Sunday, February 27, 2011
How our press got its name--Nick Carraway as a ninja?
Carraway Bay Press takes its name from Fitzgerald's "The Great Gatsby," where narrator Nick Carraway saw Gatsby looking across the bay to the green light at the end of Daisy's dock (hence our docklight logo).
And now, evidently Nick Carraway has ninja moves---we have just discovered this wonderful (and highly addictive) video game.
We may never leave the house again.
http://greatgatsbygame.com/
Watch out for the drunks who throw bottles at you and the Charleston dancers in the fountain.
Personally, we don't think there are enough video games out there where you can knock over flappers.
Evidently this ad also appeared in conjunction with it, and we just simply thought it was too good not to include as well.
Enjoy, old sport!
And now, evidently Nick Carraway has ninja moves---we have just discovered this wonderful (and highly addictive) video game.
We may never leave the house again.
http://greatgatsbygame.com/
Watch out for the drunks who throw bottles at you and the Charleston dancers in the fountain.
Personally, we don't think there are enough video games out there where you can knock over flappers.
Evidently this ad also appeared in conjunction with it, and we just simply thought it was too good not to include as well.
Enjoy, old sport!
Tuesday, February 8, 2011
Famous Poets with Bipolar Disorder
To celebrate the release of "Saint Jude" on Kindle, Carraway Bay Press will list some of our favorite books, fiction and non-fiction, that deal with mental illnesses.
While there is always a lot of speculation about famous people who may / may not have had bipolar disorder, and there are tons of lists out there on the Internet, I put my stock in the resources from "Touched With Fire: Manic Depressive Illness and the Artistic Temperament" by Dr. Kay Redfield Jamison. She is a prominent psychiatrist and leader in the field of mental health research. [I highly recommend that book, along with her autobiography, "An Unquiet Mind"
This is what she says in the opening of her book:
In Appendix B: Writers, Artists, and Composers with Probable Cyclothymia, Major Depression, or Manic-Depressive Illness.
"This is meant to be an illustrative rather than a comprehensive list; for systematic studies, see text. Most of the writers, composers, and artists are American, British, European, Irish, or Russian; all are deceased . . . Many if not most of these writers, artists, and composers had other major problems as well, such as medical illnesses, alcoholism or drug addiction, or exceptionally difficult life circumstances. They are listed here as having suffered from a mood disorder because their mood symptoms predated their other conditions, because the nature and course of their mood and behavior symptoms were consistent with a diagnosis of an independently existing affective illness, and/or because their family histories of depression, manic-depressive illness, and suicide--coupled with their own symptoms--were sufficiently strong to warrant their inclusion."
And now the poets-----[NOTE: Links may not be active]
KEY:
Antonin Artaud (H)
Konstantin Batyushkov (H, SA)
Charles Baudelaire (SA)
Thomas Lovell Beddoes (S)
John Berryman (H, S)
William Blake
Aleksandr Blok
Barcroft Boake (S)
Louis Bogan (H)
Rupert Brooke
Robert Burns
George Gordon, Lord Byron
Thomas Campbell
Paul Celan (S)
Thomas Chatterton (S)
John Clare (H)
Harley Coleridge
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
William Collins (H)
William Cowper (H, SA)
Hart Crane (S)
George Darley
John Davidson (S)
Emily Dickinson - more
Ernest Dowson
T.S. Eliot (H)
Sergey Esenin (S)
Robert Fergusson (H)
Afanasy Fet (SA)
Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea
Edward FitzGerald
John Gould Fletcher (S)
Gustaf Froding (SA, H)
Oliver Goldsmith
Adam Lindsay Gordon (S)
Thomas Gray
Nikolai Gumilyov (SA)
Robert Stephen Hawker
Friedrich Holderlin (H)
Gerard Manley Hopkins - More
Victor Hugo
Randal Jarrell (H, S)
Samuel Johnson
John Keats - More
Henry Kendall (H)
Velimir Khlebnikov (H)
Heinrich Von Kleist (S)
Walter Savage Landor
Nikolaus Lenau (H)
J.M.R. Lenz (SA)
Mikhail Lermontov
Vachel Lindsay (S)
James Russell Lowell
Robert Lowell (H)
Hugh MacDiarmid (H)
Louis MacNeice
Osip Mandelstam (H, SA)
James Clarence Mangan
Vladimir Mayakovsky (S)
Edna St. Vincent Millay (H)
Alfred de Musset
Gerard de Nerval (H, S)
Boris Pasternak (H)
Cesare Pavese (S)
Sylvia Plath (H, S)
Edgar Allan Poe (SA)
Ezra Pound (H)
Alexander Pushkin
Laura Riding (SA)
Theodore Roethke (H)
Delmore Schwartz (H)
Anne Sexton (H, S)
Percy Bysshe Shelley - More (SA)
Christopher Smart (H)
Torquato Tasso (H)
Sara Teasdale (H, S)
Alfred, Lord tennyson
Dylan Thomas
Edward Thomas
Francis Thompson
George Trakl (H, S)
Marina Tsvetayeva (S)
Walt Whitman
"Saint Jude" (originally published in 2001 by Tudor Publishers) was listed as one of the best reads for teens in 2004. It follows a teenager who is struggling with manic depressive illness. You can order this title on Kindle by clicking the cover at right.
While there is always a lot of speculation about famous people who may / may not have had bipolar disorder, and there are tons of lists out there on the Internet, I put my stock in the resources from "Touched With Fire: Manic Depressive Illness and the Artistic Temperament" by Dr. Kay Redfield Jamison. She is a prominent psychiatrist and leader in the field of mental health research. [I highly recommend that book, along with her autobiography, "An Unquiet Mind"
This is what she says in the opening of her book:
In Appendix B: Writers, Artists, and Composers with Probable Cyclothymia, Major Depression, or Manic-Depressive Illness.
