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American Authors

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John Winthrop was a very well known American author who was the first governor ... John Updike. Updike was born on March 18, 1932 in Shillington, Pennsylvania. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: American Authors


1
American Authors
  • ByShauna 8M

2
Emily Dickinson (1830-1886)
  • Emily Dickinson was born in Amherst,
    Massachusetts.
  • Emily Dickinson was a very religious person.
  • Puritanism and transcendentalism played a very
    big role in her writing.
  • One example of Emily Dickinson's work is the
    poemI Dwell In Possibility

3
John Winthrop (1588-1649)
  • John Winthrop was a very well known American
    author who was the first governor of
    Massachusetts.
  • Winthrop was also a very religious person whose
    writings were influenced by his faith.
  • The eyes of all people are upon us all, so that
    if we deal falsely with our God in this work we
    have undertaken and so cause us to withdraw this
    present help from us, we shall be made a story
    and a byword through the world.
  • -John Winthrop
  • This and many others were his idea of a model
    Christian.

4
Anne Bradstreet (1612-1672)
  • Her book of poetry The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung
    Up In America By A Gentle Woman Of Those Parts
    was the 1st book to be published by a woman in
    America.
  • Her religion of Puritanism played a very
    important role in her writings also.
  • Bradstreet was a very educated woman who spent a
    lot of time with her children teaching them to
    read.
  • Her works show someone of love and faith.

5
Walt Whitman(1819-1892)
  • He was born in Long Island, New York and left
    school very early to work for his family.
  • He worked at The Brooklyn Eagle from 1846 to 1848
    and The Brooklyn Times from 1857 to 1858
  • Whitman is an American poet, journalist, and
    essayist.
  • He is best known for his work Leaves Of Grass
    which contains the poems I Sing the Body
    Electric and Song of Myself

6
Harriet Beecher Stowe
  • She was born in Litchfield, CT.
  • She was the 7th child born in a very big family.
  • She married her husband a widower in 1836.
  • She is most famous for her first book Uncle Toms
    Cabin (1850) that told people how bad life was
    for slaves and the horrible things that happened
    to them.

7
Elizabeth Cady Stanton(1815-1902)
  • Stanton was one of the 1st leaders of womens
    rights She organized the 1st womens rights
    convention in Seneca Falls, NY along with Susan
    B. Anthony.
  • Some Of her writings included A Perfect
    Partnership, Passing The Torch, and The Only
    Girl In School.

8
American Authors Project
  • By Andrea
  • 8M

9
Ray Bradbury
  • More than 500 published works short stories,
    novels, plays, screenplays, TV scripts, and
    verse.
  • His best known and most beloved books, THE
    MARTIAN CHRONICLES, THE ILLUSTRATED MAN,
    FAHRENHEIT 451, SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY
    COMES.
  • Bradbury was awarded the National Book
    Foundations 2000 Medal for Distinguished
    Contribution to American letters, and the
    National Medal of Arts in 2004.

10
Mark Twain
  • Mark Twains real name is Samuel L. Clemens.
  • Mark Twain is one of the most widely loved and
    celebrated American writers.
  • Mark Twain has transcended ordinary fame and
    become an icon of American culture and humor the
    world over.
  • He lived a rich and eventful life, which covered
    the years 1835 1910.
  • He published over 30 works of literature
    encompassing satire, historical fiction, short
    stories, and nonfiction.

11
John Steinbeck
  • Born in Salinas, California
  • Went to Stanford University but never graduated
  • After publishing some novels and short stories,
    John first became widely known with Tortilla
    Flat(1935)
  • Steinbecks novels can be classified as social
    novels dealing with economic problems of rural
    labor, but there is also a streak of worship of
    the soil in his books.
  • Some of his works are In Dubious Battle, Of Mice
    and Men, The Long Valley, and The Grapes of
    Wrath.

12
Emily Dickinson
  • Born in Amherst, Massachusetts in 1830.
  • Many people who were close to her had an enormous
    impact in her thoughts and poetry.
  • Dickinsons poetry reflects her loneliness and
    the speakers of her poems generally live in a
    state of want, but her poems are also marked by
    the intimate recollection of inspirational
    moments which are decidedly life- giving and the
    suggest the possibility of happiness.
  • She was not publicly recognized during her
    lifetime.
  • The last volume of her work was in 1955. She died
    in Amherst in 1886.

