| ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION TitleAugust Franza Collection
 Collection NumberCollection 385
 OCLC Number1240504801
 CreatorAugust Franza, 1932-
 Provenance Donated by August Franza in 2004.
 Extent,Scope, and Content Note The collection is comprised of consists of 14 cubic feet of Franza's original manuscripts,
                                 novels, plays, poems, essays, clippings, and correspondence created between 1952 and
                                 2005.
 Arrangement and Processing NoteProcessing completed by Kristen J. Nyitray in January 2006.
 Finding aid revised and updated by Kristen J. Nyitray in June 2019.
 Last updated: March 2021.
 The collection is arranged in the orider it was received. LanguageEnglish
 Restrictions on AccessThe collection is open to researchers without restriction.
 Rights and Permissions Stony Brook University Libraries' consent to access as the physical owner of the collection
                                 does not address copyright issues that may affect publication rights. It is the sole
                                 responsibility of the user of Special Collections and University Archives materials
                                 to investigate the copyright status of any given work and to seek and obtain permission
                                 where needed prior to publication.
 Citation [Item], August Franza Collection, Special Collections and University Libraries, Stony
                                 Brook University Libraries.
 Historical NoteAugust Franza is a novelist, playwright, collagist, poet, and short story writer who
                                 has been steadily producing creative work for forty years. He earned degrees from
                                 Brooklyn College (B.A.), Columbia University (M.A.), and Stony Brook University (Ph.D.)
                                 His dissertation, The Fallen Idol, is about the relationship between the critic John
                                 Ruskin and the painter J.M.W. Turner.Three of his one-act plays have been produced
                                 at Stony Brook University and at the Village Gate in New York City. His collages have
                                 been exhibited at Generator Gallery in the East Village of New York City, in a Sag
                                 Harbor Art Gallery and at the Islip Art Museum. Franza's essays, short stories, and
                                 poems have appeared in such diverse publications as The New York Times, Newsday, Harvard
                                 Magazine, ETC: The Journal of Semantics, Commonweal, The English Journal, Harper’s
                                 Magazine, Long Island Quarterly and Hampton Shorts, annual Long Island anthology of
                                 stories, essays, and poetry.15 chapbooks of poems have been published dealing with
                                 his side travels, and, most recently, two short stories have appeared in Hampton Shorts.
                                 "Eagle Eye," a short story drawn from an unpublished novel, was one six finalists
                                 in a Newsday historical short story contest, which had over 400 submissions. His novel
                                 The Events at Vista Bay was published by XOXOX Press in 2005.
 SubjectsFranza, August, 1932-
 Franza, August, 1932-  -- Archives.
 American literature -- New York (State) -- Suffolk County.
 Poetry.
 American poetry -- New York (State) -- Suffolk County.
 Poets, American -- New York (State) -- Suffolk County.
 Suffolk County (N.Y.) -- Literary Collections.
 
 INVENTORY
 BOX 1MANUSCRIPTS
 SAY YES! (musical), 1952 (2 folders)
 Early Plays – JOURNEY TO ANACHRONIA OR CONVENTION AND TRADITION IN MILWAUKEE, 1955(?)
 
 Early Plays – ONLY TWO YEARS, 1955
 
 Early Plays - 1955(?)
 
 Early Plays - SNAKESKIN, 1955(?)
 
 Early Plays – THE BRIGHT YOUNG MEN, 1956 (2 folders)
 
 THE SON (TV play), 1958
 A comedy-drama about the efforts of a seemingly helpless but tyrannical Italian-American
                                 father who thwarts his son’s struggle for independence
 
 THE THIRST WE HAVE (novella), 1960
 The domestic loves and professional struggles of a novice bent on fulfilling his destiny
                                 as a great teacher
 
 THE VITAL CENTER (novel, satiric), 1962
 Expressing multiple points of view from the superintendent down to teachers and students,
                                 this comic novel examines the ironies, complexities, contradictions and just plain
                                 bizarre behavior in a modern school district on Long Island. At the same time, the
                                 novel comments on world events, thereby making the local events seem even more absurd.
                                 A school year is a furious dance, but few people are aware of it.
 BOX 2MANUSCRIPTS
 BOB, SON OF BATTLE: HIS CONFESSIONS (novella), 1963Comedy in two parts about teacher Bob Stroonz (1) trying to make ends meet working
                                 a demanding second job and (2) getting hired to teach summer school at a posh Massachusetts
                                 private school full of neurotic affluent teenagers.
 
 THE ADVENTURES OF MICHAL AMERICA (novel), 1964 (3 folders)
 Influenced by his idealistic Italian immigrant father, Michal America launches himself
                                 into the education wars as an idealistic teacher, but there are deflating, quixotic
                                 results.
 
 NIGHT OF BROKEN GLASS (one-act-play, satiric), 1965
 This absurdist play with film from the movies (the title referring to Kristalnacht
                                 in Germany in 1938) deals with narrator Kelly’s attempt to awaken the audience to
                                 the brute realities of the 20th century. The audience rebels as conflict in a school
                                 between Principal Herr Kleinemann and teacher Michael Mouse degenerates into a conflict
                                 with Nazis. The audience confused, the play self-destructs.
 
