Quote of the Day

“People should pursue what they’re passionate about. That will make them happier than pretty much anything else.”
Elon Musk – Entrepreneur (born 1971)

Kurt Vonnegut

Kurt Vonnegut

In the summer of 1965, a telephone rang at a failing car dealership on Cape Cod. The man who answered was forty-three, flat broke, and supporting six children by writing paperback science fiction that almost no one in the literary world took seriously. He had no idea that the voice on the other end of the line was about to change everything — not just for him, but for American literature…

The man who answered was Kurt Vonnegut.

Today his name belongs to the ages. Slaughterhouse-Five sits on nearly every list of the greatest novels of the twentieth century, and generations have grown up on Cat’s Cradle and Breakfast of Champions, on his gallows humor and his aching humanity. But in the summer of 1965, none of that had happened yet. Kurt Vonnegut was, by almost every measure the world uses, a failure.

He was scraping by, out of print, running a Saab dealership in West Barnstable that didn’t work, trying to feed a very large family on royalties that barely existed. And the reason that family was so large is a story of almost unimaginable loss.

Because the truth is that Kurt Vonnegut had already lived through more grief by 1965 than most people face in a lifetime.

In December 1944, at twenty-two, he was captured by German forces at the Battle of the Bulge and held prisoner in Dresden. On the night of February 13, 1945, he survived the Allied firebombing that destroyed the city — locked deep underground in a meat locker beneath the slaughterhouse where his captors kept the American POWs. He climbed up into daylight the next morning to find the beautiful city above him simply gone. Then he and the other prisoners were put to work, for weeks, pulling bodies from the ruins.

He carried that with him for the rest of his life.

And the war was not the only sorrow he came home to. While he was still a young soldier, before he shipped overseas, his mother had died — a tragedy that shadowed him always. Years later, in 1958, his beloved older sister Alice died of cancer in a hospital, just two days after her husband was killed in a train accident. In a single, unbearable stretch, four young boys were left without parents. Kurt and his wife, Jane, did not hesitate. They adopted three of Alice’s orphaned sons — and just like that, their household of three children became a household of six.

He loved those children. But love does not pay the bills. And for twenty years, Vonnegut had also been carrying something else: a book he could not write.

Ever since the war, he had been trying to write about Dresden — and every time, it fell apart in his hands. The horror was too big, too shapeless, to force into an ordinary war story. “When I got home from the Second World War,” he later said, “I thought it would be easy to write about the destruction of Dresden, since all I would have to do would be report what I had seen.” He was wrong. For two decades, the book would not come.

And then, in 1965, the phone rang at that failing car dealership.

On the line was a message from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop — the oldest and most prestigious creative writing program in America. They needed someone to fill a last-minute teaching vacancy. Would Kurt Vonnegut come to Iowa City and teach fiction, for a salary of eight thousand five hundred dollars a year?

Vonnegut, who by his own admission “needed the job most desperately,” said yes.

So he packed up his family and drove west, and this obscure paperback writer — pipe smoke, rumpled manner, Indiana drawl, and a bottomless well of unprocessed war — walked into a room full of the most serious young writers in the country. And for the first time in his life, people took him seriously. He had literary company, a small office, and students who hung on his every word.

He turned out to be a magnificent teacher.

Among the students who passed through his classroom in those two years was a young man named John Irving — who would go on to write The World According to Garp. Irving later summed up his teacher in a line everyone who knew Vonnegut came back to: he was “cruel to institutions, but kind to the individuals.” He taught Gail Godwin, and Suzanne McConnell, who would remain his devoted friend for life. He gave writing advice his students could still recite, word for word, forty years later.

And in Iowa City, with a little breathing room at last, Kurt Vonnegut finally cracked the book that had defeated him for twenty years.

The breakthrough was letting go of the idea that it had to be told in a straight line. Memory doesn’t work that way, he realized — not when the thing being remembered is too enormous to hold. So he handed the story to a hapless optometrist named Billy Pilgrim, a man who becomes “unstuck in time” and lurches, without warning, back and forth through the moments of his own life. That strange, broken, time-jumping structure was the key. He began the novel at Iowa, and after winning a Guggenheim grant in 1967, he traveled back to Dresden itself to research it, and finished it at home.