13
Robert Frost
  • Born in San Francisco in 1874. He moved to New
    England at age 11 and became interested in
    reading and writing poetry during his high school
    years.
  • He worked as a teacher, cobbler, and editor of
    the Lawrence Sentinel.
  • His first professional poem, My Butterfly, was
    published on November 8, 1894, in the New York
    newspaper The Independent.
  • In 1915, he published A Boys Will and North of
    Boston. (when his reputation was established).
  • By the 1920s he was the most celebrated poet in
    America.
  • He died in Boston on January 29, 1963.

14
Ernest Hemingway
  • Born in Oak Park, Illinois in 1899.
  • At age 17 he was a writer in a newspaper office
    in Kansas City.
  • After returning to the U.S., he became a reporter
    for Canadian and American newspapers and was soon
    sent back to Europe to cover such events as the
    Greek Revolution.
  • He then became a member of the group of
    expatriate Americans in Paris, which he described
    in his first important work, The Sun Also
    Rises(1926).
  • His most Ambitious novel, For Whom The Bell
    Trolls(1940).
  • His most outstanding is the short novel, The Old
    Man and The Sea.
  • Hemingway died in Idaho in 1961.

15
American Authors
  • By Anna

16
Edgar Allan Poe
  • Born January 9, 1809 in Boston, Massachusetts
  • Died October 7, 1849 in Baltimore, Maryland
  • Poes father left the family in 1810, his mother
    died of consumption in 1811, so Poe lived with
    his uncle John Allan.
  • Poe fell into many large gambling debts, and lost
    the respect of his father. He enrolled in
    military school to try to earn it back, but when
    Allan remarried, Poe gave up and purposely
    disobeyed orders to get himself kicked out.
  • He first wrote poetry, but was disappointed with
    the lack of recognition, so he began to write
    short stories.
  • Poe was found on the streets semi-conscious and
    died a few days later.
  • Pseudonyms Hans Pfaal, Quarles
  • The Raven
  • The Tell-Tale Heart
  • The Mask of the Red Death

17
Steven King
  • Born September 21, 1947 in Portland, Maine
  • Kings father deserted their family when he was
    two.
  • At 13, King discovered a box of his father's old
    science fiction and horror books, and he
    immediately became fascinated with that genre.
  • King was the 2003 recipient of The National Book
    Foundation's Medal for Distinguished Contribution
    to American Letters.
  • King retired from writing in 2002
  • Pseudonyms Richard Bachman, John Swithen.
  • Carrie
  • The Shining
  • Pet Sematary

18
Samuel Clemens
  • Born November 30, 1835 in Florida, Missouri
  • Died April 21, 1910 in Redding, Connecticut
  • Clemenss first job was as a printers
    apprentice, but in 1857 he decided he wanted to
    be a steamboat pilot.
  • He studied for two years and in 1858 he got his
    steamboat license. However in 1861 the Civil War
    broke out and the traffic along the Mississippi
    was reduced significantly.
  • He wrote stories mostly about his travels and
    tours around the world.
  • Pseudonym Mark Twain
  • The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
  • The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
  • The Tragedy of Puddnhead Wilson

19
Alice Walker
  • Born February 9, 1944 in Eatonton, Georgia
  • When Walker was eight, her brother accidentally
    shot her in the eye with a BB gun, and she lost
    sight in that eye. It developed into a scar, and
    she became ashamed of it. This period of sadness
    influenced much of Walker wrote.
  • She is deeply involved in the civil rights
    movement, which is a common theme in her
    writings.
  • She received the Pulitzer Prize in 1983 for The
    Color Purple.
  • The Color Purple
  • In Love and Trouble
  • By the Light of My Fathers Smile

20
Theodor Geisel
  • Born March 2, 1904 in Springfield, Massachusetts
  • Died September 24, 1991 in La Jolla, California
  • Geisel at first wrote articles for newspapers and
    magazines, then political cartoons, then
    childrens books
  • In 1954, there was a report of illiteracy among
    school children, and it was concluded that the
    cause was that children werent learning to read
    because their books were boring.
  • Because of this, Geisels publisher made a list
    of 400 important words, had Geisel cut it down to
    250, and then write a book using them. Using 220
    of those words, Geisel wrote The Cat in the Hat
  • Pseudonym Dr. Seuss
  • The Cat in the Hat
  • How The Grinch Stole Christmas
  • Horton Hears a Who

21
Shel Silverstein
  • Born September 25, 1930 in Chicago, Illinois
  • Died May 10, 1999 in Key West, Florida
  • Silverstein served in the armed forces in Japan
    and Korea in the 1950s. During this time he was a
    cartoonist for an American paper given to the
    soldiers there.
  • He didnt plan on writing childrens books, but
    his friend Tomi Ungerer introduced him to an
    editor, who helped to publish many of
    Silversteins books.
  • The Giving Tree
  • Where The Sidewalk Ends
  • Falling Up

22
Female American Authors
  • By Devon

23
Mary Austin 1868 - 1934
  • Mary Austin grew up in California.
  • She wrote books such as Early Horizon her
    autobiography(1932), Land of the Sun, (1927)
    The land of the Little Rain (1903) and many
    others.

