Category Archives: Ames Highlights

Tech Tuesday – New Database!

Ames Library has just signed up for a new database! The Kanopy streaming video database is available for use in classrooms and wherever else you need it.

KANOPY logoHere’s your chance to watch entire films or preview many interesting titles!  Kanopy offers a broad selection of over 12,000 films and documentaries, featuring such producers as Media Education Foundation, Criterion Collection, PBS, California Newsreel, HBO, Kino Lorber, and more.

Search Tips

  1. To look for an exact title or phrase, put your search terms in quotation marks (e.g. “Killing Us Softly”).
  2. Include “AND” between search terms to view results that must contain both words (not just either word).
  3. Having searched for keywords, use the filters on the left side of the search results page to narrow your search (by category, producer, year of production, etc)

The library welcomes your feedback on this resource.  Please send comments to Marcia Thomas, mthomas@iwu.edu.

Sayles/Renzi Film Festival

film festivalOn March 25th and 26th, we will be hosting acclaimed filmmaker John Sayles and producer Maggie Renzi on campus. In support of their visit, we will be sponsoring a John Sayles mini-film festival during the week prior to and during their visit. Sayles and Renzi will be attending classes, meeting with faculty, students, and staff during lunches and dinners, and will be giving a public talk after the screening of Amigo, one of their more recent films starring academy award winner Chris Cooper. In addition, Sayles, who in addition to having been nominated for two academy awards, is a MacArthur Award winner and a National Book Award finalist,  will be giving a public reading of some of his fiction. More about the film festival and their visit during our meeting.

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From Sayle’s website: “Sayles’ career as a storyteller BEGAN WITH HIS FICTION. HIS FIRST NOVEL WAS Pride of the Bimbos (1975), FOLLOWED BY Union Dues (1978, nominated for National Book Award and National Critics’ Circle Award)). Los Gusanos (1990) CAME NEXT AND THEN short story collections The Anarchists’ Convention (1979) and Dillinger in Hollywood (2004)THE epic historical novel A Moment in the Sun  IS HIS MOST RECENT NOVEL, PUBLISHED IN 2011 BY MCSWEENY’S.

Fiction brought him to the attention of legendary director/producer Roger Corman, for whom he wrote screenplays for such B classics as Piranha, Battle Beyond the Stars and The Lady In RedContinuing to work with directors who had developed in the Corman school, he penned The Howling and Alligator, two works that helped establish a new, more self-aware horror film tradition.

Screenwriting is still Sayles’ primary profession, and credited or not, he has been able to work in a myriad of genres- Western (The Quick and the Dead), techno-thriller (Apollo 13), action (Men of War), monster flick (Mimic), romance, historical epic, animated features- crafting over sixty screenplays-for-hire over the years.  The job has allowed him to work with directors such as John Frankenheimer, Steven Spielberg, Jonathan Demme, Sidney Pollack, Billie August, Ron Howard, Sam Raimi, Joe Dante, Rob Reiner, and James Cameron among others, and get a view of their storytelling process.

Secaucus 7 was a surprise success, one of a number of films in the early 80’s that began to be described as part of ‘the independent film movement’.  The Sundance Film Institute and its make-or-break Festival did not yet exist, but with each subsequent indie film Sayles and his collaborators found more company, and competition, at the theatrical box office.  Standing out from the crowd is always a challenge for a filmmaker, and Sayles’ work was notable not only for its rapid increase in technical mastery (breaking the $100,000 budget barrier didn’t hurt) but for the eclectic, ever-changing array of subject matter.  Lianna (1983) was a tight family drama about a wife and mother dealing with the realization that she is a lesbian, whileBaby It’s You (1983), Sayles’ first studio backed (and virtually abandoned) film, dealt with the life crisis of a Jewish girl catapulted from working-class Trenton to Sarah Lawrence college in the wild mid-60’s.  Cult classic Brother From Another Planet (1985) followed a three-toed alien stranded in Harlem attempting to ‘assimilate’.

During a lull in financing, he had the opportunity to direct three early rock videos for Bruce Springsteen, Born in the USA, I’m on Fire and Glory Days.