 THE NAVIGATORS or INITIATIONS (novel), 1966 (2 folders)
 The story of the troubles of two generations of an immigrant Italian family, the Del
                                 Vecchios. It begins in the 1900’s in a grim tenement in Greenwich Village, Manhattan,
                                 reveals the struggles of assimilation, and ends on a military base where Peter Del
                                 Vecchio, a conflicted air force officer, is serving during the Korea War.
 
 THERE ARE NO SURVIVORS OF THE 30 YEARS' WAR (one-act play), 1967
 (A one-act play that begins with picketing against the Vietnam War and ends with the
                                 theater manager promising the return of ticket money to an irate audience). In WW2,
                                 two hapless American soldiers in Germany take refuge in a library and discover a document
                                 which describes equally hapless German soldiers during the Thirty Years War of 1618-48.
                                 Two German soldiers from that period appear and compare war and combat with the American
                                 soldiers.
 
 BLACK COFFEE (poems), 1967-1980 9 folders)
 Poems in various styles on a wide range of concerns, interests, topics, and states
                                 consciousness.
 
 BOX 3
 MANUSCRIPTS
 BLACK COFFEE (poems), 1967-1980 (9 folders)Poem in various styles on a wide range of concerns, interests, topics, and states
                                 consciousness.
 
 BIRDS OF A FEATHER (novel), 1967
 Violent events at an isolated high school occur during a fierce blizzard which cuts
                                 the school off from the community. A student revolt, caused by administrative excesses
                                 and arrogance, results in the students taking charge and incarcerating faculty members
                                 in classrooms. Backed by weapons takes from the school’s rifle club, the students
                                 punish the administrators. When student’s excesses occur, some faculty members escape
                                 and a violent confrontation takes place. Order is restored but only after deaths occur
                                 on both sides.
 BOX 4MANUSCRIPTS
 THE BAFFLED DINOSAUR (poems), 1969 (2 folders)20 faculty and student members on Chanam high school on Long Island each speak their
                                 secret thoughts about what life in a high school is really like.
 
 THE INSPECTOR GENERAL (one-act-play, satiric), 1970
 When superintendent of Schools R. Winston Churchill Lincoln is told that an inspector
                                 general is going to inspect his school district and may already be teaching in the
                                 district in disguise, he undertakes an investigation that leads to utter chaos. So
                                 much so that the audience walks outs screaming, “I AM THE INSPECTOR GENERAL!”
 
 VAIN BODIES or DEATH OF OUR FATHERS (novel), 1972-1973 (3 folders)
 Hoping to benefit their marriage, Michael and Jo Villanova join an ecumenical religious
                                 group whose purpose is to improve marriages. As they become deeply involved, they
                                 discover that the group’s principles have changed from broadly ecumenical to narrowly
                                 Catholic. At the same time, Michael, reading history, becomes aware of the life of
                                 Michael Servetus aka Villanueva, a sixteenth century philosopher in a lethal conflict
                                 with John Calvin. Relating the 16th century clash of values to their own, Michael
                                 and Jo fight the changes but are defeated, as Servetus was.
 
 PENIS ENVY (one-act-play, satiric), 1974
 A rejected writer, who has failed his Ph.D. entrance exam, encounters resistance,
                                 absurdity, and hysteria among his students in his high school classes. He is also
                                 pursued by his superior and the Thirty-First Evaluator. To top off his miseries, all
                                 the books in his library collapse on his head, but he survives and arises to fight
                                 another day.
 
 BOX 5
 MANUSCRIPTS
 AXE aka THE ASSAULT (novel), 1974-1975 (3 folders)
 AXE aka THE ASSAULT (screenplay), 1974-1975
 Jay Axelrod, a Queens’s resident teaching at a Manhattan college, commits an unpremeditated
                                 murder of a Latin American student who turns out not to be the person he appeared
                                 to be. This discovery drives Jay into a nightmare struggle to discover the true identity
                                 of his victim as well as his own true identity. As Jay searches for the truth on Long
                                 Island, Manhattan, and Peru, he discovers love and deadly conspiracy.
 
 Arrows of Longing: BEHOLD THE MAN (Ecce Homo) - A Filmscript of the Life of Friedrich
                                 Nietzsche (play), 1974-1980 (2 folders)
 Based on Nietzsche’s remark: “I love the great despisers for they are the great adorers
                                 and arrows of longing for the other shore”, these plays and scripts examine the careers
                                 and conflicts of six great overreachers.
 
 Arrows of Longing: SPHINX - A Screenplay about Charles Darwin (screenplay), 1974-1980
 Based on Nietzsche’s remark: “I love the great despisers for they are the great adorers
                                 and arrows of longing for the other shore”, these plays and scripts examine the careers
                                 and conflicts of six great overreachers.
 BOX 6MANUSCRIPTS
 Arrows of Longing: KARL!!: THE MOOR OF SOHO – A musical play about Karl Marx (play),
                                 1974-1980Based on Nietzsche’s remark: “I love the great despisers for they are the great adorers
                                 and arrows of longing for the other shore”, these plays and scripts examine the careers
                                 and conflicts of six great overreachers.
 