"This is meant to be an illustrative rather than a comprehensive list; for systematic studies, see text. Most of the writers, composers, and artists are American, British, European, Irish, or Russian; all are deceased . . . Many if not most of these writers, artists, and composers had other major problems as well, such as medical illnesses, alcoholism or drug addiction, or exceptionally difficult life circumstances. They are listed here as having suffered from a mood disorder because their mood symptoms predated their other conditions, because the nature and course of their mood and behavior symptoms were consistent with a diagnosis of an independently existing affective illness, and/or because their family histories of depression, manic-depressive illness, and suicide--coupled with their own symptoms--were sufficiently strong to warrant their inclusion."
And now the poets-----[NOTE: Links may not be active]
KEY:
H = Asylum or psychiatric hospital
S = Suicide
SA = Suicide attempt
Wednesday, February 2, 2011
Famous Writers with Bipolar Disorder
To celebrate the release of "Saint Jude" on Kindle, Carraway Bay Press will list some of our favorite books, fiction and non-fiction, that deal with mental illnesses.
While there is always a lot of speculation about famous people who may / may not have had bipolar disorder, and there are tons of lists out there on the Internet, I put my stock in the resources from "Touched With Fire: Manic Depressive Illness and the Artistic Temperament" by Dr. Kay Redfield Jamison. She is a prominent psychiatrist and leader in the field of mental health research. [I highly recommend that book, along with her autobiography, "An Unquiet Mind"
This is what she says in the opening of her book:
In Appendix B: Writers, Artists, and Composers with Probable Cyclothymia, Major Depression, or Manic-Depressive Illness.
"This is meant to be an illustrative rather than a comprehensive list; for systematic studies, see text. Most of the writers, composers, and artists are American, British, European, Irish, or Russian; all are deceased . . . Many if not most of these writers, artists, and composers had other major problems as well, such as medical illnesses, alcoholism or drug addiction, or exceptionally difficult life circumstances. They are listed here as having suffered from a mood disorder because their mood symptoms predated their other conditions, because the nature and course of their mood and behavior symptoms were consistent with a diagnosis of an independently existing affective illness, and/or because their family histories of depression, manic-depressive illness, and suicide--coupled with their own symptoms--were sufficiently strong to warrant their inclusion."
We'll start with the writers-----
KEY:
"Saint Jude" (originally published in 2001 by Tudor Publishers) was listed as one of the best reads for teens in 2004. It follows a teenager who is struggling with manic depressive illness. You can order this title on Kindle by clicking the cover at right.
While there is always a lot of speculation about famous people who may / may not have had bipolar disorder, and there are tons of lists out there on the Internet, I put my stock in the resources from "Touched With Fire: Manic Depressive Illness and the Artistic Temperament" by Dr. Kay Redfield Jamison. She is a prominent psychiatrist and leader in the field of mental health research. [I highly recommend that book, along with her autobiography, "An Unquiet Mind"
This is what she says in the opening of her book:
In Appendix B: Writers, Artists, and Composers with Probable Cyclothymia, Major Depression, or Manic-Depressive Illness.
"This is meant to be an illustrative rather than a comprehensive list; for systematic studies, see text. Most of the writers, composers, and artists are American, British, European, Irish, or Russian; all are deceased . . . Many if not most of these writers, artists, and composers had other major problems as well, such as medical illnesses, alcoholism or drug addiction, or exceptionally difficult life circumstances. They are listed here as having suffered from a mood disorder because their mood symptoms predated their other conditions, because the nature and course of their mood and behavior symptoms were consistent with a diagnosis of an independently existing affective illness, and/or because their family histories of depression, manic-depressive illness, and suicide--coupled with their own symptoms--were sufficiently strong to warrant their inclusion."
We'll start with the writers-----
KEY:
H = Asylum or psychiatric hospital
S = Suicide
SA = Suicide attempt
- Hans Christian Andersen
- Honore de Balzac
- James Barrie
- Arthur Benson (H)
- E.F. Benson
- James Boswell
- William Faulkner (H)
- F. Scott Fitzgerald (H)
- Lewis Grassic Gibbon (SA)
- Nikolai Gogl
- Maxim Gorky (SA)
- Kenneth Graham
- Graham Greene
- Ernest Hemingway (H, S)
- Hermann Hesse (H, SA)
- Henrik Ibsen
- William Inge (H, S)
- Henry James
- William James
- Charles Lamb (H)
- Malcolm Lowry (H, S)
- John Bunyan
- Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain)
- Joseph Conrad (SA)
- Charles Dickens
- Isak Dinesen (SA)
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Herman Melville
- Eugene O'Neill (H, SA)
- Francis Parkman
- John Ruskin (H)
- Mary Shelley
- Jean Stafford (H)
- Robert Louis Stevenson
- August Strindberg
- Leo Tolstoy
- Ivan Turgenev
- Tennessee Williams (H)
- Mary Wollstonecraft (SA)
- Virginia Woolf (H, S)
- Emile Zola
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A short story collection by award-winning Carolina writer, Dawn DeAnna Wilson.
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Entertaining. Unexpected.
Carraway Bay Press is an independent publisher producing titles that entertain and inspire.
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Carraway Bay Press typically accepts submissions during June - September each year.
Keep checking this blog for additional information.
Carraway Bay Press typically accepts submissions during June - September each year.
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