The Open Road Blog

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Archival Photo of the Week: Mother's Day

Sunday, May 13, 2012

We're spotlighting archival photos a day early this week in honor of Mother's Day!

Check out two new slideshows featuring gorgeous archival snapshots of authors with their mothers—and, in the case of authors who are mothers, authors with their children! Have a look:

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Jewish American Heritage Month: Speaking to the Soul

Friday, May 11, 2012

The "First Passover Sedar Dinner" given by Jewish Welfare Board to men of Jewish Faith in the American Expeditionary Forces in order that they may observe the Passover Holidays. Paris, France., 04/1919Jewish American Heritage Month celebrates "generations of Jewish Americans who have helped form the fabric of American history, culture and society." It’s supported by the Library of Congress, the National Archives and Records Administration (from which the image at left came), the National Endowment for the Humanities, the National Gallery of Art, the National Park Service, and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

Open Road is proud to participate in the tribute by offering new videos, essays, and excerpts on Fridays throughout the month of May. Join us on Twitter by using the hashtag #JAHM.

As our first contribution, ...

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Archival Photo of the Week: Lois Lenski

Monday, May 07, 2012

Lois Lenski with Stephen and Arthur

Above: Lois Lenski in this picture with her son, Stephen, and  her husband, Arthur, in 1946, just after she had won the Newbery Award for Strawberry Girl. With them is their pet goat, Missy.

Lois Lenski graduated from high school in 1911 and moved with her family to Columbus, where her father joined the faculty at Capital University. Because Capital did not yet allow women to enroll, she attended college at Ohio State University. Lenski took courses in education, planning to become a teacher like her mother, but also studied art, and was especially interested in drawing. In 1915, with ...

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Archival Photo of the Week: Josephine Hart

Monday, April 30, 2012

Charles Dance, Rupert Evans, Josephine Hart, Jeremy IronsFor the last day of National Poetry Month, we are delighted to feature this photo of Josephine Hart at her Poetry Hour at the British Library celebrating Robert Browning in 2009 (from left: Charles Dance, Rupert Evans, Josephine Hart, and Jeremy Irons).

"The story of the individual soul on its journey is the only one worth telling. That’s why I write. I have little or no interest—nor, I believe, any ability whatsoever—to describe the surface experiences of life." – Josephine Hart

Hart is the international bestselling author of six novels and two poetry anthologies. Her novels, which include Damage (1991), ...

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Archival Photo of the Week: Rachel Carson

Monday, April 23, 2012

Rachel CarsonThe girl pictured here is a young Rachel Carson (1907–1964) with her pet dog. She would grow up to become one of the most influential American nature writers of the twentieth century. Born in the rural town of Springdale, Pennsylvania, near the Allegheny River, Carson spent much of her childhood roaming her family’s sixty-five-acre farm and exploring the woods around her home. She described herself as a “solitary girl” who was always happiest with “wild birds and creatures as companions.”

Grounded in the scientific discoveries of the day, Carson’s works were notable for their intimate lyric prose that appealed to ...

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Archival Photo of the Week: Muriel Spark

Monday, April 16, 2012

Muriel SparkMuriel Spark is on our minds here at Open Road: the sixth anniversary of her passing occurred on April 13th; we recently released eight of her titles in ebook form; and we're gearing up for Muriel Spark Reading Week (April 23-29), hosted by a couple of literary-minded bloggers.

Spark was born and raised in Edinburgh and from an early age attended James Gillespie’s High School. There her education was closely guided by an idiosyncratic teacher named Christina Kay, the inspiration for the title character in her best-known novel, The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie. After school, Spark ...

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Archival Photo of the Week: Erskine Caldwell

Monday, April 09, 2012

Passport PhotoThis photograph was pictured in Erskine Caldwell's passport from 1946 to 1950. Throughout much of his adult life, Caldwell traveled extensively as a journalist, writing pieces from every corner of the globe. During World War II, he had received special permission from the U.S.S.R. to travel to the Ukraine, where he reported on the war effort.  

 

Caldwell was born in 1903 in Moreland, Georgia. His father was a traveling preacher, and his mother was a teacher. The Caldwell family lived in a number of Southern states throughout Erskine’s childhood. Caldwell’s tour of the South exposed him to ...

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Archival Photo of the Week: Jean Craighead George

Monday, April 02, 2012

Jean Craighead GeorgeIn honor of International Children's Book Day, this picture shows beloved children's book author Jean Craighead George circa 2001, feeding a wolf pup near the Bob Marshall Wilderness in western Montana.

