Each morning I would strike out for this temple of learning in the crisp autumn air . . . with a sense of purpose and the conviction that this was where I belonged.Marilyn Stasio from My Research Project
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Inspired partly by Richard Alticks
The Scholar Adventurers,the thirteen writers in
Curiositys Catsoffer powerful arguments for the value of hands-on research, be it chasing documents, cracking mysteries, interviewing long-lost subjects, or visiting exotic and not-so-exotic locales.
Alberto Martinez explains how diligence with dates can provide clues to unlock the most difficult historical puzzles. Jan Reid explores the difference between research for an epic novel and research to write the epic biography of a friend. Margot Livesey suspects that she continues to write novels simply to do the research. But every essay testifies to the fact that research is valuable not only because of the product that may result from it, but because the process itself fulfills a basic human need.
Contributors include:? Philip J. Anderson, Annette Kolodny, Theodore Kornweibel Jr., Margot Livesey, Alberto A. Martinez, Bruce Joshua Miller, Katherine Hall Page, Jan Reid, Ali Selim, Marilyn Stasio, Ned Stuckey-French, ?Bruce White, and Steve Yates.
Bruce Joshua Millerhas edited two books and written for public radio, the
Chicago Tribune,and other publications. He has worked in the book industry for thirty-five years.
Thirteen writersincluding historians, journalists, novelists, a scriptwriter, and moreoffer powerful arguments for the value of hands-on research.
Research has always seemed a bit like homework to me. Whatever the topic, I feel like a naughty schoolboy whos cramming for an exam. What a relief to realize I am not alone. Through a variety of methods and circumstances, the writers in this fascinating collection demonstrate that research, like exploration, is challenging, maddening, frul"