The Changing Bell
by
Book Details
About the Book
I live in a small town. Perhaps a larger town than I realize: On the streets of Paris, I met a stranger who knew the town I lived in. Why? Because people like John Humphrey Noyes in the 1840s made history that excited even George B. Shaw. Several institutions of learning began here in the thirties and forties of the last century. It was in the center of New England. There were farmers in this area-the so-called hoi polloi-who noticed the sticker on the back of my truck-"Call me Ishmael"-who said to me, "Ah, I see you like Herman Melville." I am writing a story about this town as it might be, if suddenly one stepped into it and found his Jerusalem. Its center is the Bell, the great railroad engine wheel rim that ran our lives in my favorite institution, the Putney School, my teacher that set me on the road.
About the Author
EDUCATION: Putney School, Bard College, a World War II veteran (for three-and-a-half years), and a University of Iowa master?s thesis (an original play). With wife Dorothy, and child, returned to Putney, Vermont, to write plays.
INTERRUPTIONS: taught English and Drama at Kent School, Connecticut, for four years. With friend, established the Grammar School in Putney. Collaborated with Arthur Lithgow in starting the Brattleboro Center for the Performing Arts.
CREATIONS: five more children and several plays. One off-Broadway production of Pequod and other productions through the New England Playwright?s Guild, performed locally and in the Boston area. Wrote two novels: The Folk and the Education of Private Ambrose and The Changing Bell.