Finally able to raise just enough money to shoot Matewan (1987) an extremely ambitious low-budget pseudo-Western about a bitter, violent coal miners’ strike of 1920, Sayles continued to explore different territory each time out.   Eight Men Out (1988), based on Eliot Asinof’s classic non-fiction account, explored the Black Sox Scandal of the 1919 World Series, while City of Hope (1990) is set in a decaying, eastern-urban city and features a complex web of politics and crime that foreshadows the HBO series The Wire.   Passion Fish (1992)a sadVespa-portrait-e1333472182505, romantic trip to Cajun country in Louisiana for a story of two women who help each other rebuild their lives, won Sayles his first Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay.

Sayles’ first feature shot outside the U.S was The Secret of Roan Inish (1994), based on a children’s book about a young girl descended from a selkie (seal-woman).  Lone Star (1996),also garnering an Oscar nomination for Best Original Screenplay, took place in a town on the Texas-Mexico border and dealt with race, memory and legend.   Even further afield was Men With Guns (Hombres Armados, 1997), a political parable set in a fictional Latin American country (nominated as Best Foreign Language Film for the Golden Globes).  With dialogue principally in Spanish, it remains one of the few instances where the long tradition of foreign directors coming to Hollywood and working in English has been reversed.

Limbo (1999), another studio-backed film, took Sayles to Alaska, ‘where Nature is big and people are small’ and provoked controversy everywhere it played with its 70’s-style open ending.  The next picture, Sunshine State (2000), took place at the extreme opposite end of the country in a multi-character tale of roots and real estate on a Florida tourist island.   As usual there were familiar faces from other of Sayles’ films as well as newcomers.  Over the years he has been able to work with excellent actors on several different stories, actors like David Strathairn, Chris Cooper, Kris Kristofferson, Joe Morton, Angela Bassett, Mary McDonnell, Gordon Clapp, Mary Steenbergen, Vanessa Martinez, Bill Cobbs, Susan Lynch-  the list goes on.

One of Sayles’ short stories became the mico-budgeted Casa de los Babies (2003), shot in Acapulco with a knockout American/Mexican cast.  Silver City, rushed into production for the election year of 2004, was much more specific in its politics than previous outings, and marked his fourth collaboration with noted cinematographer Haskell Wexler.

Honeydripper (2007), about the origins of rock and roll in the deep South, was shot in Georgiana, Alabama, where country legend Hank Williams grew up. Danny Glover, Charles Dutton, Stacey Keach, R&B legend Mabel John, singer-songwriter Keb Mo and Austin guitar sensation Gary Clark Jr. combined their talents for a feel-good movie with a memorable soundtrack, winning an NAACP Image Award for best independent film.   His latest film,Amigo (2011) deals with a suppressed aspect of our history, the Philippine-American War, and was nominated for the Filipino equivalent of the Oscar in several categories.

Sayles continues his work for hire on features and television series, as well as writing original scripts.  He will be shooting his 18th feature, currently titled Go for Sisters, this summer.

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Maggie Renzi has been John Sayles’ creative partner since 1978 and she has produced nearly all of his movies.

From Maggie Renzi’s page: She has also acted in many of them. Renzi and Sayles were students together at Williams College in the early 1970s, and have been together since 1973.

Before becoming a fulltime producer Renzi had worked as a bookstore clerk, a pediatric receptionist, a substitute teacher, a casting assistant, a talent agent’s assistant, and for two years as a salad chef in Southern California. She began her acting career as a child at the Williamstown Theater Festival, where she continued to perform into her twenties. Renzi began her professional association with Sayles when she played a leading role in his first film,The Return of the Secaucus Seven, where she was also Unit Manager and Assistant Editor.

For John Sayles, Maggie Renzi has produced Lianna, The Brother from Another Planet,Matewan, City of Hope, Passion Fish, The Secret of Roan Inish, Lone Star, Men With Guns,Limbo, Sunshine State, Silver City, Honeydripper, and Amigo.

In addition to mastering the highly specialized craft of producing thematically ambitious films on small budgets, under often adverse conditions, Renzi has made key creative contributions to many of Sayles’ films-suggestMaggie-on-Amigo-Set1ing that Louisiana was the perfect location for Passion Fish, for example, and discovering the novel by Rosalie K. Fry that Sayles adapted as The Secret of Roan Inish.

Since her linchpin performance as Kate, who hosts the weekend gathering in The Return of the Secaucus Seven, Maggie Renzi has also played featured roles in many of the movies she has produced. She is especially memorable as Sheila the friendly neighbor in Lianna, as the social worker Noreen in The Brother From Another Planet, as the Italian immigrant wife Rosaria in Matewan, and as the American tourist glued to her guidebook in Men With Guns. She also appeared in Jonathan Demme’s film Swing Shift (1984) and in Key Exchange(1985).