 Arrows of Longing: MUST A SONG ALWAYS BE A SONG! – A Play about Charles Ives (play),
                                 1974-1980
 Based on Nietzsche’s remark: “I love the great despisers for they are the great adorers
                                 and arrows of longing for the other shore”, these plays and scripts examine the careers
                                 and conflicts of six great overreachers.
 
 Arrows of Longing: THE INK COLIEE – A play about The Ordeals of Stephane Mallarme
                                 (play), 1974-1980
 Based on Nietzsche’s remark: “I love the great despisers for they are the great adorers
                                 and arrows of longing for the other shore”, these plays and scripts examine the careers
                                 and conflicts of six great overreachers.
 
 Arrows of Longing: THE COMEDIAN AS THE LETTERS WS – A play about Wallace Stevens (play),
                                 1974-1980 (2 folders)
 Based on Nietzsche’s remark: “I love the great despisers for they are the great adorers
                                 and arrows of longing for the other shore”, these plays and scripts examine the careers
                                 and conflicts of six great overreaches.
 
 BLOODSTREAM (novel), 1975-1976 (2 folders)
 Based on the DeFeo family murders in Amityville, Long Island, this novel, seen from
                                 the point of view of Frankie Croce, the killer son, examines and explores the reasons
                                 why he murdered his father, mother, two brothers, and a sister.
 
 AMERICA ARRIBA! (novel- satiric), 1976-1980 (1 of 4 folders)
 In pursuit of a market for a new product called “Donquiburguers”, Eli Naches, President
                                 of Donquiburguers, Inc., resurrects Don Quijote and Sancho Panza from Cervantes’ novel,
                                 has them trained for 20th century society, then sends them to South America to promote
                                 Donquiburguers. As in Cervantes’ novel, all hell breaks loose.
 
 BOX 7
 MANUSCRIPTS
 AMERICA ARRIBA! (novel- satiric), 1976-1980 (3 of 4 folders)In pursuit of a market for a new product called “Donquiburguers”, Eli Naches, President
                                 of Donquiburguers, Inc., resurrects Don Quijote and Sancho Panza from Cervantes’ novel,
                                 has them trained for 20th century society, then sends them to South America to promote
                                 Donquiburguers. As in Cervantes’ novel, all hell breaks loose.
 
 THE NAKED EYE aka THE MARRIAGE (one-act-play), 1977
 In a monologue, a woman visits her deceased husband in a funeral home and, rejecting
                                 the usual platitudes, frankly explores the realities of their marriage, then bids
                                 him goodbye.
 
 MEMORIES (one-act-play, satiric), 1977
 When the lights go out on a suburban Long Island couple and they are unable to watch
                                 TV, they take out their picture albums and review their family experiences by candlelight.
                                 The surprise is their ‘family experiences’ amount to the sitcoms and soap operas they
                                 have watched all their lives. When their sons visit, they don’t know who they are.
 
 STRIKING NOTES (journal of a strike), 1979
 A personal journal of a teachers’ strike at the Miller Place Schools in 1979.
 
 NAYBUZZ (one-act-play, satiric), 1979
 A party attended by suburban Long Islanders, each of whom has the name of famous Hollywood,
                                 literary, and sarcastic celebrities. A banal conversation contrasts with their celebrated
                                 names and identities.
 
 THE CURE, 1979 (incomplete)
 
 HOUSE OF PAIN (long poem about Gerard Manley Hopkins - published), 1980
 The personal ordeals of the great 19th century English Catholic poet and priest.
 
 B.F. SKINNER’S PLANET (essay), 1981
 A critique of B.F. Skinner’s behaviorism.
 
 THAT MAN aka THE ONE HUDREDTH (novel), 1981
 Based on the Norse legends, this story deals with a three contemporary Americans (Harry
                                 Krieger, Mark Nido, and a woman named Valerie) who, in contemporary situations, are
                                 brought together by chance and love. After a long period of testing during which their
                                 relationships deepen, they sent out to save the world from Ragnarok, the day of doom.
 
 HERO OF OUR TIME (novel), 1980-1981 (1 of 2 folders)
 J.J. Katharin, raised by his stern but loving grandfather, grows from his one-parent
                                 isolation into a world of complexity and riddles. Learning about envy, hatred, hypocrisy,
                                 sex, love, and friendship, he takes this difficult but useful knowledge and carries
                                 it tentatively into the future.
 
 BOX 8
 MANUSCRIPTS
 HERO OF OUR TIME (novel), 1980-1981 (1 of 2 folders)J.J. Katharin, raised by his stern but loving grandfather, grows from his one-parent
                                 isolation into a world of complexity and riddles. Learning about envy, hatred, hypocrisy,
                                 sex, love, and friendship, he takes this difficult but useful knowledge and carries
                                 it tentatively into the future.
 
 THE FALLEN IDOL (Ph.D. dissertation on John Ruskin and J.M.W. Turner), 1982
 The story of the complex relationship between young art critic John Ruskin and J.M.W.
                                 Turner, the elderly and famous British Romantic painter. Focuses equally on Ruskin’s
                                 writing and Turner’s paintings.
 
