美国 人物列表
非马 William Marr爱伦·坡 Edgar Alan Poe爱默生 Ralph Waldo Emerson
惠特曼 Walt Whitman狄更生 Emily Dickinson斯蒂芬·克兰 Stephan Crane
史蒂文斯 Wallace Stevens弗罗斯特 Robert Frost卡尔·桑德堡 Carl Sandberg
威廉斯 William Carlos Williams庞德 Ezra Pound杜丽特尔 Hilda Doolittle
奥登 Wystan Hugh Auden卡明斯 E. E. Cummings哈特·克莱恩 Hart Crane
罗伯特·邓肯 Robert Duncan查尔斯·奥尔森 Charles Olson阿门斯 A. R. Ammons
金斯堡 Allen Ginsberg约翰·阿什伯利 John Ashbery詹姆斯·泰特 James Tate
兰斯敦·休斯 Langston Hughes默温 W. S. Merwin罗伯特·勃莱 Robert Bly
毕肖普 Elizabeth Bishop罗伯特·洛威尔 Robert Lowell普拉斯 Sylvia Plath
约翰·贝里曼 John Berryman安妮·塞克斯顿 Anne Sexton斯诺德格拉斯 W. D. Snodgrass
弗兰克·奥哈拉 Frank O'Hara布洛茨基 L.D. Brodsky艾米·洛威尔 Amy Lowell
埃德娜·圣文森特·米蕾 Edna St. Vincent Millay萨拉·梯斯苔尔 Sara Teasdale马斯特斯 Edgar Lee Masters
威廉·斯塔福德 William Stafford艾德里安娜·里奇 Adrienne Rich大卫·伊格内托 David Ignatow
金内尔 Galway Kinnell西德尼·拉尼尔 Sidney Lanier霍华德·奈莫洛夫 Howard Nemerov
玛丽·奥利弗 Mary Oliver阿奇波德·麦克里许 阿奇波德麦 Kerry Xu杰弗斯诗选 Robinson Jeffers
露易丝·格丽克 Louise Glück凯特·莱特 Kate Light施加彰 Arthur Sze
李立扬 Li Young Lee斯塔夫理阿诺斯 L. S. Stavrianos阿特 Art
费翔 Kris Phillips许慧欣 eVonne杰罗姆·大卫·塞林格 Jerome David Salinger
巴拉克·奥巴马 Barack Hussein Obama朱瑟琳·乔塞尔森 Josselson, R.詹姆斯·泰伯 詹姆斯泰伯
威廉·恩道尔 Frederick William Engdahl马克·佩恩 Mark - Payne拉吉-帕特尔 Raj - Patel
史奈德 Don J. Snyder
美国 现代美国  (1950年)

都市生活 urbanism《我要养活这家人》

阅读史奈德 Don J. Snyder在小说之家的作品!!!
  唐·J·史奈德在缅因州的斯卡巴勒港口是一个保姆和油漆工。他的作品有一部传记《一个士兵的耻辱》和两部小说《切重要点》、《退伍军人的公园》。《我要养活这家人》摘要连载在《哈伯杂志》上作为封面小说而发表。


  Don J. Snyder (born 1950 Pennsylvania) is an American novelist and screenwriter.
  
  Life
  
  He grew up in Bangor, Maine. He graduated from Colby College in 1968 and earned a Masters Of Fine Arts from the Iowa Writers Workshop in 1986 where he was chosen for their prestigious Teaching-Writing Fellowship. He was awarded a James Michener Fellowship for his first novel. He taught at Colgate University, Colby College, The University of Maine, and Columbia College. In 1997 He became a Canadian citizen and moved his family to the seaside village of St. Andrews, New Brunswick where he created a Writing Retreat for new MFA grads. TheWritingRetreat.com. In 1984 he married Colleen McQuinn of Maine. They eloped in Winchester England where she was teaching at the time, then rode the Night Ryder train from London to Scotland to begin their honeymoon. From 1985, until 1990 they had four children, three daughters—Erin, Nell, Cara—and a son, Jack. In 1987 they lived in County Wicklow, Ireland with two babies while Don wrote his second novel, From The Point. In 2008 Don returned to Scotland to work as a caddie.
  [edit]Literary career
  
