David McCullough's Typewriter Bookend - Type Writer Book End -...
David McCullough (The Associated Pres)
The Citizen Chronicler
![Portrait of David McCullough](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_uWNVw0u6r7NQvLUFAOW2fp2Et41JynEhnH_wr7-QT7pvlukQT6xruHwiJ6K8-IeIeNk3WUDgm0LLT5nzVOyUdJCRAlYGsywCxUU2JrQYtiq5Nx-SbmpJiVHhlh7v4=s0-d)
He is called the "citizen chronicler" by Librarian of Congress James
Billington. His books have led a renaissance of interest in American history--from learning about a flood in
Pennsylvania that without warning devastated an entire community to discovering
the private achievements and frailties of an uncelebrated president. His
biography of Harry Truman won him a Pulitzer, as did his most recent biography
of another president, John Adams.
David McCullough throws himself into the research of his subjects, tracing
the roads they traveled, reading the books they read, and seeing the homes they
lived in. His diligence pays off in detailed and engaging narratives. In
receiving an honorary degree from Yale University the citation praised him: “As
an historian, he paints with words, giving us pictures of the American people
that live, breath, and above all, confront the fundamental issues of courage,
achievement, and moral character.”
Meeting Thornton Wilder at Yale as an undergraduate inspired McCullough to
become a writer--his first love, in fact, had been art. While at college he also
met his wife, Rosalee. He learned his craft working at Sports
Illustrated, at the United States Information Agency, and at American
Heritage. McCullough researched and wrote his first book in the precious
hours away from his job with American Heritage; The Johnstown
Flood came out in 1968. It was a story and region familiar to McCullough,
who was born and raised in nearby Pittsburgh. The book was a success and he
became a full-time author. Since then, McCullough has given us six more
books--The Great Bridge, The Path between the Seas,
Mornings on Horseback, Brave Companions, Truman, and
John Adams--earning him two Pulitzer Prizes, two National Book Awards,
and two Francis Parkman Prizes from the American Society of Historians. His
other honors include a Charles Frankel Prize, a National Book Foundation
Distinguished Contribution to American Letters Award, and a New York Public
Library’s Literary Lion Award.
(http://www.neh.gov/whoweare/mccullough/biography.html)
David McCullough calls walking from his home to the backyard shed that serves as his writing studio his "daily commute." The structure's walls are lined with about 800 books, most of them from his work on "John Adams," one of the most popular books in publisher Simon & Schuster's history. (Steven Senne, Associated Press)
Pulitzer Prize Winning Historian, Biographer, and PBS narrator David McCullough
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi6Kl5n7AK2rVLLThwlHh0TlDl7LjwJshxnDcaF9xDVkAxA3XAlm3wgDeGJmEQwH0kqKrArQsIiWFh7odfScXWn6qILSRyiub2MkPO1H3cr-3lXrWuArjqg41dx0d0xOnOcRkewfyKXolI/s280/McCullough-at-typewriter.jpg)
McCullough writes every day in a studio behind his house
David McCullough
Author, historian, two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award and a recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom, David McCullough is also very much a shedworker (although he calls his Pittsburgh shedlike atmosphere a 'writing studio' or 'the bookshop' rather than a shed). Inside, the unfinished walls are lined with around 1,000 books, mainly about John Adams about whom McCullough wrote a hugely successful biography. "I put it out here," he says, "so the kids didn't have to worry about making too much noise while I was writing."
There's a really nice interview with him in The Paris Review including a chat about his garden office.
Here's a snippet:
“Nothing good was ever written in a large room,” David McCullough says, and so his own office has been reduced to a windowed shed in the backyard of his Martha’s Vineyard home. Known as “the bookshop,” the shed does not have a telephone or running water. Its primary contents are a Royal typewriter, a green banker’s lamp, and a desk, which McCullough keeps control over by “flushing out” the loose papers after each chapter is finished. The view from inside the bookshop is of a sagging barn surrounded by pasture. To keep from being startled, McCullough asks his family members to whistle as they approach the shed where he is writing
John Adams by David McCullough
About
the book: In this powerful, epic biography, David McCullough unfolds
the adventurous life journey of John Adams, the brilliant, fiercely independent,
often irascible, always honest Yankee patriot who spared nothing in his zeal for
the American Revolution; who rose to become the second president of the United
States and saved the country from blundering into an unnecessary war; who was
learned beyond all but a few and regarded by some as "out of his senses"; and
whose marriage to the wise and valiant Abigail Adams is one of the most moving
love stories in American history
http://www.achievement.org/autodoc/page/mcc2bio-1
http://www.neh.gov/whoweare/mccullough/biography.html
http://www.nytimes.com/books/01/05/27/specials/mccullough.html
http://www.post-gazette.com/books/20011230mccullough1230fnp2.asp
http://www.shedworking.co.uk/2012/02/david-mccullough-shedworker.html
http://abookwormsreviews.blogspot.com/2012/01/john-adams-by-david-mccullough.html
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