 THE MURDER OF HITLER (novel 1983, published 2002)
 A what-if novel describing the confrontation between Franz Kafka and Adolf Hitler
                                 in Prague in 1912. Kafka, driven by his disturbing dreams, pursues Hitler the young
                                 artist, not yet fired by the crisis of World War One.
 
 WRITE AS YOU ARE (text), 1983
 Published – J. Weston Walch, pubs – published. The contents are designed to help high
                                 school students master composition, the novel, and the mass media. A fourth on figurative
                                 language is about to be published.
 
 MASTERING THE NOVEL (text), 1984
 Published – J. Weston Walch, pubs – published. The contents are designed to help high
                                 school students master composition, the novel, and the mass media. A fourth on figurative
                                 language is about to be published.
 
 SUBURBS OF ELLIGHTENMENT (essays on education), 1985
 BOX 9MANUSCRIPTS
 PULLING A GAUGUIN (novel, incomplete), 1988Without warning Caril Bridgewater, an amateur artist, leaves her husband, home and
                                 children, and disappears. Her husband, Paul, tracks her down in the Caribbean where
                                 they confront each other’s demons.
 
 MADE IN BROOKLYN (novel), 1988-1989 (2 folders)
 With the death of his mother, Michael Floretti plunges into a bitter conflict with
                                 his sister. On the surface, the conflict is about the disposition house; underneath,
                                 it is a bitter sibling rivalry about family identity, contrary views of the past,
                                 and who got trapped and who escaped.
 
 ELEVEN ONE-ACT PLAYS (two performed), 1960-1987
 
 POOR BASTARD (short stories in two volumes), 1960-1988
 
 Brooklyn Plays: THE INCOGNITO MAN (play), 1988-1989
 Two treatments of the same event: sibling rivalry that emerges after the death of
                                 the parents. BLUE CHAMPAGNE is written in the realistic mode; THE INCOGNITO MAN is
                                 surreal.
 
 Brooklyn Plays: BLUE CHAMPAGNE (play), 1988-1989
 Two treatments of the same event: sibling rivalry that emerges after the death of
                                 the parents. BLUE CHAMPAGNE is written in the realistic mode; THE INCOGNITO MAN is
                                 surreal.
 
 LIZARD ON A WHITE WALL (novel: incomplete), 1989
 Novel set in the Caribbean.
 
 SAT FOLLIES OF 1985 (play), 1988-1989
 
 YOU AND THE MASS MEDIA (text), 1989
 Published – J. Weston Walch, pubs – published. The contents are designed to help high
                                 school students master composition, the novel, and the mass media. A fourth on figurative
                                 language is about to be published.
 
 THE MAGIC MOUNTAIN (screenplay), 1991
 Screenplay version of Thomas Mann’s 1924 novel about Hans Castorp’s experiences and
                                 discoveries at a Swiss tuberculosis sanatorium prior to World War One.
 
 BOX 10
 MANUSCRIPTS
 THE LIFE I HAD IN MIND (novel: incomplete), 1990-1991Vito Nuova, an obsessive writer, tries to purge his mind of his literary career, ambitions,
                                 failures, friends, and enemies.
 
 MAN OF THE CENTURY (novel: incomplete), 1990-1991
 An ironically titled story about Tom and Petra Amphibologies, an everyman and woman.
                                 Using an early English printing device (“f” for “s”) as well as some over-the-top
                                 chapter heading, the author tells a story of their loves, hates, joys, work, miseries
                                 and opinions as they try to find what is lasting in the transience of the present.
 
 EVENTS AT VISTA BAY (novel in form of a journal), 1990 (4 folders)
 After thirty years of owning their home, Roy and Julia Turner choose condo-living
                                 in an isolated “Adult Community” on Long Island. Roy, retired, is looking for peace
                                 and quiet as he enjoys each living day sketching and painting natural and bird life.
                                 Julia, still working, is under a great deal of pressure. All does not go well as domestic
                                 and social problems intrude on Roy’s search for tranquility.
 
 CONFESSION (long poem), 1991
 Long poem assessing life in the 20th century.
 
 THE MOST BEAUTIFUL GIRL IN SCHOOL HANGED HERSELF (novel: incomplete), 1991
 
 THE GRAND HIGHWAY (novel), 1991-1992 (2 folders)
 Youthful Mark Gamble goes on a nationwide search for his mother, who may or may not
                                 be the assassin of a world famous politician. Mark’s travels, and the people he meets,
                                 sometimes stupefy, but often enrich him. His life turns out to be richer than he could
                                 ever have imagined.
 
 BOX 11
 MANUSCRIPTS
 THORN IN THE FLESH (novel), 1992-1993 (3 folders)Severe crises occur in the Lawrence family when a naïve daughter marries a successful
                                 but shrewd, wily, and dangerous sociopath.
 
 YOU CAN’T GET OFF THE ISLAND (play – performed at Stony Brook), 1992
 Comedy-drama about the effect on a Long Island family of the effort to shut down the
                                 Shoreham Nuclear Plant.
 
 ADRIANNA (one-act play), 1992
 A declining 85 year old woman fantasizes about her life and family until her daughter
                                 appears to try to convince her about what is real. Screaming ensues.
 
