hemingway Audio and Analysis

January 4, 2015 by Daniel Johnston Leave a Comment

The Doctor and the Doctor’s Wife by Ernest Hemingway was published in the short story collection In Our Time in 1925 and was the third story about Nick Adams, a semi-autobiographical character of Hemingway’s.

Nick’s father, a doctor, enlists the help of an Indian man named Dick Boulton to assist him in cutting logs. The logs were lost off of a boat, and would never be used, so Nick’s dad takes them from himself. Dick wants to see who the logs originally belonged to, and accuse his boss of stealing the logs. Nick’s dad doesn’t like that, and says for Dick not to saw them up if he believes them to be stolen, eventually exploding into a fight.

Nick’s dad is forced to walk off because Dick is a bigger man, and when he tells his wife that Dick was trying to start a fight because he owed him money, she refuses to believe it and says that no one could be that bad. She asks for her son, but when her husband leaves and finds him he asks to go with his dad to find black squirrel’s and he agrees, ignoring the request of Nick’s mother.

The Doctor and the Doctor’s Wife shows how important honor is to a man. Everyone knows what is going on with the logs, but Nick’s dad will not allow himself to be characterized as a thief, which he of course is not. It is hard to tell whether Dick really does owe money to Nick’s dad, but it seems likely because he’s a doctor and doctor’s are expensive. If that is the case, then Dick is able to easily get at Nick’s dad simply by making an implicit attack on the man’s honor. What is ironic is that if Nick’s dad was really and truly a thief, the charge that he was stealing would not bother him; it is only because of his honorable that an attack of inhonorability can get to him.

The main point of the story, however, judging both by the content and the title, is the relationship between the doctor and his wife. She lives near men, but she is not there when the action takes place. She gives advice on how her husband should see things and what he should do, but he doesn’t really take it seriously. She asks to see her son, but even this is not granted her. Even though she thinks she is part of the world of doing, of men, of working, really she is very far away from it.

https://readersandwritersparadise.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/The-Doctor-and-The-Doctors-Wife-by-Ernest-Hemingway-Audio.m4a

Filed Under: audio, Ernest Hemingway, Short Story

Indian Camp by Ernest Hemingway Audio and Analysis

January 1, 2015 by Daniel Johnston 1 Comment

Indian Camp by Ernest Hemingway was published in the short story collection In Our Time in 1925 and was the second story about Nick Adams, a semi-autobiographical character who appears in a slew of connected Hemingway stories. It is the first one published, as its predecessor was cut out by Hemingway.

Nick comes along with his father, who is a doctor, to help deliver an Indian baby. He is forced to perform a c-section despite a complete absence of medical materials of antiseptics, which makes the mother have quite a few yells of pain. Unfortunately her husband and unable to bear it, and he decides to kill himself.

Nick is surprised at the man’s suicide but his father reassures him that death isn’t all that bad. Nick thinks to himself that he will never die. The theme of not dying is something that sometimes recurs in Hemingway’s stories.

Indian Camp juxtaposes the brutal experience Nick witnesses with his pleasant feeling on return that he will never die. After seeing such a painful birth and then a suicide, it is hard to believe that immediately the young boy had gained a sense of immortality. It is likely a commentary of the strength of youth and nature versus more painful things in life.

Hemingway frequently paired nature with positivity in his stories, and the boy is strong enough to withstand his vision of pain because of the stronger power of beauty, nature, and the goodness and strength inherent in man. It is quite impressive that Hemingway wrote a story chiefly about negativity that ends up really being about the triumph of strength in the world, and something that he continues to do in his later stories.

https://readersandwritersparadise.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/Indian-Camp-by-Ernest-Hemingway-Audio.m4a

Filed Under: audio, Ernest Hemingway, Short Story

On the Quai at Smyrna by Ernest Hemingway Audio and Analysis

January 1, 2015 by Daniel Johnston Leave a Comment

On the Quai at Smyrna was a short story written by Ernest Hemingway in his short story collection In Our Time in 1925 and is told from the viewpoint of a Grecian man who is on the scene at a strange event. The strange thing is how people are screaming at midnight, and a number of other weird occurrences.

The story is ambiguous, but it’s safe to say that it is in response to the Great Fire of Smyrna that took place in 1922. It was a catastrophic fire that took place during the Greco-Turkish war, killing tens of thousands of people. Hemingway probably wrote the piece on a supposition of what the fire might’ve appeared like to someone like our narrator, who didn’t even know what was going on.

Although the narrator is unaware of the fire, he notes a bunch of things happening that he wouldn’t have expected. When they came in to attack the Turks, they were merely fired at lightly instead of greatly attacked. There were tons of dead babies and other horrible stuff in the water, although he tries to dismiss it at the end.

This is a pretty short story, but an interesting one. Hemingway was well known to write about historical events, and I imagine it would’ve been a lot more interesting if we were actually living at the time of this war. Given the fact that we are not it isn’t really too relevant for us today, but it’s a nice perspective piece.

https://readersandwritersparadise.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/On-the-Quai-at-Smyrna-Audio.m4a

 

Filed Under: audio, Ernest Hemingway, Short Story

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Hi, I'm Daniel Johnston. I'm a seventeen year-old who loves everything about books! Check around for book reviews, recordings of audio short stories, and my own writing. Thanks for stopping by!

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