  Don J. Snyder's formal training as a writer took place at the Iowa Writer's Workshop where he won the prestigious teaching Writing Fellowship and earned an M.F.A.. After receiving a James A. Michener Fellowship for his first novel, he went on to publish five novels and three critically acclaimed nonfiction books with Alfred A. Knopf, Little Brown, Simon & Schuster and Doubleday. His work has been translated in eleven languages and his books which have sold across the world, concern themselves with loss, redemption and the accommodations we make to bridge the distance between how we dream our lives will turn out and how they actually do. His earliest desire as a writer was to write books that would deprive the world of some of its indifference and its loneliness. He credits his success as a novelist to the instruction he received from the writer, Richard Yates.
  He spent from 1978 until 1985 writing A Soldier's Disgrace, a nonfiction book intended to clear the name of a U.S. Army officer falsely accused of being a traitor while he was held prisoner by the Chinese during the Korean War. When the book was published in 1987, C. Michael Curtis, the renowned Senior Editor of The Atlantic Monthly wrote: "This book deserves a Pulitzer Prize." In August 1998, He flew to Omagh, Northern Ireland sixteen hours after the bombing there. He attended thirteen funerals and immediately began writing his novel, Night Crossing for Knopf, which took him back to Northern Ireland the following summer where he finished the novel after spending time at the site of every IRA bombing in the history of the Troubles. A 1996 cover story for Harper's Magazine led to his memoir, The Cliff Walk, which was published by LIttle Brown the following year.
  His first experience with Hollywood came in 1986 when the film rights to his nonfiction book, A Soldier's Disgrace, were purchased by Paramount Pictures. Martin Brest was signed on to direct, (He would later direct "Scent Of A Woman") the Australian screenwriter, David Williamson, ("The Year Of Living Dangerously") was hired to write the script. The movie was never made. In 1997 Kathleen Kennedy who had just won an Academy Award for "Schindler's List" bought the rilm rights to Snyder's book, The Cliff Walk, and signed Curtis Hanson to Direct. Hanson had just won the Academy Award for "LA Confidential," but the project was shelved a year later. In 2001 when the Hallmark Hall Of Fame bought film rights to his novel, Fallen Angel, Snyder was hired to write the script. That film which starred Gary Sinise and Joley Richardson, and was the highest rated TV movie in 2003, airs every year on The Hallmark Channel.
  In 1999 when Oprah Winfrey decided to produce a series of book videos to try to do for books in America what videos had done for music, the first book she chose for this project was Snyder's, Of Time & Memory, a critically acclaimed memoir, published in New York by Alfred A. Knopf, which told the true story of Peggy Schwartz, a nineteen year old girl who died one August morning in 1950 in Hatfield, Pennsylvania, nine months after her wedding to a young soldier, leaving him behind with their twin baby boys who were just sixteen days old.
  Mark Pellington, the brilliant young Hollywood director who had made the classic music videos for Bruce Springsteen and the Irish band, U2, was hired to direct and he took a film crew to Hatfield, to document the sad beauty of Peggy's love story and the mystery that shrouded her death. Her marriage bed and all her belongings, including the Singer sewing machine she had used to make her wedding dress and baby clothes, were given away soon after she died. And when her husband in his desolation began sleeping every night on her grave, he had to be placed under a physician's care.
  The people of Hatfield who had watched Peggy grow up spent the next fifty years wondering why she had died, and why her twin sons were never told about their mother. Though the boys grew up with their father and his new wife just a few blocks from the cemetery where Peggy was buried, the family minister, a Lutheran pastor, had instructed their father never to take them there.
  One of those sons went on to become a Lutheran minister himself. The other became a writer.