 THE MAN WHO WAITED FOR HIS WIFE (play performed at The Village Gate), 1992
 Ray Joyce shows up at the book department of a department store fifteen minutes before
                                 opening time, causing suspicion and confusion. He says his wife has a job interview
                                 at personnel and he just wants to look at the books while he waits for her. Elsie,
                                 a saleswoman and Helen, the manager, react strongly to Ray since there has recently
                                 been some criminal behavior in the store. He tries to calm them, succeeding with Elsie
                                 but not with Helen. Ray seems to know how it will end because bad endings have been
                                 Ray’s fate. It turns out that Ray is only dangerous to himself.
 
 A FLEA’S NOTEBOOK aka HOLOCAUST ON GLORY ROAD (novel), 1984-1992 (2 of 3 folders)
 Jerry Floh (Flea in German), a married college teacher on Long Island, who has screenwriting
                                 ambitions, meets Buzzy Powers, a nasty childhood friend who is now a successful movie
                                 producer. He invites Jerry to Southampton mansion where movie people, passion, and
                                 desire come together in a fiery mix. Jerry is the only survivor.
 
 BOX 12
 MANUSCRIPTS
 A FLEA’S NOTEBOOK aka HOLOCAUST ON GLORY ROAD (novel), 1984-1992 (1 of 3 folders)Jerry Floh (Flea in German), a married college teacher on Long Island, who has screenwriting
                                 ambitions, meets Buzzy Powers, a nasty childhood friend who is now a successful movie
                                 producer. He invites Jerry to Southampton mansion where movie people, passion, and
                                 desire come together in a fiery mix. Jerry is the only survivor.
 
 QUERDENKER’S WORLD (poems – published), 1993
 Songs from the Island of Longing
 
 FW (A play about James Joyce and his novel “Finnegans Wake”), 1993
 
 AROMA OF MEATS (poems), 1993
 
 TURTLES ALL THE WAY DOWN (play, satiric), 1994
 Because of the wars, corruption, and killing in the world, Obie refuses to attend
                                 a third millennium New Year’s party his wife Mary is giving. His friends beg him to
                                 change his mind, but he won’t. When he gets the chance he kills himself three times.
                                 To prove his point that the world is evil, Hitler, Stalin, Pol Pot, and General Douglas
                                 Haig arrive to justify their slaughter of millions. By some strange feat good will
                                 triumphs in the end with everyone – the good and the evil – singing “Auld Lange Syne”
                                 in cozy company.
 
 PUZZLED HEARTS: Men and Women of Long Island (poems), 1994
 84 residents of Long island tell their stories in verse. The title comes from Thornton
                                 Wilder’s novel THE WOMAN OF
 ANDROS: “Lift every roof and you will find seven puzzled hearts.”
 
 DUBLINERS (screenplay of James Joyce’s short stories – in progress), 1994
 
 SULTAN (screenplay), 1995
 The story of the combative relationship between JJ Rosseau and David Hume, updated
                                 to the 20th century with flashbacks to the 18th.
 
 FIBS – Fibrillations in Barren Spaghetti (short stories), 1996
 
 BOX 13
 MANUSCRIPTS
 IMP! (comic novel), 1996 (2 folders)Long Islander Wally Androsch has a pre-Viagra impotence problem which he tries to
                                 solve by going through one hilarious procedure after another. He almost loses his
                                 wife to an ex-priest friend, but when a golden-hearted prostitute comes to his aid
                                 on the Island of Alegre in the Caribbean, he and his marriage is saved.
 TOO HOT FOR SOUP (poems), 1996 BUGHOUSE (one-act-play, satiric), 1996
 BOIL AND MONIA SEEK COMFORT (one-act-play, satiric), 1998
 
 VOYAGER, 1998 (Dialogue)
 When Sir Potential is about to be born, Mr.Guide describes the pleasures of living,
                                 But Sir Potential has heard bad things about life. Losing patience, Mr. Guide gives
                                 Sir Potential rose-colored glasses to wear.
 
 LETTER TO HER HUSBAND (one-act-play), 2000
 In conflict with all the men in her life, Janet Zee tries to remake herself, but she
                                 fails, then drowns herself.
 
 9/11 (poems), 2001
 
 NO ROOM IN HEAVEN (poems), 2002
 
 AMERICAN ECSTASY, V.1: The Man in the Middle (novel), 1997-2003 (1 of 3 folders)
 Volume one of a 2,000 page trilogy about Luke Hall's confined life, work, and marriage
                                 and his attempt to escape through a transformation into a bald eagle. His escape is
                                 thwarted by the fact that the eagle's brain in contaminated by pollution. As a result,
                                 his journey into the American past (the revolutionary period) is disorienting while
                                 his human life grows more and more untenable.
 
 BOX 14
 MANUSCRIPTS
 AMERICAN ECSTASY, V.1: The Man in the Middle (novel), 1997-2003 (2/3 of 3 folders)
 AMERICAN ECSTASY, V.2: State of Light (novel), 1997-2003 (3 folders)
 Luke Hall's eagle journeys and human problems continue as he experiences disorienting
                                 events in the 19th century.
 