“It’s pretty interesting to have a record of yourself aging on film.” Renzi says. “In Secaucus Seven I was 28 years old and I weighed 118 pounds. By the time I saw myself in Passion FishI thought, ‘I think I’m gonna wait until I’m a genuine old lady before I go in front of a camera again.’ Also, I really like producing. It’s where I am most fully myself at work, more than I am as an actress.”

In 2000 Renzi produced, in partnership with Sarah Green and Martha Griffin, Karyn Kusama’s acclaimed debut feature Girlfight. The film went on to win several international festival awards (including the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance) and the Independent Spirit award as Best First Feature. The film’s star, Michelle Rodriguez, also won critical acclaim and several awards for her performance as a young Latina pursuing a boxing career. Co-Executive Produced by Sayles and Jonathan Sehring of IFC Films, Girlfight featured Jaime Tirelli (Hector in The Brother From Another Planet) as the heroine’s show-me trainer.

According to director Karyn Kusama, “Maggie has a very dynamic personality,” “so she moves things through when most people couldn’t. She’s persuasive and charismatic. Those are very important qualities for someone who has to be diplomatic with a host of different people, and at times forceful with those same people.”

“Different producers have different styles,” Renzi asserts. “Mine is very hands on. Even now, I’ve been doing it for twenty years, I’m still up and on the set at morning call and I eat with everyone else and I wrap out the day with everyone else. My job is really about fulfilling the director’s vision. I think particularly as a woman it’s taken me a long time to really sit in my own chair. But also it doesn’t really suit the independent style to be too much of a show-off about being a producer.”

Most recently, Renzi was an Executive Producer with Sayles on the Alejandro Springall movie, entitled Morirse esta en Hebreo or My Mexican Shivah.

 

#tbt Advice from the Past

Originally appearing on the Ames Library Tate Archives Blog – Here’s an excerpt from some advice given by students in the 19th Century: “The aim of all college students should be to gain knowledge…We are here as a body of students to cultivate our minds, so that we may be able to cope with the outside world….”

 

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Diversity Explosion – What’s New Wednesday

From Amazon.com

“At its optimistic best, America has embraced its identity as the world’s melting pot. Today it is on the cusp of becoming a country with no racial majority, and new minorities are poised to exert a profound impact on U.S. society, economy, and politics. The concept of a “minority white” may instill fear among some Americans, but William H. Frey, the man behind the demographic research, points out that demography is destiny, and the fear of a more racially diverse nation will almost certainly dissipate over time.

Through a compelling narrative and eye-catching charts and maps, eminent demographer Frey interprets and expounds on the dramatic growth of minorityindex populations in the United States. He finds that without these expanding groups, America could face a bleak future: this new generation of young minorities, who are having children at a faster rate than whites, is infusing our aging labor force with vitality and innovation. In contrast with the labor force-age population of Japan, Germany, Italy, and the United Kingdom, the U.S. labor force-age population is set to grow 5 percent by 2030.

Diversity Explosion shares the good news about diversity in the coming decades, and the more globalized, multiracial country that the U.S. is becoming.”

Check out this new edition to The Ames Library collection. Interested in other similar titles? Browse through the E184s on the 2nd floor to get in touch with a librarian.

Trial Tuesday!

The Ames Library has several trial databases running. Trialing a database is the best way to determine (for free) if a particular databasse will be useful to you. As such, we need your input. Check out these databases and send any feedback to Marcia Thomas, Collections Librarians.
readers guide
Trial for Reader’s Guide Retrospective (1890-1982) – through May 25.  You can discover materials from this resource throug the A-Z Resources list and Megasearch. Readers’ Guide Retrospective contains comprehensive indexing of the most popular general-interest periodicals published in the United States and reflects the history of 20th century America.

AmericaHistLife_Masthead_Web

Trial for America: History & Life w/ Full Text – through June 2. You can discover materials from this resource throug the A-Z Resources list and Megasearch. Database of literature covering history and culture of the United States & Canada, from prehistory to present.

HistAbsFT_Masthead_Web

Trial for Historical Abstracts w/ Full Text – through June 2. You can discover materials from this resource throug the A-Z Resources list and Megasearch. Covers the history of the world (excluding the United States and Canada) from 1450 to present, including world history, military history, women’s history, history of education and more.

