ABSTRACT

It is only in childhood that books have any deep influence on our lives--Graham Greene The luminous books of our childhood will remain the luminous books of our lives.--Joyce Carol Oates Writers, as they often attest, are deeply influenced by their childhood reading. Salman Rushdie, for example, has said that The Wizard of Oz made a writer of me. Twice-Told Tales is a collection of essays on the way the works of adult writers have been influenced by their childhood reading. This fascinating volume includes theoretical essays on Salman Rushdie and the Oz books, Beauty and the Beast retold as Jane Eyre, the childhood reading of Jorge Luis Borges, and the remnants of nursery rhymes in Sylvia Plath's poetry. It is supplemented with a number of brief commentaries on children's books by major creative writers, including Maxine Hong Kingston and Maxine Kumin.

part

Introduction “Points of intersection …”

part 1|8 pages

“To drift in the currents of my unconscious …”

part 2|40 pages

"The place was full of books …”

chapter 2|16 pages

Borges and Georgie

Childhood Reading, Adult Writing, and the Shapeof the Latin American Fantastic

chapter 3|6 pages

Lonely Impulse of Delight

One Reader's Childhood

chapter 4|6 pages

All the Stuff

chapter 5|6 pages

Taking Flight

A Retrospect on Booking Passage

chapter 6|4 pages

Bad Habits

part 3|28 pages

“Wake me up in Wonderland and Whoville and Oz …”

part 4|30 pages

“The essential eternal stories …”

chapter 10|19 pages

“Grains of Truth in the Wildest Fable”

“Beauty and the Beast” Retold as Jane Eyre

chapter 11|4 pages

Pictures First

chapter 13|2 pages

Silver Chief

part 5|24 pages

“Whose echoes seem ineradicable …”

chapter 14|16 pages

Higgledy Piggledy, Gobbledygoo

The Rotted Residue of Nursery Rhyme in Sylvia Plath's Poetry

chapter 16|2 pages

Cuentos

part 6|18 pages

“The luminous symbol of innocence …”

chapter 18|14 pages

“Wonders Wild and New”

Lewis Carroll's Alice Books and Postmodern Women Writers

part 7|32 pages

“An impossible idealism …”

chapter 20|24 pages

Mapping the Soupsweet Land

King Solomon's Mines in Graham Greene's The Heart of the Matter

chapter 21|2 pages

Sheba's Breasts

part 8|24 pages

“Recuperated loss …”

chapter 23|16 pages

Punch Reads Aunt Judy

Kipling, Ewing, and the Uses of Children's Literature

chapter 25|4 pages

Cowboys and Poets

part 10|6 pages

“To wash up on another island of truth …”