L.C. Kanon's Blog, page 139
October 31, 2012
The Early Jobs of 24 Famous Writers
The Early Jobs of 24 Famous Writers :
William S. Burroughs was an exterminator. He really liked that job. He liked the word, too, and published a collection of short stories called Exterminator! not to be confused with a collaborative collection of stories with Brion Gysin called The Exterminator.
Vladimir Nabokov was an entomologist of underappreciated greatness. His theory of butterfly evolution was proven to be true in early 2011 using DNA analysis.
Margaret Atwood first worked as a counter girl in a coffeeshop in Toronto, serving coffee and operating a cash register, which was a source of serious frustration for her. She details the experience in her essay, “Ka-Ching!”
Don DeLillo took a job as a parking attendant when he was a teenager. It was so boring that he became an avid reader, which led him to pursue a career in writing.
Before writing 1984, George Orwell (born Eric Arthur Blair) was an officer of the Indian Imperial Police in Burma. He shouldered the heavy burden of protecting the safety of some 200,000 people, and was noted for his “sense of utter fairness.”
Though it’s apparent in reading Joseph Conrad’s work (especially Heart of Darkness) that he lived a large part of his life at sea, it’s maybe less obvious that he spent part of that time involved in gunrunning and political conspiracy.
Cha-Ching!
Published on October 31, 2012 07:01
October 30, 2012
October 29, 2012
"Spring Break" blog review, "Well written but just a bit to unreal for my taste." Right on, says SGP!
Published on October 29, 2012 08:00
More Butt-Kicking Babes in Movies (Please)!
Check out LC Kanon’s guest post over at Pretty Opinionated.
Published on October 29, 2012 06:00








