Afbeelding auteur

Peggy Teeters (1918–2011)

Auteur van The Cat with No Tail (Books for Young Learners)

5 Werken 69 Leden 6 Besprekingen

Werken van Peggy Teeters

How to Get Started in Writing (1980) 19 exemplaren
You Can Get Published (1998) 10 exemplaren
Weekend Romance (1993) 7 exemplaren

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Gangbare naam
Teeters, Peggy
Officiële naam
Teeters, Elsie Barbara Lang
Geboortedatum
1918-02-08
Overlijdensdatum
2011-01-27
Graflocatie
Oakwood Cemetery, Falls Church, Virginia, USA
Geslacht
female
Nationaliteit
USA
Geboorteplaats
Hoboken, New Jersey, USA
Plaats van overlijden
Washington, D.C., USA
Opleiding
St. Norbert College
Montclair State University
Beroepen
author
journalist
columnist
teacher
Organisaties
Society of Children's Book Writers
Mystery Writers of America
American Association of University Women
Korte biografie
Elsie Barbara "Peggy" Teeters, née Lang, was born in Hoboken, New Jersey. She attended what is now Montclair State University in New Jersey. She later graduated from St. Norbert College in Wisconsin. Peggy began her wide-ranging writing career creating radio and television scripts for public stations in Washington, DC, while working as a substitute teacher in Arlington, Virginia.

Leden

Besprekingen

This is a folktale retold, about how the Manx cat came to have to nail. Legend has it that a cat was so busy trying to catch a mouse, he almost missed getting on Noah's ark. He squeezes in, but his tail doesn't quite make it.
 
Gemarkeerd
steffsweet | 4 andere besprekingen | Mar 7, 2018 |
Genre: Fantasy
Summary: This book seems to e quite interesting just from the tile of the book. The author used a interesting way to tell a how Manx cat is formed based on the story of Noah Ark. And the nonfiction note in the end of the book is also helpful to know Manx cat.
Review: The cat in this book seem to be very clinging. He lose his tail in order to catch a mouse. Finally, he became a Manx cat.
The pictures in this book are also impressive. The author did not used many words instead pictures showed what author wanted to express. I think it is a good book for bedtime story. I love this book!… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
xye15 | 4 andere besprekingen | Jan 29, 2016 |
This short biography is a wonderful introduction to the life and writings of Jules Verne. Peggy Teeters has interwoven a believable historical narrative around the literary genius of Jules Verne. Throughout this tale, she pays close attention to the events surrounding the Second and Third French Republic. During the Second Republic (1848), Jules Verne was a naive law student trying to surreptitiously work his way into Parisian literary society. While he was living in Paris, he happened to gain the friendship and tutelage of one of his early literary heroes, Alexander Dumas. Through his failed attempts to write a fashionable story in the vein of Dumas, he created his own literary genre: the science fiction novel. Around the time of the Third Republic (1870), Verne was stationed off the coast with a naval fleet, writing his most famous novel, Around the World in Eighty Days.

One of the credits I give Teeters in this book, is delving into Verne's influences, and giving brief summaries of important moments from Verne books. Some of Verne's books are notoriously long, tedious, and repetitive. She notices how Victor Hugo and Alexander Dumas were early influences. She also goes into the various influences that Poe's early writing had on his works (while leaving out the possible influence of the later Poe). The existence of at least two landmarks in 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea show Poe's influence: the trans-Atlantic cable Poe had predicted before his death in "Mellonta Tauta", and the ejection of the Nautilus passengers from the maelstrom off the cliffs of Lofoden, recounted in Poe's "A Descent into the Maelstrom". Teeters makes special mention of the influence of Poe's stories on the young Verne.

Verne was also become a balloon flight enthusiast after reading Poe's balloon stories. Knowing the famous aviationist, Nadar, also fanned the flame of his interest. In his excitement for a future of balloon travel, he had developed an energy efficient design for a balloon that regulated a constant amount of gas between the envelopes of two balloons, one placed inside the other. As far as I can tell, this is still a relevant idea for our future of energy efficient transportation. The myth about balloon travel in Around the World in Eighty Days, promoted by the 1956 movie, is also dispersed, when we understand where Verne's enthusiasm for balloons originated. He had used balloon travel as the theme for his debut novel, Five Weeks in a Balloon, and later in The Mysterious Island. Only in the Hollywood version of Around the World in 80 Days does a balloon appear as a form of travel for Phileas Fogg. After the screening of the popular 1956 movie, the image of Fogg in a balloon began appearing on newly published covers of Verne's book.

Teeters delves into the possible impact Verne's family relationships had on his writing. His father, who wanted him to follow the family tradition of becoming a lawyer, eventually conceded to his son's literary ambitions. His mother and brother, however, always had faith in him. One fact that I did not know before reading this book, is that Verne's publisher, Hetzel, was mainly a publisher of children's literature. He had commissioned Verne to write his series, "Extraordinary Voyages", for an audience of young readers. Unlike some other authors whose works are marketed to young audiences long after their literary era, even though their works were originally intended for adults (Poe and Dickens), Verne's works were originally intended for young audiences. As Verne's fame grew as a science fiction author, his books were also largely anticipated by adult audiences.

Verne was one of the first authors to anticipate the genre of "hard" science fiction. Journey to the Center of the Earth reportedly predicted the discovery of fossils in caves by a number of years. From the Earth to the Moon, besides sparking the ambitions of many of the scientists who contributed to NASA's space program, also predicted the original design and location of the first American rocket launch. Verne's imaginative work will go down in history as a testament to human ability to see into the far future. In this misty future, optimism for scientific technology is paradoxically pessimism, as the tables are turned on the barbaric conquests of civilization.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
mpresti | Apr 5, 2015 |
This is a good book for primary students learning to read.

This book is a myth. It is a myth because it gives an untrue explanation to something that is not known. In this book, it says that the Manx cat came to be because Noah shut the door on its tail when he closed the ark. Since Manx cats have no tails in real life, the author saying that this is the reason for that.

There are no deep characters in the book, just one flat character which is the cat. He does not grow throughout the story, we just learn that he loves to chase mice and does not pay attention to much of anything else.

The setting of the story is right outside Noah's Ark just before the storm comes.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
mulstad07 | 4 andere besprekingen | Oct 27, 2010 |

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Statistieken

Werken
5
Leden
69
Populariteit
#250,752
Waardering
½ 3.4
Besprekingen
6
ISBNs
8

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