Slaughterhouse-Five was published in 1969. Kurt Vonnegut was forty-six years old.

It made him famous almost overnight. Landing in the middle of the Vietnam War, in front of a country desperate to understand what war does to those who survive it, the book struck like a lightning bolt. The paperback writer the literary world had spent twenty years ignoring was suddenly one of the most important novelists in America — and he stayed there for the rest of his life.

He wrote fourteen novels in all. But through all of them, and through all his dark humor and his despair at the cruelty of the world, he kept returning to one simple piece of advice that he believed mattered more than any clever technique or turn of phrase. It has been taped to refrigerators and read aloud at weddings and funerals ever since:

“God damn it,” he wrote, “you’ve got to be kind.”

Kurt Vonnegut died on April 11, 2007, in Manhattan, at the age of eighty-four, after a fall. His former students — Irving, McConnell, and a whole generation of American writers who had passed through that Iowa classroom — wrote about him with enormous love.

And when you trace it all the way back, the bridge that carried him out of obscurity and into the ranks of the immortals was one desperate yes to a phone call. A broke, grieving, middle-aged man with six kids and a book he couldn’t finish, who said yes to eighty-five hundred dollars a year — and, in saying it, finally found the room to write the story he’d been carrying since he was twenty-two.

Sometimes the thing that saves a life doesn’t look like salvation at the time. Sometimes it looks like a modest teaching job in Iowa, taken because the bills were due. And sometimes that’s exactly where a masterpiece — and a second life — quietly begins.

Jonathan Kozol’s Lesson Changed American Education

Jonathan Kozol

He Read a Fourteen-Line Poem to a Class of Fourth-Graders. The Next Morning, He Was Fired.

Boston, Massachusetts.

May 1965.

It started with a poem.

Inside a fourth-grade classroom in Roxbury, one of Boston’s predominantly Black neighborhoods, twenty-eight-year-old substitute teacher Jonathan Kozol stood before his students holding a slim book of poetry.

The children were nine years old.

Many had spent their entire lives inside schools that expected very little from them.

That morning, Kozol decided to give them something more.

He read The Ballad of the Landlord, a poem by Langston Hughes first published in 1940.

The poem tells the story of a Black tenant confronting his white landlord over unsafe living conditions, only to be arrested after demanding justice.

It was only fourteen lines long.

It was also not part of the Boston Public Schools’ approved fourth-grade curriculum.

The students listened.

They talked about it.

The lesson ended.

The next morning, Jonathan Kozol was fired.

The dismissal letter arrived almost immediately.

Signed by Boston’s Deputy Superintendent for Instruction, it explained that teachers were not permitted to introduce literature outside the official Course of Study without prior approval.

Kozol had never asked for permission.

The letter also stated that parents had complained after learning about the lesson.

He had been teaching in the Boston Public Schools for only seven months.

A fourteen-line poem had ended his career there.

But it also began something much larger.

Jonathan Kozol had never planned to become a public school teacher.

Born in Boston on September 5, 1936, he grew up in a family deeply committed to public service.

His father, Harry Kozol, was a neurologist and psychiatrist at Massachusetts General Hospital.

His mother, Ruth, worked as a social worker.

Academically, he excelled.

He attended Noble and Greenough School before graduating summa cum laude from Harvard University in 1958 with a degree in English literature.

That same year, he received a Rhodes Scholarship to study at Oxford.

His future seemed clear.

Graduate school.

A life in academia.

A career devoted to literature.

Instead, after only a year at Oxford, he left.

He moved to Paris, rented a small room, and spent four years trying to write a novel while living among American expatriate writers.

When he eventually returned to the United States in 1963, publishers rejected the manuscript.

He planned to begin doctoral studies.

Then history intervened.

During the summer of 1964, Kozol volunteered at a Freedom School in Roxbury.

The temporary school had been established by civil rights activists to educate Black children while protesting racial inequality within Boston’s public school system.

The experience transformed him.

He later said he had discovered something more meaningful than an academic career.

He withdrew his graduate school applications.

Instead, he accepted work as a substitute teacher in Boston.

The classroom he entered reflected the inequalities surrounding it.

