Dave Schaafsma
Goodreads Author
Born
in Grand Rapids, Michigan, The United States
January 06, 1953
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Member Since
August 2007
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Growing Up Chicago (Second to None: Chicago Stories)
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2022
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2 editions
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On Narrative Inquiry: Approaches to Language and Literacy
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2011
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3 editions
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Eating On The Street: Teaching Literacy in a Multicultural Society (Composition, Literacy, and Culture, 163)
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1994
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4 editions
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Jane Addams in the Classroom
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2014
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4 editions
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Language and Reflection: An Integrated Approach to Teaching English
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1991
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3 editions
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Literacy and Democracy: Teacher Research and Composition Studies in Pursuit of Habitable Spaces : Further Conversations from the Students of Jay Robinson
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published
1998
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Dave’s Recent Updates
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Dave Schaafsma
rated a book it was amazing
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| So I actually got from the library the book that is referred to in Penny’s title and repeatedly referred to throughout her book, Charles Mackay’s Extraordinary Personal Delusions and the Madness of Crowds (1841). Penny has a way of urging you to go d ...more | |
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Dave Schaafsma
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“We did not ask for this room or this music. But because we are here, let us dance.” The literary establishment has done itself no favors by beating up on King as a hack writer, as his works have sold over 350 million copies (which is evidence of his ...more |
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Dave Schaafsma
rated a book it was amazing
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| I have a certain fondness for parodies of fairy tales and fables. What comes to mind? James Thurber's always still hilarious Fables for Our Time; the short film Bambi Vs. Godzilla; Jon Scieszka's The True Story of the Three Little Pigs. When I was a ...more | |
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Had read and reviewed all the volumes, but decided to buy this large compendium volume to read it all the way through. Crazy, pulpy premise: A miserab
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Dave Schaafsma
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Dave Schaafsma
rated a book liked it
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| A picture book by Portuguese author Rafael Sica about a houseful of people who can't sleep because there is a ghost in the house. So girl Kooky helps everyone get to sleep by telling stories. But we are supposed to forget there is a ghost; how does t ...more | |
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I learned a word to describe such work recently from a writer friend: irrealism, to distinguish it from the word surreal, which gets thrown around a l
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Topics Mentioning This Author
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| THE Group for Aut...: 'Author's Writing' section on profile page | 17 | 70 | Sep 26, 2016 10:10PM | |
| Read Women: The Best We Could Do by Thi Bui | 20 | 98 | Jul 08, 2018 12:36PM |
“Conversations are efforts toward good relations. They are an elementary form of reciprocity. They are the exercise of our love for each other. They are the enemies of our loneliness, our doubt, our anxiety, our tendencies to abdicate. To continue to be in good conversation over our enormous and terrifying problems is to be calling out to each other in the night. If we attend with imagination and devotion to our conversations, we will find what we need; and someone among us will act—it does not matter whom—and we will survive.”
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“Everything is held together with stories. That is all that is holding us together, stories and compassion.”
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“Remember on this one thing, said Badger. The stories people tell have a way of taking care of them. If stories come to you, care for them. And learn to give them away where they are needed. Sometimes a person needs a story more than food to stay alive. That is why we put these stories in each other's memories. This is how people care for themselves. ”
― Crow and Weasel
― Crow and Weasel
The Transition Movement
— 122 members
— last activity Jun 18, 2020 12:52PM
This group is dedicated to readings and discussion related to the Transition Movement started by Rob Hopkins. The movement started in Ireland and En ...more
Damn You, Grant Morrison
— 12 members
— last activity Jul 10, 2019 07:46PM
This is a group for people who typically have no clue what Grant Morrison is talking about and want to commiserate /attempt in vain to figure out his ...more
COMIC BOOK CRAZIES
— 329 members
— last activity Jun 17, 2025 09:28AM
We read comics all the time! https://www.facebook.com/COMIC-BOOK-Crazies-290288951356668/s
Musicians And Music Lovers
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This is where we will post our videos, and our songs.
Goodreads Authors/Readers
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This group is dedicated to connecting readers with Goodreads authors. It is divided by genres, and includes folders for writing resources, book websit ...more
The Short Story Club
— 544 members
— last activity 9 hours, 45 min ago
The purpose of this group is to read and discuss one short story a week. For the the first couple of years, we read from specific anthologies, but fro ...more
Chicago Writers
— 108 members
— last activity Feb 02, 2017 05:12PM
This is a place for Chicago Writers Association members to discuss their current and upcoming titles, announce events and reviews, and connect with ot ...more
100-books-read boys club
— 7 members
— last activity Dec 31, 2018 04:20AM
Not a massive number? Sure. But still my favourite 100-bragging number.
Ovid's Metamorphoses and Further Metamorphoses
— 93 members
— last activity Feb 08, 2020 02:44PM
To read the Metamorphoses of Ovid, in any of the many translations (or the original), and at whatever speed it takes, with three goals in mind: 1. To ...more
Theatre Books and Plays
— 1494 members
— last activity Jul 03, 2024 05:59AM
A room for lovers of theatre, theater books, texts on acting, directing, theory and scripts.