To Vend or Not to Vend…

Welcome back Titans! Spring has come at last! We hope everyone had a great spring break and is now ready for the rest of the semester.

So what do you really need in order to succeed for the rest of the summer?

  • Space to study? Ames Library has all sorts of spaces for you!
  • Scholarly resources? Oh yeah, we’ve got lots of those.
  • Computers to work on? Yup, got those too.

IMG_0581So what else could you need? Coffee, snacks, and sodas? Hey! We’ve got those now too! We installed a new vending area on the entry level over spring break (head straight back from the front doors). We’ve got three new machines that accept cash or credit (sorry, no munch money), all fully stocked and ready to go! Our coffee machine is brand new and serves up some great brew.

Starting today, we’ve also got an exhibit of East German comic books on display by the Circulation Desk. “Atze and Mosaik: History and Politics in East German Comics: 1914-1989”

March 16 through May 2015 – Ames Library – 1st Floor

Exhibit by Thomas Kramer, English Translation by IWU German students

Come see this compelling presentation of history and politics from an East German perspective as portrayed in two of the country’s most popular comic book series. The exhibit of twenty posters begins with World War I and finishes with an analysis of the portrayal of race and colonialism in the comic books. Other topics include the image of the Soviet Union, the Spanish Civil War, German history of the 20th century, the influence of East German cinema, Sputnik and the space race, educational policy, and the image of Vietnam. The posters in this exhibit are part of a larger exhibit that was shown in Berlin and Cottbus, Germany in the summer 2014.

All of the German text of the original exhibit was translated into English by students in Ger 201 Intermediate German I, Ger 370 Advanced German, and Ger 488 From Democracy to Dictatorship in fall 2014 with the help of our IES exchange student – Eva Strittmatter and the German Studies faculty members.

There will be an opening reception on Monday, March 16th at 4 pm on the 1st floor of the Ames Library. Please join us.

Tuesday, 4pm, Beckman Auditorium – Speaker Alan Shapiro, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, sponsored by Greek and Roman Studies with support from a Mellon Re-Centering the Humanities Grant.

Tuesday, 7pm, Beckman Auditorium – Greek & Roman Studies Poetry Reading, Sponsored by Greek and Roman Studies with support from a Mellon Re-Centering the Humanities Grant.

Tuesday, 8pm, Beckman Auditorium – Roger Ebert described “Lone Star” as “a great American movie, one of the few to seriously try to regard with open eyes the way we live now. Set in a town that until very recently was rigidly segregated, it shows how Chicanos, blacks, whites and Indians shared a common history, and how they knew one another and dealt with one another in ways that were off the official map. This film is a wonder — the best work yet by one of our most original and independent filmmakers — and after it is over, and you begin to think about it, its meanings begin to flower.”

Wednesday, 7pm, Beckman Auditorium – “Matewan,” As described by Vincent Canby in the New York Times, 1987: “Taking as his source material an especially bitter and bloody confrontation between West Virginia coal miners and the company that owned their souls in 1920, John Sayles has made a film with the sweetness and simplicity of an Appalachian balladfilm festival. “‘Matewan’ is so direct in its sympathies and so unsophisticated in its methods that it seems to be an intrusion on our awareness of everything that’s happened to complicate the American labor movement between then and now. “Yet it’s this awareness that gives ‘Matewan’ its poignancy and separates it from the old, optimistic, in-unity-there-is-strength movies made in the 1930s. Mr. Sayles understands that there is strength in unity, but his film is seen in the context of more than 60 years of labor history, which had included the growth of giant unions vulnerable to corruption, and, more recently, a political climate in which union-busting causes little outrage.”

Thursday, 4pm, Beckman Auditorium – “Casa de los Babys,” As described by Stephen Holden in the New York Times, 2003: “This coolly observant movie follows six white American women, all but one over 30, who are impatiently waiting out their lengthy residency requirements in an unidentified South American country before picking up their adoptive babies at an orphanage. “Despite its emotionally loaded theme, the film is a scrupulously suds-free examination of motherhood as it is viewed in first- and third-world countries. The closest it gets to misty-eyed is in its panoramic shots of wide-eyed Latino infants who will soon be transported from a nation mired in poverty to a land of plenty. “Like every other movie by this writer and director, ‘Casa de los Babys’ is rooted in Mr. Sayles’s profound awareness of the degree to which the personal is political in everyone’s lives, and the ways in which money, class and ethnicity shape our points of view. At his savviest, Mr. Sayles shows an exceptional talent for camouflaging his characters’ functions as mouthpieces by giving them sharp, quirky dialogue.”