Many of the textbooks were decades old.

The heating system barely worked.

Students frequently disappeared as families struggled with poverty and unstable housing.

The official curriculum left little room for curiosity.

So Kozol quietly expanded it.

He brought books from his own apartment.

American poetry.

Literature he believed every child deserved the opportunity to hear.

One of those books contained a poem by Langston Hughes.

When administrators dismissed him over that single lesson, Kozol could have walked away from education.

Instead, he picked up a pen.

In 1967, Houghton Mifflin published *Death at an Early Age*, his account of teaching in Roxbury and the inequalities he had witnessed firsthand.

The book stunned readers across the United States.

It described overcrowded classrooms, deteriorating schools, racial discrimination, and children whose opportunities had been limited long before they entered the classroom.

A year later, it received the National Book Award in the Science, Philosophy and Religion category.

Over the following decades, it sold more than two million copies in the United States and Europe.

It also established Jonathan Kozol as one of America’s most influential voices on education.

He continued writing.

In 1988 came Rachel and Her Children, documenting homelessness among American families.

In 1991, Savage Inequalities exposed the enormous funding gaps between wealthy and poor public schools.

Amazing Grace, published in 1995, chronicled the lives of children growing up in New York City’s South Bronx.

In 2005, The Shame of the Nation examined the persistence of racial segregation in American public education decades after the Civil Rights Movement.

Each book returned to the same question.

What kind of society allows children to inherit unequal futures simply because of where they are born?

Even as his books reached millions of readers, Kozol never truly left the classroom.

For years, he continued teaching part-time in the Newton Public Schools outside Boston.

He believed writing about education mattered.

But standing beside students mattered even more.

Over time, generations of teachers, parents, policymakers, and students encountered his work.

Some embraced his ideas.

Others challenged them.

Very few ignored them.

Jonathan Kozol turned eighty-nine in September 2025.

More than sixty years after reading one unauthorized poem to a room full of fourth-graders, he continues to write about children, schools, and the promise of public education.

His story is a reminder that history does not always change because of famous speeches or sweeping legislation.

Sometimes it changes because a teacher opens a book.

Reads fourteen lines of poetry.

Accepts the consequences.

And refuses to believe that any child should be denied the chance to think.

Dustin, Tom and Cassie

Dustin, Tom and Cassie

In 1984, Tom Cruise was eating with his younger sister Cass in a New York restaurant when she spotted Dustin Hoffman ordering takeout and demanded that her brother introduce himself.

Cruise refused. He was filming “Legend” (1985), but fame still felt new enough that approaching an Oscar-winning actor seemed more humiliating than exciting.

Cass would not let the moment disappear. Cruise remembered her warning. “If you don’t go up and say hello to him, I’m going to say hello to him, and I was like, ’Oh my god.’” He finally crossed the restaurant, apologized for interrupting, and addressed him as Mr. Hoffman. Then Hoffman looked up and called out Cruise’s surname. The young actor had expected blank confusion. Instead, one of his heroes already knew his name.

Hoffman was appearing in the Broadway revival of “Death of a Salesman” (1984), and he invited Cruise and Cass to attend. Backstage, he gave Cruise another surprise. Cruise recalled, “As I was leaving, he said, ’I want to make a movie with you.’ I was like, ’That’d be nice.’” Cruise answered with the manners he had learned growing up, never expecting the promise to become real. Around two years later, Hoffman sent him the screenplay that became “Rain Man” (1988).

The script placed Cruise far outside the swagger audiences associated with him. Charlie Babbitt was a furious, selfish car dealer who discovers that his late father’s $3 million estate has been left in trust for Raymond, an autistic older brother Charlie never knew existed. Cruise said the role had originally been written as a 57-year-old man. Reworking Charlie for a performer in his twenties gave the character a younger anger. Cruise later called it the best role of his career at that point and said each film was giving him greater confidence to try scenes in different ways.

Getting the film made was almost as difficult as that first restaurant approach. Cruise said he and Hoffman spent more than two years developing it and passed through four directors before Barry Levinson took control. Martin Brest, Steven Spielberg, and Sydney Pollack had all been involved at different stages. Levinson arrived only eight weeks before filming and stripped away gangsters, FBI agents, storms, and other plot machinery. He trusted that two difficult brothers, a 1949 Buick, and a tense cross-country journey could hold an audience.

