
Tristram Potter Coffin (1922–2012)
Author of Folklore in America: Tales, Songs, Superstitions, Proverbs, Riddles, Games, Folk Drama and Folk Festivals
About the Author
Works by Tristram Potter Coffin
Folklore in America: Tales, Songs, Superstitions, Proverbs, Riddles, Games, Folk Drama and Folk Festivals (1966) 82 copies, 1 review
Indian Tales of North America: An Anthology for the Adult Reader (Bibliographical & Special Series) (1961) 22 copies
Associated Works
Beauty and the Beast: Classic Tales About Animal Brides and Grooms from Around the World (2017) — Contributor — 129 copies, 2 reviews
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1922-02-13
- Date of death
- 2012-01-31
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Haverford College (BA|1943)
University of Pennsylvania (MA, PhD) - Occupations
- folklorist
Professor, University of Pennsylvania
Editor, Journal of American Folklore - Organizations
- Denison University
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- San Marino, California, USA
- Places of residence
- Granville, Ohio, USA
- Place of death
- Wakefield, Rhode Island, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
This author plainly wears his heart on his sleeve and as the book heats up, it is clear that this a passioned attack on the then American military adventure in Vietnam, the military power and influence over the elected government. I came across this book reading others inspired by the JFK anniversary, the Snowden revelations, and the "J. Edgar" movie. This is another block in the foundation of my conviction that there isn't much neo about the Neo-cons (Major General Edwin Anderson Walker), show more Americas vacillates between flirtation with police state and reform, and American is an unadmitted empire built on overwhelming military superiority.
"The military decided long ago to concentrate its conquest of political power on Congress. This was a sagacious move. Congress is ... the least responsive to national need (as apart from local ones), and the most antagonistic to the Executive."
Even the themes of at least implicit support of water torture and government spying on citizens and allies arises here. show less
"The military decided long ago to concentrate its conquest of political power on Congress. This was a sagacious move. Congress is ... the least responsive to national need (as apart from local ones), and the most antagonistic to the Executive."
Even the themes of at least implicit support of water torture and government spying on citizens and allies arises here. show less
An interesting little book about baseball in American literary and folkloric culture that would be more interesting if written today; the references to "Negroes" and, at one point, a "Negress," are off-putting in this context. Also some of the terminology of the game which he uses is no longer in circulation. Obviously, this is all a strange criticism in a way, he was writing using the vernacular of the time, but it's really hard to ignore now. Anyhow, it's worth a read, don't get me wrong, show more I enjoyed it overall, but if someone has a recommendation for an updated version of this, I'd love to hear it. show less
Cayman 2024 - #8 - My Story: In the fall of 1979, i began my college education at the University of Pennsylvania ....Quite a culture shock from my Northeast suburban upbringing to find myself living right in Philadelphia! That first year of my journey to a BS in Mechanical Engineering was full of all the non-engineering courses to get them out of the way....one of which was an intro to English Literature. Huge lecture Hall....hundreds of Freshman.....and this was one of 5 courses i had to show more take every semester. My professor was Tristram Potter Coffin, the author of this book! He was the very stereotypical Ivy League professor in appearance & demeanor......and i remember almost NOTHING from this class.....but i do remember we started the class by reading a book he had just published! This was early 1980......I remember thinking how cool it was to be taught a book by the author who wrote it, and i remember it was green. And there it stopped!!! For years i would remember this book......knowing i had read it, not being able to find it in all my boxes of college things i kept, and having no memory of it beyond a tennis theme. So, i recently went online, found one, and bought it, and brought it on my Caribbean vacation. The Book: I thoroughly enjoyed this. Nice sparse prose from the perspective of a college-aged kid working as an assistant to a CT country club tennis pro. It is his story.....but really the story of the goings on at an upscale country club......and not all of it is pretty and glamorous. He has an infatuation with a younger beautiful girl, Susan, that goes on for 3 summers, yet never seems to bring himself to approach her beyond his professional capacity in the tennis shack. The sordid realities of the real Susan vs. his perceived perfect Susan eventually force him to sadly confront truths he was unable to see. There is enough humor in this steady story to keep it fun, a little too much detail about Tennis (of which i know nothing) and blow-by-blow accounting of matches and scoring which made my eyes glaze over. But i enjoyed it a lot and it was a quick easy read. And no.....I did not remember one blessed thing about the story! show less
A delightful change from the usual Christmas stories. This book explores the beginnings of Romam Mithraic rites incorporated into early Christian tenets. Ultimately, ending with the move to pink Christmas trees.
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 29
- Also by
- 2
- Members
- 347
- Popularity
- #68,852
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 6
- ISBNs
- 24
- Languages
- 1