Thursday, 7pm, Beckman Auditorium – “Offside” (2006, Iran), presented by Associate Professor of English Alison Sainsbury.

Instruction Lab, Room 129

  • Monday, 8am – Hispanic Studies 280
  • Monday, 10am – Prof. Chaulagain’s Gateway
  • Tuesday, 9:25am – Political Science 225
  • Tuesday, 2:30pm – Google Drive Training
  • Thursday, 10:00am – Google Drive Training

Meeting Room 214

  • Monday, 9:30am – Network Meeting
  • Monday, 10:30am – Disaster Recovery Meeting
  • Tuesday, 1:00pm – Assessment Committee Meeting
  • Tuesday, 2:00pm – ITS Meeting
  • Tuesday, 4:30pm – Star Literacy
  • Wednesday, 9:00am – Star Literacy
  • Wednesday, 11:30am – Theatre Recruitment
  • Wednesday, 2:00pm – CUPP
  • Thursday, 1:00pm – CUPP
  • Thursday, 4:30pm – Star Literacy
  • Friday, 10:00am – Campus Climate Assessment Committee
  • Friday, 2:00pm – Portal Meeting

Beckman Auditorium

  • Monday, 6pm – Prof. Folse’s Gateway
  • Tuesday, 1:10pm – Sociology 222
  • Tuesday, 2:25 – Humanities 103
  • Tuesday, 4:00pm – Ides Lecture
  • Tuesday, 7:00pm – Poetry Reading
  • Tuesday, 8:00pm – John Sayles Film Festival
  • Wednesday, 7:00pm – John Sayles Film Festival
  • Thursday, 2:25pm – Theatre History II
  • Thursday, 4:00pm – John Sayles Film Festival
  • Thursday, 7:00pm – International Film Festival

Popular Fiction for Your Travels?

Are you on your way out of town for Spring Break? Going somewhere warm and sandy? Traveling by plane, train, or automobile? What better to do during those long travel hours and on warm sandy beaches than indulging in a little recreational reading? Ames Library has a whole collection of titles that are a welcome break from all that studying you’ve been doing!

popreading_collection

The Ames Library’s Popular Reading Collection consists of more than 400 recently published books covering a wide range of interests and topics.

If you’re looking for a way to escape from your daily routine, stop by and browse the collection.  You’ll find mysteries, suspense, romance, science fiction, and fantasy novels, as well as non-fiction books covering current issues and people in the news.

To see a list of current titles, click here.

The collection is located on the entry level – east of the Circulation Desk.  Books are available to faculty, students and staff and can be checked out for three weeks; there is no limit to the number of books you can check out and the items can be renewed.

Items are added to the collection on a regular basis, so be sure to stop by often and see what’s new.

Do you have suggestions for book titles to include?  Contact Gloria Redinger at gredinge@iwu.edu or 309-556-3526.

Writing Center Wednesday – ESL Services in Ames Library

The new English as a Second Language Service at IWU seeks to support the University’s international students and their academic and professional needs by providing ESL instruction and help with academic writing, reading and speaking. blacksmithOur primary goal is to enhance the learning experience of international students and support the University’s community.

If you have any questions about our services or would like to schedule an appointment, please contact Dr. Teodora Nikolova at tnikolov@iwu.edu or call (309) 556-3810.

As of Jan. 26, we are located in the Writing Center, Ames 105B.
Office hours are
Monday and Wednesday, 10 a.m.-12 p.m.
Tuesday and Thursday,  11 a.m.-2 p.m.

The Writing Center+ESL online scheduler is at iwu.mywconline.com.

Trial Tuesday!

readers guide
The Ames Library now has a trial for Reader’s Guide Retrospective (1890-1982) through May 25.  You can discover materials from this resource throug the A-Z Resources list and Megasearch.

Readers’ Guide Retrospective contains comprehensive indexing of the most popular general-interest periodicals published in the United States and reflects the history of 20th century America.

 

Marvelous Monday!

Spring break is almost here! It doesn’t feel much like spring in Bloomington, but the daily highs are supposed to be in the 40s this weekend, so there’s hope! Ames Library will be open limited hours during spring break. Learn all about our spring break hours and normal semester hours on our webpage!