Hoffman’s confidence also cracked. After watching footage from his first day, he believed his portrayal had failed and suggested Richard Dreyfuss replace him. Three weeks into filming, a scene about Raymond’s missing Hanes underwear unlocked the character. Hoffman explained, “And I suddenly realized that I was playing off myself because I know something about obsession and I’m comfortable being obsessive.” Raymond existed completely in the present, and Hoffman’s own obsessive nature became more useful than the pages of research filling his dressing room.

Hoffman built Raymond through intensive study, consulting specialists and learning from autistic men including Joseph Sullivan. He borrowed real behaviors, such as eating cheese balls with a toothpick, memorizing phone numbers, and reacting intensely to alarms. Hoffman explained his goal with unusual tenderness. “I tried very hard to be myself in this film. But I hope what emerged was Joe’s spirit, because that’s what moved me.” Cruise, meanwhile, made Charlie’s gradual change believable without turning it into a sudden miracle.

The film earned $172.8 million in the United States and Canada, won four Academy Awards including Best Picture, and gave Hoffman his second Best Actor Oscar. It also introduced millions of viewers to autism, while its rare combination of autism and extraordinary savant skills later became an overused stereotype. For Cruise, the deeper reward was learning beside Hoffman. He said their two-year collaboration taught him how carefully scenes could be shaped around another performer’s strengths, a lesson he carried into later work with young actors. Cass pushed Cruise across one restaurant, and Hollywood history followed him.

Quote of the Day

“If you want a quality, act as if you already had it.” – William James, Philosopher (1842 – 1910)

Maurice Sendak

Maurice Sendak

In September 2011, an eighty-three-year-old children’s book author gave a radio interview that made strangers pull their cars over on American highways and weep.

His name was Maurice Sendak.

He was the man who, forty-eight years earlier, had written a small forty-page picture book about a boy named Max who got angry, got sent to his room without supper, and sailed off in his imagination to a place where wild things roared and gnashed their teeth.

The book was called Where the Wild Things Are.

It sold twenty million copies. It won the 1964 Caldecott Medal. It has never gone out of print in sixty-two consecutive years. It is, on the operating record of essentially every American library catalog of the following six decades, one of the most-read children’s books in the American commercial-publishing apparatus of the twentieth century.

Sendak had grown up in a Brooklyn tenement apartment in the 1930s, the youngest child of Polish-Jewish immigrant parents who had lost essentially every extended family member left behind in Europe during the Holocaust. He had been a sickly child. He had spent long stretches of his childhood in bed reading. He had watched his parents receive letters through the 1940s telling them that specific aunts and uncles and cousins had been murdered at specific extermination camps.

He knew from the beginning that childhood contained darkness.

He wrote children’s books that told children the truth about it.

Most children’s books in 1963 were cheerful and simple. They gave children bright colors, happy endings, and a world that always made sense.

Sendak did something different.

He gave them Max. He gave them a boy who got angry, was sent to his room without supper, and sailed away to a place where wild things roared and gnashed their teeth and rolled their terrible eyes. Max did not get punished for his feelings. He became king of them. And when the wildness was done, he came home. Because home was where someone loved him best of all.

Children understood immediately. Adults were not so sure. Some librarians pulled the book from shelves. Some parents worried it was too dark. Bruno Bettelheim publicly criticized it in a Ladies’ Home Journal column, arguing that a boy being sent to his room without supper would traumatize child readers.

But children, who always recognize the truth even when adults have forgotten how, loved it completely.

By 2011, Maurice Sendak was eighty-three years old.

His parents were long gone. His brother Jack was gone. His sister Natalie was gone. His partner of fifty years, the psychiatrist Eugene Glynn, had died of lung cancer four years earlier at their Ridgefield, Connecticut home. Sendak had never publicly acknowledged the relationship during Eugene’s lifetime — he told a New York Times profile in 2008, a year after Eugene’s death, that his mother would not have understood, and that he had not wanted to explain.

