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How to write a bad review - 0 views

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    This week, my review of Paul Auster's new memoir "Winter Journal" ran in The Guardian. I disliked the book intensely, and thought it was very bad, both by the standards of other memoirs and by the standards of Auster's own career. And I expended considerable effort explaining my reasons for feeling this way about it.
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Tool Review: Posterous Spaces - The Tempered Radical - 1 views

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    Possibility for class web site that offers easy posting (via email) for text AND attachments. The hassle of posting anything to Edline keeps me from using it as much as I want to. If this site is as good as it sounds, I may try this next year.
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    If you want to look at another option, feel free to join one of my Edmodo sites. It does the same sort of thing, and (to the students' delight) it looks exactly like Facebook. You can join and see what we're doing by: 1. Go to www.edmodo.com and get an account 2. Enter the class code to join one of my classes and see everything: freshmen code is fifkl6 and sophomore code is u3rpzo. You can put up links, attachments, quizzes, photos, videos, polls, etc. They can also turn in papers on Edmodo, which is fun for something different once in awhile. I don't require them to use it, it's just "extra" and we use it in class sometimes just for differentiation.
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ToonDoo - World's fastest way to create cartoons! - 1 views

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    Oh. My. Word. Such a fun tool! Students can create custom cartoons of, like, anything. Giant time-waster? Sure. Useful review tool for low-level readers? You betcha! Possible resource for end-of-unit analysis? Maybe.
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Paris Review - The Art of Fiction No. 69, Gabriel Garcia Marquez - 0 views

  • Do the journalist and the novelist have different responsibilities in balancing truth versus the imagination?  GARCÍA MÁRQUEZ In journalism just one fact that is false prejudices the entire work. In contrast, in fiction one single fact that is true gives legitimacy to the entire work. That’s the only difference, and it lies in the commitment of the writer. A novelist can do anything he wants so long as he makes people believe in it.
  • How do you feel about using the tape recorder? GABRIEL GARCÍA MÁRQUEZ The problem is that the moment you know the interview is being taped, your attitude changes. In my case I immediately take a defensive attitude. As a journalist, I feel that we still haven’t learned how to use a tape recorder to do an interview. The best way, I feel, is to have a long conversation without the journalist taking any notes. Then afterward he should reminisce about the conversation and write it down as an impression of what he felt, not necessarily using the exact words expressed. Another useful method is to take notes and then interpret them with a certain loyalty to the person interviewed. What ticks you off about the tape recording everything is that it is not loyal to the person who is being interviewed, because it even records and remembers when you make an ass of yourself. That’s why when there is a tape recorder, I am conscious that I’m being interviewed; when there isn’t a tape recorder, I talk in an unconscious and completely natural way.
  • Ultimately, literature is nothing but carpentry. INTERVIEWER Can you explain that analogy a little more? GARCÍA MÁRQUEZ Both are very hard work. Writing something is almost as hard as making a table. With both you are working with reality, a material just as hard as wood. Both are full of tricks and techniques. Basically very little magic and a lot of hard work are involved. And as Proust, I think, said, it takes ten percent inspiration and ninety percent perspiration. I never have done any carpentry but it’s the job I admire most, especially because you can never find anyone to do it for you.
    • Patty Van Spankeren
       
      Writing is work, not magic!
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  • Do you have any long-range ambitions or regrets as a writer? GARCÍA MÁRQUEZ I think my answer is the same as the one I gave you about fame. I was asked the other day if I would be interested in the Nobel Prize, but I think that for me it would be an absolute catastrophe. I would certainly be interested in deserving it, but to receive it would be terrible. It would just complicate even more the problems of fame. The only thing I really regret in life is not having a daughter.
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    The first words GGM says help to illustrate his insistence that magical realism is more true than realism.
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Class Tools - 1 views

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    You can put in a set of questions and it will come up with fun video games for students. Good for vocab. (I just played Wordshoot here: http://www.classtools.net/mob/quiz_1/ihaQF.htm)
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