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Ernestine Taggard

Author of Here We Are

1 Work 170 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Works by Ernestine Taggard

Here We Are (1941) — Editor — 170 copies, 5 reviews

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Common Knowledge

Gender
female

Members

Reviews

5 reviews
These short stories were written from 1917-1940 and were mostly written about people who did not fit in to what society thought appropriate regarding behavior. Most were written by people who had a fairly comfortable or very comfortable life and did not always understand what "others" experience. However, those who did realize the challenges faced by many wrote very moving stories, many of which have always been and still are relevant, sadly.
Short stories by twenty-somethings for YA readers. Not really my cup of tea as an adult reader committed to no-fiction, but I dived in. At a high-level, no stories about youths finding they are magically powerfully and cosmically important in a setting of fantastic enemies and dire threats as seems to be what youths are reading when I talk to to them. These stories are very down to earth about the human condition, by and large. Many have pained, tragic endings like a phone call from a new show more boy that will never come ("Sixteen" by Maureen Daly). That are some top-shelf writers that of course stand out: Steinbeck, Sinclair Lewis, Irwin Shaw, etc. That one that really knocked me out was the tragic tale of one blind child's cruel taunting: "Clothe the Naked" by Dorothy Parker. Even the writer's bio here points to as superlative for her specifically and generally.

"Clothe the Naked" by Dorothy Parker ran in Scribners, January 1938, pp. 31-35.

Raymond goes out alone while Big Lannie is at work, and his excitement in preparing for the excursion is barely contained. "As he folded the sleeves back over his thin arms, his heart beat so that the cloth above it fluttered."

He heard the laughter once again, but:

"As quickly as he could, he gained the walk and set forth, guiding himself by the fence. He could not wait; he called out, so that he would hear gay calls...


They were actually cruel jeers.
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Stories for young readers in an eclectic collection. The reader is engaged by all of the stories, including some favorites and lesser-known ones. An enjoyable introduction to the genre of short stories.
½
20 stories - 9 of them by women writers! - first appeared in Scholastic Magazine for scholars and young adults.

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Associated Authors

Dorothy Canfield Fisher Introduction, Contributor
John Steinbeck Contributor
Martha Foley Contributor
Elliott Merrick Contributor
Ruth Suckow Contributor
George Milburn Contributor
Albert Halper Contributor
Katharine Brush Contributor
Sally Benson Contributor
Jesse Stuart Contributor
Sinclair Lewis Contributor
Maureen Daly Contributor
Ring Lardner Contributor
William Saroyan Contributor
Irwin Shaw Contributor
Dorothy Parker Contributor
Harry Sylvester Contributor

Statistics

Works
1
Members
170
Popularity
#125,473
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
5
ISBNs
7

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