  Don J. Snyder was forty-seven years old when he stood at Peggy's grave for the first time. He had been writing his way there for most of his life, though he didn't know this. He also didn't know how close he was to uncovering the secret that his nineteen year old mother had taken to her grave almost half a century before.
  It was a secret she had shared only with her doctor, and when Don found the man, he swore that Peggy had never been his patient. Then just before his death, he revealed the truth which he had kept hidden for so long.
  Dr. Clinton Toewe, was a brilliant young obstetrician just a few years out of medical school when he first met Peggy. He diagnosed her pregnancy in the fifth week, and soon after discovered that the fetus was poisoning her kidneys. He told her that she would die unless he performed an abortion. He placed before her the choice of saving herself or the baby she was carrying.
  She told him that she wanted to save her baby.
  But in the sixth month of her pregnancy when she was gravely ill, she went to him to save her life. As he prepared to perform a late term abortion, he examined Peggy with his stethoscope and heard two hearts beating, not one, and when he told her that she was carrying twins, she would not let him take her babies. Here the choice became almost impossible for her because she knew that by chosing to give up her life for her babies, she was, in essence, choosing them over the young man who loved her. She was his first and last love, and he was hers. They loved each other depthlessly, and her death would destroy him, she knew this. And because she was afraid he would not be able to be a good father to her babies if he knew they had caused her death, she made the doctor promise to keep all of this secret from him. And so he kept his silence. He delivered the babies just before four o'clock in the morning on August 11, his first set of twins. Sixteen days later Peggy died.
  It took Snyder two years to write this story in his book, and from 2003-2009 to finish his screenplay adaptation titled,"American Love Story." In a 1998 interview with The Associated Press Snyder spoke about his screenplay, saying he believed the movie would one day take its place among the greatest love stories ever brought to film. " In addition to being a breathtakingly beautiful story of first love that embraces the enduring themes of redemption and forgiveness, it is also a detective story which follows the son out of the darkness of his own life as he discovers the love story that carried him into the world."
  Snyder's father barely made it through the years after Peggy died, and because he was far too broken to be a real father, Snyder drifted away from him for many years. All his life he believed it was his father who had to ask to be forgiven for never being present in his life; but finally he knew that he and his brother had to be forgiven for taking from their father the girl he loved.
  According to Snyder:
  All the great films across the years have compelled us to see our lives in a new way and so they have struck an urgency in our culture. Because Peggy at age nineteen experienced all the emotions on both sides of what has become a debate over abortion in America, and because her final decision placed her on the common ground that both sides often seem blind to, namely Antiabortion, Prochoice, this film has the chance to draw the opposing sides together by making us see abortion as we never have before, just as the film "Kramer Vs. Kramer" once made us see divorce in a new way. In addition to this script, Snyder has been working for years on a Frank Capra style Christmas movie called The Winter Travelers.
  His work appeared in The New York Times Sunday Magazine, and Harper's Magazine.
  [edit]Bibliography
  
  Novels
  Soldier's Disgrace: US Army Officer as POW in Korea. Dublin NH: Yankee Books. 1987. ISBN 0899091393.
  Veterans Park. Ballantine Books. 1988. ISBN 9780804102865.
  From the Point (1988) reprint. Ivy Books. 1989. ISBN 9780804103978.
  Fallen Angel. Simon and Schuster. 2001. ISBN 9780743423694.
  Night Crossing. Alfred A. Knopf. 2001. ISBN 9780375409066.
  Winter dreams. Doubleday. 2004. ISBN 9780385508506.
  Non-fiction
  The cliff walk : a memoir of a job lost and a life found. Little, Brown and Company. 1998. ISBN 9780316803489.
  Of time and memory : a mother's story (1999)
  Of time and memory : My Parents' Love Story. Random House. 2001. ISBN 9780345427694. (trade paperback)
    

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