 AMERICAN ECSTASY, V.3: Where is the Gold? (novel), 1997, 2003 (1/2 of 4 folders)
 Luke Hall's disorienting journeys continue into the 20th century where his eagle and
                                 human passions finally come to rest in found love.
 
 BOX 15
 MANUSCRIPTS
 AMERICAN ECSTASY, V.3: Where is the Gold? (novel), 1997, 2003 (3/4 of 4 folders)
 LA GUERRA CONTINUES (journal of the Iraq invasion), 2003
 
 THE KITCHEN (novella), 2003
 Tom and Carole face marital crises when Carole has her kitchen redecorated. But it
                                 disappears instead.
 
 WHO NEED EZRA POUND? (play), 2003-2004
 A full-length play, with lyrics, about the controversial life of the great American
                                 poet, Ezra Pound.
 
 THE BOOK CLUB (novel), 2004 (2 folders)
 A comedy/drama about the members of the Belmont Long Island Library Book Club, their
                                 literary lives and their private griefs which are more complex than the books they
                                 read.
 
 THE POETRY OF MARCUS VALERIUS SPAGHETTINIUS (satiric – in progress), 2004
 
 LAND (E) SCAPE: POEMS FROM FLA-FLA (poetry), 2005
 
 NOT DRUNK ENOUGH: INTERNAL COMBUSTION POEMS (poetry), 2005
 
 BOX 16
 MANUSCRIPTS
 THE EVENTS AT VISTA BAY (novel - corrected galley proofs), 2005Roy Turner, looking for peace and quiet in retirement in an adult community, finds
                                 himself in a battle between his affluent neighbors and the young and poor across the
                                 bay.
 
 CATHOLICS (novel: a section of DEATH OF OUR FATHERS aka VAIN BODIES), N.D.
 
 EXT. YANKE’S BACKYARD DAY (play), N.D.
 
 IF IT DIDN’T HAPPEN, IT WILL!! (play), N.D.
 
 THE INTERVIEW (play), N.D.
 
 THE NAKED TRUTH ABOUT IMPROVING WRITING (play), N.D.
 
 THE NAME OF THE GAME (play), N.D.
 
 PARADE OF MIDGETS (novel), N.D.
 
 A VISIT TO THE TOMB (play), N.D.
 
 AHHHHHHHHHHHH…HHH!! (play), N.D.
 
 BOX 17
 POEMS
 
 POEMS / misc. (2 folders)
 POEMS (1990) / A
 POEMS (1990) / B
 POEMS (1990) / C
 POEMS (1990) / D - F
 POEMS (1990) / G – H
 POEMS (1990) / I - J
 POEMS (1990) / K – O
 POEMS (1990) / P
 POEMS (1990) / Q - S
 POEMS (1990) / T - Z
 POEMS (n.d.) / A
 POEMS (n.d.) / B (2 folders)
 POEMS (n.d.) / C (2 folders)
 
 BOX 18
 POEMS
 POEMS (n.d.) / DPOEMS (n.d.) / E
 POEMS (n.d.) / F
 POEMS (n.d.) / G
 POEMS (n.d.) / H
 POEMS (n.d.) / I
 POEMS (n.d.) / J - K
 POEMS (n.d.) / L
 POEMS (n.d.) / M
 POEMS (n.d.) / N
 POEMS (n.d.) / O
 POEMS (n.d.) / P
 POEMS (n.d.) / Q - R
 POEMS (n.d.) / S
 POEMS (n.d.) / T
 POEMS (n.d.) / U
 POEMS (n.d.) / V
 POEMS (n.d.) / W
 POEMS (n.d.) / X - Z
 
 BOX 19
 POEMS
 POEMS (2000’s) / A – DPOEMS (2000’s) / E – G
 POEMS (2000’s) / H - J
 POEMS (2000’s) / K – M
 POEMS (2000’s) / N - P
 POEMS (2000’s) / Q - Z
 BOX 20SHORT STORIES
 THE ADVENTURES OF TWENTIETH CENTURY (short story)AMONG THINGS TO REGRET ABOUT THE 20TH CENTURY (short story)
 AMY VOSS (short story)
 ARTIFICIAL LIGHT (short story)
 AT THE RESTAURANT (short story)
 THE BALLAD OF THE TEACHIN' DYNAMO (short story)
 BUGS (short story)
 THE CAGE (short story)
 CAPTIVE AUDIENCE (short story)
 CHANGE OF HEART (short story)
 CHRIS GOES TO A PARTY (short story)
 DAFFOLDILS (short story)
 FIDELITY (short story)
 FRUSTATION (short story)
 GRIDLOCK DREAMS (short story)
 HAMPTON SHORTS (short story)
 THE HITCH-HICKER (short story)
 HOW I GOT MY PH.D. IN TEN SHORT LESSONS (short story)
 HOW TO GROW OLD DISGRACEFULLY (short story)
 THE INTERVIEW (short story)
 ISLAND OF BLISS (short story)
 JACK-IN-THE-BOX (short story)
 JOE NAMATH WAS NOT IN SCHOOL TODAY (short story)
 LANGUISHING IN NEW JERSEY (short story)
 LITTERAPHOBIA! IT CAN STRIKE YOU NEXT! (article)
 A LONG WAY FROM HOME (short story)
 MAN ALIVE (short story)
 MISINFORMED ABOUT PARADISE (short story)
 THE MOST BORING ELECTION OF MY LIFE (short story)
 MR ORGANIC CARTOON (short story)
 MY RECURRING DREAM (short story)
 NED AND TIKKI or WHEN THE MOON COMES OVER THE MOUNTAIN (short story)
 ON THE BEACH (short story)
 1-25 (short story)
 POOR BASTARD (short story)
 THE POST GRADUATE (short story)
 PSYCHOTIC AKIREMA (short story)
 SIDNEY AND ME (short story)
 THE SWEETEST BOY (short story)
 TALE OF THE KOOBS (short story)
 THAT MAN OR THE ONE HUNDREDTH (short story)
 UNHAPPINESS AT SCHOOL (short story)
 UNTITLED (short story)
 WELCOME DARKNESS (short story)
 WHAT DO WE REALLY UNDERSTAND ABOUT LOVE (short story)
 WONDERFUL TOWN (short story)
 