He had written his final children’s book, Bumble-Ardy, sitting at Eugene’s bedside during the final months of Eugene’s illness.

“I did it to save myself,” Sendak said later. “I did not want to die with him.”

He survived Eugene by five years.

He kept working. He kept drawing. He kept writing. He continued to give a small number of long interviews to the American press each year — Colbert, The New Yorker, Fresh Air.

That September, he sat down with Terry Gross of NPR’s Fresh Air for what neither of them knew would be his last interview.

He had spoken with Gross many times across the previous thirty years. He trusted her. He respected her.

At eighty-three, with nothing left to protect and nothing left to prove, he simply told her the truth.

He talked about the enormous old maple trees outside his studio window in Ridgefield — trees that had stood on the property for two or three hundred years before he was born and would stand there long after he was gone. He said he had fallen deeply in love with the world in his last years. Not in spite of everything he had lost, but because of it.

Then he said something that made people pull over on highways.

“I have nothing now but praise for my life. I’m not unhappy. I cry a lot because I miss people. They die and I can’t stop them. They leave me and I love them more.”

He cried on the phone.

Terry Gross cried on the phone.

Across the United States, strangers driving to work in the morning heard the interview on their local NPR affiliates. They pulled over on highway shoulders. They sat in parking lots. They wept. Not out of sadness exactly, but out of recognition. Because they had all been there. Holding love in their chest for someone no longer there to receive it. With nowhere to put it.

Before the interview ended, Sendak thanked Terry for the rare gift she had — the quality of presence that made people want to say the things they usually kept locked away.

Then, gently and plainly, he said:

“Almost certainly, I’ll go before you go, so I won’t have to miss you.”

And before the line went quiet, he left three words for everyone listening.

Not three different things. The same thing, said three times, because once simply was not enough.

“Live your life. Live your life. Live your life.”

The interview aired on September 20, 2011.

Eight months later, on the morning of Tuesday, May 8, 2012, Maurice Sendak died of complications following a stroke at Danbury Hospital in Danbury, Connecticut. He was eighty-three years old.

His books still live in libraries and on nightstands everywhere. Children still follow Max into the wild rumpus. Parents still sit on the edge of beds and read the words aloud, and sometimes, without quite knowing why, feel their voices catch.

Now they know why.

He cried nearly every day near the end. Not because life had taken from him. But because life had given him so much — so many people to love, so many mornings to love them in — that even at the very end the love was still spilling over.

That was the whole secret.

He cried because he loved them.

If his story stayed with you, drop one word in the comments — Maurice, Max, wild, anything that comes to mind. Tap the like button so more people find this story. The page is small. Every reaction helps us keep telling stories like this one.

Grandma’s Kitchen

Grandma's Kitchen

“Your great-grandmother was not trying to manifest a beach vacation. She was not curating an aesthetic. She was not optimizing…anything. She had a list, and the list was short, and the list was sacred.

A full pantry. Healthy children. A roof that did not leak. A husband who came home. A garden that produced. A few good dresses. A reliable stove. Sunday dinner with people she loved. Enough flour for the week and enough kindness for the neighbors.

That was the whole dream. That was the whole life. And by the standards of most of human history, achieving that list was a roaring success.

Then the twentieth century happened, and somebody figured out that a woman who is content is terrible for business. A woman with a full pantry is not running to the store. A woman who is satisfied with her kitchen is not redoing it every four years. A woman who knows what enough looks like cannot be sold the next thing.

So they got to work. They made the small house embarrassing. They made the old car embarrassing. They made the home-cooked meal embarrassing, and then when nobody knew how to cook anymore they sold it back as a meal kit with a celebrity chef on the box. They raised the cost of living until both parents had to work, and then they sold daycare and convenience food and weekend therapy to fix the exhaustion that working both jobs created in the first place.

They took your great-grandmother’s list and called it poverty. They took her life and called it limited. They took her contentment and called it a lack of ambition.

And then they sold you ambition. They sold you a bigger house you cannot clean, a car you cannot pay off, a wardrobe you do not wear, a calendar you cannot survive, and a vague constant feeling that you are still falling behind.

You are not falling behind. You are running a race that was designed to have no finish line. The race itself is the product.

-copied and pasted author unknown