24
Ann Bradstreet
  • Anne was born in 1612 and died in 1672
  • One example of Bradstreets work is the Flesh
    and the Spirit.

25
Kate Chopin
  • Kate Chopin was born in 1851.
  • She wrote REGRET in 1895
  • She died in 1904.
  • "There are some people who leave impressions not
    so lasting as the imprint of an oar upon the
    water." ---Kate Chopin
  •  

26
Caroline Kirkland.
  • Caroline Kirkland was born in 1801.
  • Some samples of her work are A Book for the Home
    Circle (1853) and The Scarlet Letter
  • Kirkland died in 1864.

27
Emily Dickinson.
  • Emily Dickinson (1830-1886), The Belle of
    Amherst, American poet, wrote hundreds of poems
    including Because I Could Not Stop for Death,
    Heart, we will forget him!, I'm Nobody! Who
    are You?, and Wild Nights! Wild Nights!

28
Zona Gale.
  • Zona Gale (August 26, 1874 December 27, 1938)
    was an American writer. Born in Portage,
    Wisconsin, which she often used as a setting in
    her writing, she attended Wayland Academy in
    Beaver Dam, Wisconsin. Later she entered the
    University of Wisconsin-Madison, from which she
    received a Bachelor of Literature degree in 1895,
    and four years later a Master's degree.

29
American Authors
  • By Fadi

30
R.L Stine
  • R.L. Stine was born on October 8, 1943 in
    Columbus Ohio. Stine began writing at the age of
    9. Stine graduated from Ohio State University in
    1965 and moved to New York City to become a
    writer. Stine also was involved in the creation
    of the PBS childrens show of Eureekas Castle.
  • Stine was known for the Goosebumps series.
  • Stines accomplishments include winning the
    Nickelodeon Kids Choice Award 3 times. Stine
    sold over 300 million books.

31
John Steinbeck
  • John Steinbeck was born on February 27, 1902 in
    Salinas, California. John died on December 20,
    1968. John left Stanford to become a writer.
    Johns first book Cup of gold was
    unsuccessful..
  • John is known for Of Mice and Men
  • Johns accomplishments include winning the Nobel
    Prize for Literature and the Pulitzer Prize.

32
AVI
  • AVI was bon on December 23, 1937 in New York
    City, NY. AVI was good in science, but not in
    writing. AVI had a writing problem called
    dysgraphi.
  • AVI is known for The Barn.
  • AVIs accomplishments include Best Book of the
    year and Newbery Honor.

33
Gary Paulsen
  • Gary Paulsen was born on May 17,1939 in
    Minneapolis, Minnesota. He was raised by his
    grandmother and his aunts. At age 14 Gary ran
    away from home to travel with a carnival. He
    even flunked ninth grade.
  • Garys first ever book was Some Ugly Birds
    Dont Cry. Garys well known book was Hatchet.
  • Garys accomplishments include the Mark Twain
    Award and the Margaret A. Edwards Award.

34
John Updike
  • Updike was born on March 18, 1932 in
    Shillington, Pennsylvania. Updike suffered from
    psoriasis and stammering. Updike went to Harvard
    on a full scholarship. Updike was the president
    of the Harvard Lampoon.
  • Updike is known for the Rabbit series.
  • Updikes awards include two Pulitzer Prize awards.

35
Daniel Keyes
  • Daniel Keyes was born on August 9, 1927 in
    Brooklyn, NYC, NY. Daniel obtained a B.A. in
    psychology. Daniel earned a Masters degree in
    English and American literature while teaching
    English in public schools.
  • Daniel is best known for Flowers for Algernon.
  • Daniels accomplishments include the Author
    Emeritus honor by the Science Fiction and Fantasy
    Writers of America in 2000.

36
Summary
  • All of these authors R.L. Stine, John
    Steinbeck, AVI, Gary Paulsen, John Updike, and
    Daniel Keyes all written their books around the
    same time period.
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