 BOX 21
 ESSAYS AND ARTICLES
 ABOLISH ADOLESCENTS (CE)!AFTER THE ABOLITION OF ENGLISH, WHAT?
 AMERICAN LITERATURE IN UN-AMERICAN
 AN AMERICAN TRAGEDY
 ARROWS OF LONGING
 AS I SEE IT
 ASIGNING, READING AND GRADING PAPERS
 BELLOW PAPER (3 folders)
 A BIG DIFFERENCE!!
 BURNOUT!
 THE CALL
 THE CASE FOR REAL REJECTION LETTERS
 THE CHILDRENS STUDY
 COLLEGE SENTENCES
 THE SCHOOLING EDUCATION
 DID I HAVE YOUR KID?
 DOES WRITING IMPROVE THINKING
 DON QUIXOTE AND SANCHO PANZA HAVE A CONVERSATION ON THE FALKLAND ISLANDS
 EDUCATION, OH, EDUCATION!
 THE ENGLISH TEACHER AS GADFLY
 OF FERRIES AND BUREAUCRACIES
 THE FINAL BEAST
 THE FIRST HOSTAGE INTERVIEW (uncensored)
 FIVE SEENES FROM THE PERSIAN WOLF WAR – 1991
 FLYING
 THE “GENESIS” OF MODERNS
 GILMORESQUE
 GROWING UP WITH 1984
 HAS DAVID DUKE ANYTHING TO TEACH MARIO CUOMO?
 HIGH SCHOOL: BATTLE GROUND OR ARENA OF DISCOVERY
 HOW TO KEEP ENGLISH FROM DYING ON THE ALREADY WILTING ACADEMIC VINE
 HOW TO SPOT A PHONY
 HUMANITY IS A SAD INDIVIDUAL
 IDIOT’S DELIGHT
 IS LIFE POSSIBLE WITHOUT TV
 JOHNNY CARSON, PHILOSOPHER
 JOURNEY TO ANACHRONIA
 JOYCE, ISSISMO!!!
 LENNON, RUBIN, DYLAN AND TOWNSHEND: CHANGES
 
 BOX 22
 ESSAYS AND ARTICLES
 LITERMIKS, LITERICKS, POLIRICKS, EDURICKS, CONTEMPORICKSLIT. 323: THE NAKED TRUTH ABOUT IMPROVING WRITING
 THE LONG RUN
 MALPRACTIVE IN THE CLASSROOM
 MIND-STRETCHING IN YOUR CLASSROOM
 MISCELLANOUS
 MY WRITING PROBLEM
 THE NASA TEACHER IN SPACE PROJECT
 NIETZSCHE CONTRA NIETZSCHE
 NOTES OF THE SOVIET EXHIBITION
 OF OUR OWN MAKING
 THE OLD TRICK
 THE ORDEAL OF ADMIRAL ABLEDOER
 ORPHEUS IN THE CLASSROOM
 OUR TOWN USA REVIEWS
 THE PAIDEIA PROPOSAL A REBUTTAL AND A COUNTER PROPOSSAL
 PLAYING SIMON’S GAME
 PREPARING TO LEAVE THE PLANET
 PROLEGOMENON TO “YOUR LAST GRAMMAR LESSON”
 REFLECTIONS ON EDUCATION
 RENATA PUNCTUATA
 REVEALINGWORDSMATTER
 A REVIEW OF NEIL POSTMAN’S TEACHING AS A CONSERVING ACTIVITY
 SCHOOL’S OPEN: CHANCE OF A LIFETIME
 THE SCHOOL YEAR SO FAR
 SCOOP
 THE SECRET THAT ENGLISH TEACHERS KNOW
 SHOULD SCHOOLS SURVIVE
 A SIMPLE PLAN
 STRATEGIES
 STUDENT VIOLENCE: 1360 STYLE
 TALE OF THE KOOBS
 A TEACHER MIGHT AFFECT ETERNITY
 A TEACHER’S LAMENT
 TEACHING ENGLISH WITH A DIFFERENCE
 TEACHING NOT JUST SKILLS BUT THE WHOLE PERSON
 THE YEARS TO CONTROL
 TO CATCH A TITLE
 “TOMMY” AND HIS MOMMY
 THE VALUE OF PROGRESSIVE EDUCATION FOR MODERN AMERICA
 THE VULNERABLE SEEKERS
 THE WASTELAND
 A WAY OUT OF DEFEATISM
 WHAT HAS BECOME OF ENGLISH
 WHO IS BIG BROTHER?
 THE WINE FLEW
 