Tuesday, Beckman Auditorium, 4pm – Indians Writing Latin: Native Americans and Classical Learning in Colonial New the-man-who-wouldnt-stand-upEngland – Craig Williams, professor of Classics at University of Illinois – Urbana-Champaign, will present a lecture on Native Americans and Latin. The event is free and open to anyone interested. There will be light refreshments for everyone to enjoy. Sponsor: Greek and Roman Studies

Thursday, Beckman Auditorium, 4pm – Author Jacob Appel will read from his fiction. He is the author of six literary works, including the novel The Man Who Wouldn’t Stand Up and the story collection Scouting for the Reaper.

Instruction Lab, Room 129

  • Monday, 2pm – Prof. Lessen’s Gateway
  • Tuesday, 4:30pm – Nursing 460
  • Wednesday, 11am – Help@Ames Meeting
  • Thursday, 9:30am – English 280
  • Thursday, 2:30pm – Nursing 460
  • Friday, 2:00pm – Hispanic Studies 280

Beckman Auditorium, Lower Level

  • Tuesday, 8:00am – Nursing 460
  • Tuesday, 9:30am – American Studies/History 150
  • Tuesday, 2:30pm – Humanities 103
  • Tuesday, 4:00pm – Ides of March Performance and Lecture Series
  • Tuesday, 7pm – LC 116 Film Showing
  • Wednesday, 11am – National Society of Leadership and Success Speaker Broadcast
  • Wednesday, 1:30pm – Technology Training for Beckman equipment
  • Wednesday, 8:00pm – National Society of Leadership and Success Speaker Broadcast
  • Thursday, 8:00am – Nursing 460
  • Thursday, 9:30am – American Studies/History 150
  • Thursday, 3:30pm – Jacob Appel Reading
  • Thursday, 7:00pm – International Film Series

Meeting Room 214, 2nd Floor

  • Monday, 9:30am – Network Meeting
  • Monday, 10:30am – Disaster Recovery Meeting
  • Tuesday, 10:00am – Library Public Services Meeting
  • Tuesday, 1:00pm – Assessment Committee Meeting
  • Tuesday, 4:30pm – Star Literacy
  • Wednesday, 9:30am – Star Literacy
  • Wednesday, 11:30am – Theatre Recruitment Meeting
  • Wednesday, 2:00pm – CUPP
  • Thursday, 1:00pm – CUPP
  • Thursday, 4:30pm – Star Literacy
  • Friday, 2:00pm – Portal Meeting

Want to know something cool?

advice dr seuss gave us“On this day in 1904, Theodor Geisel, better known to the world as Dr. Seuss, the author and illustrator of such beloved children’s books as “The Cat in the Hat” and “Green Eggs and Ham,” is born in Springfield, Massachusetts. Geisel, who used his middle name (which was also his mother’s maiden name) as his pen name, wrote 48 books–including some for adults–that have sold well over 200 million copies and been translated into multiple languages. Dr. Seuss books are known for their whimsical rhymes and quirky characters, which have names like the Lorax and the Sneetches and live in places like Hooterville.

Geisel, who was born on March 2, 1904, in Springfield, Massachusetts, graduated from Dartmouth College, where he was editor of the school’s humor magazine, and studied at Oxford University. There he met Helen Palmer, his first wife and the person who encouraged him to become a professional illustrator. Back in America, Geisel worked as a cartoonist for a variety of magazines and in advertising.

The first children’s book that Geisel wrote and illustrated, “And to Think That I Saw It On Mulberry Street,” was rejected by over two dozen publishers before making it into print in 1937. Geisel’s first bestseller, “The Cat in the Hat,” was published in 1957. The story of a mischievous cat in a tall striped hat came about after his publisher asked him to produce a book using 220 new-reader vocabulary words that could serve as an entertaining alternative to the school reading primers children found boring.

Other Dr. Seuss classics include “Yertle the Turtle,” “If I Ran the Circus,” “Fox in Socks” and “One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish.”

Some Dr. Seuss books tackled serious themes. “The Butter Battle Book” (1984) was about the arms buildup and nuclear war threat during Ronald Reagan’s presidency. “Lorax” (1971) dealt with the environment.

Many Dr. Seuss books have been adapted for television and film, including “How the Grinch Stole Christmas!” and “Horton Hears a Who!” In 1990, Geisel published a book for adults titled “Oh, the Places You’ll Go” that became a hugely popular graduation gift for high school and college students.

Geisel, who lived and worked in an old observatory in La Jolla, California, known as “The Tower,” died September 24, 1991, at age 87.”