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Reply To: | A LISTSERV list for discussions pertaining to New York State history." < [log in to unmask]> |
Date: | Thu, 4 Apr 2002 08:59:17 -0500 |
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Also as film or novel, Drums Along the Mohawk and as novels the fiction of some of the New York State regional writers, such as Irving Batchellor. Richard Russo, who wrote the novel Nobody's Fool, certainly would be a good choice if you want to see in fiction how a depressed area's people live. I also recommend World's End by T. O'C. Boyle, a sort of surreal novel of the Hudson Valley that yaws back and forth between colonial and modern times.
>>> [log in to unmask] 04/03/02 01:40PM >>>
These are all terrific suggestions. I would also consider having your students research and evaluate current fiction set in their own counties, or allow them to pick and study a city, county or region. NY locales are the settings for many contemporary novels.
To keep students' interest, you could also make reference to movies based on novels and filmed in NY. Among recent films set in Upstate I'm thinking of "Nobody's Fool."
David Palmquist
NY State Museum
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>>> [log in to unmask] 04/03/02 10:22AM >>>
Folks--
I have been hired to teach a one-semester New York State history course at
the university level for this coming fall term. In hopes of offering
students a variety of sources from which to work, I'm looking for teachable
novels about the state, but preferably ones that are not solely about New
York City. Any suggestions?
Tom Baker
soon-to-be Assistant Professor of History, SUNY-Potsdam
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