Born in Washington, DC, on July 2, 1919, Jean loved nature from an early age. Her parents, aunts, and uncles, all naturalists, encouraged her interest in the world around her, and she has drawn from that passion in her more than one hundred books for children and young adults.

In 1963 George and her three children, Twig, Craig, and Luke, began to travel around the country, visiting parks ...

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Archival Photo of the Week: Iris Murdoch

Monday, March 19, 2012

Iris Murdoch and John BayleyThis photograph shows author Iris Murdoch with her husband John Bayley. The two married in 1956, two years after the publication of Murdoch’s first novel Under the Net, about a struggling young writer in London. The American Modern Library would later select this title as one of the one hundred best English-language novels of the twentieth century, and Time magazine would list it as among the twenty-five best novels since 1923.

Murdoch and Bayley met at Oxford University, where Murdoch studied classics, ancient history, and philosophy, and where she later lectured in philosophy for fifteen years. Bayley was also ...

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Archival Photo of the Week: Alice Walker

Monday, February 13, 2012 by Grace Srinivasiah

Alice WalkerThe photograph shows author Alice Walker being arrested and taken into custody during a protest in Concord, California in the 1980s, against weapons shipments being sent to Central and South America. Her shirt “Remember Port Chicago,” refers to an explosion during World War II that killed mostly black sailors, which occurred while the sailors were loading munitions.

Born the youngest of eight children, Alice Walker was raised by parents who believed in the power of education, despite being a family of black sharecroppers in the South. After graduating from Sarah Lawrence College in 1956, she moved back to the South, ...

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Archival Photo of the Week: Pat Conroy

Monday, January 09, 2012

This week, we're proud to feature a collection of treasures from Pat Conroy's childhood. Conroy was born in 1945 in Atlanta, Georgia. Growing up as the first of seven children in a military family, Conroy moved twenty-three times before he turned eighteen. Today, he is one of America’s most acclaimed and widely read authors and the New York Times bestselling writer of ten novels and memoirs, including The Water Is Wide, The Lords of Discipline, The Great Santini, and The Prince of Tides.

Have a look at childhood portraits, family holidays, a report card, and more—all courtesy ...

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Archival Photo of the Week: Erica Jong

Monday, October 24, 2011

This week’s photo shows Erica Jong, at age eleven. A native of New York City, Jong’s parents were the makers of collectible porcelain dolls. She completed her Master of Arts from Columbia University in 1965. She published her first novel, Fear of Flying, in 1973. Selling more than 20 million copies, the novel was controversial for its treatment of female sexuality. In addition to its notoriety, Fear of Flying has been included as one of the texts that helped along the second-wave feminist movement. The main character, Isadora Wing would continue on in three more novels, How to ...

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Archival Photo of the Week: Dori Hillestad Butler

Monday, September 12, 2011

Dori H ButlerAs our back-to-school promotion continues, Open Road is thrilled to share this special photo of Dori Hillestad Butler on her first day of kindergarten. What a lovely keepsake for the child who would grow up to write the Buddy Files series! (Read on for an excerpt from Chapter 1 of The Case of the Mixed-Up Mutts, on sale through September 13 for only $1.99.)

Do you and your children have special photos from the first day of school? Perhaps, like Dori, you're outside squinting in the end-of-summer sunlight? Or are you at the front door wearing your brand-new shoes, ...

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Archival Photo of the Week: Erskine Caldwell

Monday, August 29, 2011

In this week’s archival photo, author Erskine Caldwell leans on a sign that alludes to his most famous novel, Tobacco Road. Later adapted to a play, the show ran for nearly eight years, earning Caldwell a hefty sum in royalties. Caldwell will forever be associated with the vast tobacco regions of the American South, which are also known as Tobacco Road.

Caldwell was raised as a child of the South. His family lived in a number of southern cities and rural areas, places that would later help frame his writing. A devout preacher, Caldwell’s father instilled in his son ...

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Archival Photo of the Week: James Jones

Monday, August 15, 2011

This week’s archival photo features author James Jones at the trailer camp where he worked. It is the site where Jones wrote From Here to Eternity in the late 1940s.

Raised amid the financial and cultural chaos of the Great Depression, Jones joined the army just before the attack on Pearl Harbor. A brief stint away from the army led him to Lowney Handy, the novelist who later became Jones’s confidant and mentor. Honorably discharged with what we now call Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, Jones entered NYU and commenced his literary journey. He is best known for his second novel, ...

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