 BOX 23
 CORRESPONDENCE
 CORRESPONDENCE (1960s)CORRESPONDENCE (1971 – 1977)
 CORRESPONDENCE (1978 – 1979)
 CORRESPONDENCE (1980)
 CORRESPONDENCE (1981 – 1982)
 CORRESPONDENCE (1983)
 CORRESPONDENCE (1984)
 
 BOX 24
 CORRESPONDENCE
 CORRESPONDENCE (1985 – 1988)CORRESPONDENCE (1990’s)
 CORRESPONDENCE (N.D.)
 
 BOX 25
 SCRAPBOOKS AND DRAFTS
 THE ALEX D. TOKEVILLE SCRAPBOOKDODO (LEWIS CARROLL)
 JOURNAL, SEPTEMBER 1968-69
 JOURNAL – FORBIDDEN TERRITORY, 1979
 NOTES FROM INSIDE
 THE SWANS OF LETHE (2 folders)
 JOURNAL ENTRY, 1996
 POSTERS AND BROADSIDES
 BOX 26JOURNAL and MAGAZINE ARTICLES
 THE ATLANTIC (Sept, 1979)THE CHARGING HOUSE (Feb, 1986)
 DUST (Fall, 1965)
 THE EDUCATION DIGEST (Feb, 1987)
 THE ENGLISH JOURNAL (Dec, 1958) (Nov, 1969)
 THE ENGLISH JOURNAL (Sept, 1970) (Jan, 1975)
 THE ENGLISH JOURNAL (Apr, 1975) (Oct, 1975)
 THE ENGLISH JOURNAL (Dec, 1975) (Apr, 1976)
 THE ENGLISH JOURNAL (Apr, 1977) (Sept, 1978)
 THE ENGLISH JOURNAL (Feb, 1979) (March, 1979)
 THE ENGLISH JOURNAL (Sept, 1979) (Dec, 1979)
 
 BOX 27
 JOURNAL and MAGAZINE ARTICLES
 THE ENGLISH JOURNAL (Jan, 1980) (March, 1980)THE ENGLISH JOURNAL (Dec, 1980) (March, 1982)
 THE ENGLISH JOURNAL (Apr, 1982) (March, 1983)
 THE ENGLISH JOURNAL (Apr, 1983) (Sept, 1983)
 THE ENGLISH JOURNAL (Oct, 1983) (Jan, 1984)
 THE ENGLISH JOURNAL (March, 1984) (Dec, 1984)
 THE ENGLISH JOURNAL (Oct, 1985) (Sept, 1986)
 ENTRE NOUES (spring, 1987)
 ETC (winter, 1979) (2 copies)
 FORTNIGHT (Sept, 1978)
 BOX 28JOURNAL and MAGAZINE ARTICLES
 HARPER’S (July, 1973) (Feb, 1986)HARVARD MAGAZINE (May, 1976)
 LITERARY CAVALCADE (Feb, 1971)
 MEDIA AND METHODS (Jan, 1980 ) (Jan, 1981) (March, 1989)
 MILLER PLACE PUBLIC SCHOOLS NEWSLETTER (Oct, 1975)
 MMI NEWSLETTER (Apr, 1971)
 NEWSLETTER OF THE SUFFOLK COUNTY PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION (June, 1975)
 SOUNDINGS (1975)
 SOUThWEST REGIONAL ENGLISH CONFERENCE (Oct, 1970)
 THE TEACHER PAPER (Oct, 1972) (Dec, 1972) (Apr, 1974)
 BOX 29NEWSPAPER CLIPPINGS
 February 12, 1968March 9, 1967
 May 13, 1967
 November 14, 1967
 May 28, 1970
 September 5, 1970
 June 1, 1971
 June 10, 1971
 June 19, 1971
 October 30, 1971
 December 27, 1971
 June 14, 1972
 March 18-24, 1973
 November 7, 1974
 June 12, 1975
 September 7, 1975
 September 13, 1975
 August 26, 1976
 September 5, 1976
 September 9, 1976
 September 16, 1976
 November 15, 1976
 November 25, 1976
 December 2, 1976
 December 16, 1976
 January 6, 1977
 January 13, 1977
 January 20, 1977
 January 27, 1977
 February 3, 1977
 February 10, 1977
 February 17, 1977
 February 24, 1977
 October 4, 1978
 September 14, 1980
 September 16, 1982
 October 10, 1984
 October 11, 1984
 May 26, 1985
 June 26, 1985
 September 8, 1985
 November 7, 1986
 March 26, 1989
 December 3, 1989
 June 2, 1991
 October 30, 1991
 November 21, 1996
 April 10, 1997
 October 2-8,1997
 October 16, 1997
 October 23-29, 1997
 November 6-12, 1997
 November 17 - December 3, 1997
 Undated
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