
Bill VanPatten
Author of Destinos: An Introduction to Spanish (Student Edition)
About the Author
Dr Alessandro G Benati is Principal Lecturer in SLA and Head of the Department of Languages and International Studies at the University of Greenwich, UK. Professor Bill VanPatten is Interim Head at the Department of Spanish, French, Italian, and Portuguese at the University of Illinois at Chicago, show more USA show less
Series
Works by Bill VanPatten
Workbook/Study Guide I (Lessons 1-26) to accompany Destinos: An Introduction to Spanish (1992) 72 copies
Theories in Second Language Acquisition: An Introduction (Second Language Acquisition Research Series) (2006) 39 copies
Student Viewer's Handbook (Original) to accompany Destinos: An Introduction to Spanish (1992) 11 copies
Research Methods in Second Language Psycholinguistics (Second Language Acquisition Research Series) (2013) 7 copies
Second Language Acquisition: Foreign Language Learning (Multilingual Matters, 58) (1990) 7 copies, 1 review
Input Processing and Grammar Instruction in Second Language Acquisition (Second Language Learning) (1996) 7 copies
Foreign Language Learning: A Research Perspective (Cross-linguistic series on second language research) (1987) 6 copies
Processing Instruction: Theory, Research, and Commentary (Second Language Acquisition Research Series) (2003) 3 copies
Form-Meaning Connections in Second Language Acquisition (Second Language Acquistion Research Theoretical and Methodologi (2004) 3 copies
Student Viewer's Handbook to Accompany Destinos: An Introduction to Spanish : Episodios 27-52 (1997) 3 copies
Explicit and Implicit Learning in Second Language Acquisition (Elements in Second Language Acquisition) (2022) 1 copy
A Little Rain 1 copy
While We're on the Topic 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- male
- Places of residence
- Chowchilla, California, USA
- Map Location
- USA
Members
Reviews
The synopsis is very precise and on-point, so we go into this read with a clear roadmap of the journey. It's not suspenseful...it is compelling to me, whose experiences of life are very close to Arnie's minus the maternal alcoholism. Abandoned by a father whose selfishness was complete? Check! Emotionally abused by a codependent mentally ill mother? Check! Involved in an age-gap romance? Check!
I know from reading the author's bio that he's telling us a story rooted in his own gay-male show more experience. This comes through in many facets of Arnie's story, and none more clearly than the opening scene where Arnie is raked over the coals by his supervisor, Rachel, not for the first or even tenth time, in the cruelest and most belittling way. This sets the tone for the read: Arnie in an awful and humiliating position, painfully unable to defend or extract himself from it.
As the narration is all third-person limited, we're privy to all the ways the action mirrors his past abuse. It can feel a bit repetitive, but it definitely sets the stakes. This is a man with a huge hill to climb just to get up to "bad." When glimmerings of good things come to him, if he even recognizes them, he's immediately on the alert for the fuckening. This being a romantic story, we know this is what we're here to watch him triumph over.
And do that he does...he's handed a dinner invitation by his boss hot on the heels of his very public humiliation by Rachel, and of course is all set for it to turn into a fiasco...especially when he meets the boss's handsome, sparkling dominant nephew. Who is all of eighteen. And beautiful.
And interested in thirty-year-old Arnie.
That CAN'T be right.
What follows is the journey to self-acceptance and to learning about accepting acceptance. Arnie is, at long last, among people who want to be with him. That's an intoxicating feeling to someone not accustomed to it. Arnie blossoms into a happy, still-nebbishy middle-aged guy. I'd've been a lot less kind if he'd suddenly changed completely, but he's a better-adjusted version of himself at the end of the book—not someone suddenly tured into a confident, self-motivated dudebro.
I liked this read just fine, and appreciated its positive resolution that stayed within realistic outcomes. A lot of guys could identify with nebbishy Arnie Violet. His trajectory, while pat (as expected in this genre), is never incredible. It's a warm comforting thing to see this ordinary no one much get to live out his happy dream.
No matter how banal the dream may be. show less
I know from reading the author's bio that he's telling us a story rooted in his own gay-male show more experience. This comes through in many facets of Arnie's story, and none more clearly than the opening scene where Arnie is raked over the coals by his supervisor, Rachel, not for the first or even tenth time, in the cruelest and most belittling way. This sets the tone for the read: Arnie in an awful and humiliating position, painfully unable to defend or extract himself from it.
As the narration is all third-person limited, we're privy to all the ways the action mirrors his past abuse. It can feel a bit repetitive, but it definitely sets the stakes. This is a man with a huge hill to climb just to get up to "bad." When glimmerings of good things come to him, if he even recognizes them, he's immediately on the alert for the fuckening. This being a romantic story, we know this is what we're here to watch him triumph over.
And do that he does...he's handed a dinner invitation by his boss hot on the heels of his very public humiliation by Rachel, and of course is all set for it to turn into a fiasco...especially when he meets the boss's handsome, sparkling dominant nephew. Who is all of eighteen. And beautiful.
And interested in thirty-year-old Arnie.
That CAN'T be right.
What follows is the journey to self-acceptance and to learning about accepting acceptance. Arnie is, at long last, among people who want to be with him. That's an intoxicating feeling to someone not accustomed to it. Arnie blossoms into a happy, still-nebbishy middle-aged guy. I'd've been a lot less kind if he'd suddenly changed completely, but he's a better-adjusted version of himself at the end of the book—not someone suddenly tured into a confident, self-motivated dudebro.
I liked this read just fine, and appreciated its positive resolution that stayed within realistic outcomes. A lot of guys could identify with nebbishy Arnie Violet. His trajectory, while pat (as expected in this genre), is never incredible. It's a warm comforting thing to see this ordinary no one much get to live out his happy dream.
No matter how banal the dream may be. show less
I finally finished this! The accompanying video as well, of course. Got off track for a few months after moving house, but I eventually got back to it. It's dated (hello late 1980s fashion!) and repetitive but extremely effective at helping to acquire Spanish. I'll probably try to dig up the second season of the show, too.
The former professor in me wonders how on earth VanPattern ever got funding to make this. We couldn't even get a large enough budget to cover photocopies for an entire show more semester's worth of class handouts, and this guy got an entire telenovela filmed (in multiple countries, no less!). He's a legend. show less
The former professor in me wonders how on earth VanPattern ever got funding to make this. We couldn't even get a large enough budget to cover photocopies for an entire show more semester's worth of class handouts, and this guy got an entire telenovela filmed (in multiple countries, no less!). He's a legend. show less
Please don't pay money for this book; I'll send you my copy for free.
Awards
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Statistics
- Works
- 76
- Members
- 590
- Popularity
- #42,529
- Rating
- 3.2
- Reviews
- 5
- ISBNs
- 163
- Languages
- 1