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Hey, Dave — I just saw your review of Kate Beaton's book. I was going to link to the excellent review at the NYTimes (with a paywall-skipping gift link), but of course Goodreads doesn't allow links anywhere but in reviews anymore. Anyway, if you want to add it to your review, here's that link, modified so I can at least DM it to you:nytimes.com / 2022 / 09 / 12 / books / kate-beaton-ducks-canada-oil.html?unlocked_article_code=gT0YdCu1dfrsJo_hLSA1jK0-cpHozTywKGSfeOH2zdsuWpNuUUbLUgr8AH_3enqzXB4ZVQnO2iJYOzqaE4KdkovE2M-GutNsCmEzHEtVzrVNfvw64_pzz--Fh_lmPWdHXRy5wSyJVJANUqOF1H7BCdmPqKRN-ySUHBKin32GWcZJxLPQ2qtShzB_NSt2oe87cH0wAKc7ckgDFN4D5OttzQyqgQj-NQFoWwNlntl68mDdNx0_jh7h1UWO1gjWGLXj48qKO-taoQ3JOb5vUd5ICSX94vJd-XTgz6XM6NhBpi_U13KvSLaSbYATUIfL9bGuIsAnluF1q7DydBZgXZgzlSyGNSc&smid=share-url
Kristine wrote: "Dave, thank you for taking me on as a friend. Professor of Literature sounds like my dream job. Thanks for taking me on as a friend. I always write reviews, whether they are decent is certainly deb..."Do the dream! You get to read a lot, for sure! :) Good luck with your reading (and reviews!).
Dave, thank you for taking me on as a friend. Professor of Literature sounds like my dream job. Thanks for taking me on as a friend. I always write reviews, whether they are decent is certainly debatable, but I try.
Hello David,I am reading your reviews for quite some years now, so it was a very pleasant surprise to receive your friend invite; thank you very much!
I am looking forward to interesting discussions and comic book findings,
Michael
Hanneke wrote: "Happy New Year, David! Hope health, happiness and good books come your way!"And to you, too, Hanneke!
Cathy wrote: "Merry Christmas David and thanks for goodreads friendship." The same to you, Cathy! :)
David wrote: "Ted wrote: "David, what genre was that that you and your family were reading all the candidates for the GR book awards?"Picture Book" And I can help you by compiling--soon--my/our favorites, but A Hungry Lion, or A Dwindling Assortment of Animals
by Lucy Ruth Cummins was our top favorite. I finally found for Ida, Always, because the lion book was out of the running. I liked Klaasen's Hat book, but the kids liked it less.
Ted wrote: "David, what genre was that that you and your family were reading all the candidates for the GR book awards?"Picture Book
David, what genre was that that you and your family were reading all the candidates for the GR book awards?
Majenta wrote: "Good evening, David! Friend Request accepted, thanks for Requesting! Congratulations on all your publishing success! I hope this has been a good week for you, that you'll have a nice weekend, and t..."Thanks for accepting my request, and glad to now know what you are also reading. And thanks for all the wishes! I hope you also have a terrific weekend.
Good evening, David! Friend Request accepted, thanks for Requesting! Congratulations on all your publishing success! I hope this has been a good week for you, that you'll have a nice weekend, and the week ahead will be...even better! (And the week after that, and the week after that, and the week after that....) Be blessed!Best wishes from Majenta
Melki wrote: "I guess finals are over by now. Enjoy your summer!"So nice of you to say! I wish you the same, a terrific summer! Keep reading and reviewing. You make me happy!
Matthias wrote: "Thank you for accepting David! I see you teach Young Adult Fiction? That's very interesting, I never figured that was a seperate course, but it makes sense now that I think of it. Looking forward t..."Well, the Young Adult Literature course is a typical one for the preparation of English teachers in a lot of universities and colleges. I have been teaching it for maybe 15 years, but haven't been reading that much of it lately. Mostly comics. Will next year, maybe. Oh! And this summer I will teach a course on Young Adult Graphic Novels, just to try something different.
Thank you for accepting David! I see you teach Young Adult Fiction? That's very interesting, I never figured that was a seperate course, but it makes sense now that I think of it. Looking forward to reading your reviews!
Jonathan wrote: "I saw you liked my status on the book about pursuing a further academic studies in Humanities! If you want to find a way to sneak me into an assistantship program at UIC....*wink wink nudge nudge*"well, I am glad to help you in any way I can. Let's talk!
Thanks for the link to Lee, Ted. And thanks for the reminder to read the Wittgenstein novel I had initially intended to read. Just ordered it, finally!
Thanks for the friend request, David. I'm always pleased to connect with a prof. You might be interested in one of my friends, Lee Klein. This is his regular GR page, I believe he also has an author page. https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/9...(I don't think he's a prof, but he's a learned reader and an interesting writer.)
I will have a more education-oriented year, now that I am going off sabbatical. I have followed Kozol for years, one of the greats.
Hi David ... thanks for connecting! Good to meet a fellow Kozol fan ... amongst many other titles! Karan
Fatty wrote: "Thanks for connecting, David, and a happy new year to you! :) That's the largest collection I've seen on this site. Incredible!"Well, I read a lot, like many on Goodreads, but I have recently taken to recording and writing reviews of EVERYTHING, kind of like an autobiography through reading. I don't know why, exactly. I just am enjoying it. Not many people read my reviews, so I just write for myself, mainly, but am glad to connect to you and anyone through books!
Fionnuala wrote: "I think we have some books in common, David - but a passion for reading definitely, judging by your large quantity of 'read' books!"Well, I am getting older, an English major who became an English prof, so the books I have read.. they'll accumulate. Honestly, I am sure there are many more unrated. Things in areas I have read I just haven't thought of. But that's not bragging. Just saying that if you read your whole life, you will have read a lot of books! I still have a passion for reading, no question! Glad to begin to get to know you!
I think we have some books in common, David - but a passion for reading definitely, judging by your large quantity of 'read' books!
it seems like gravity's rainbow was actually a really fun (albeit difficult) launching point! Well, Jonathan, Gravity's Rainbow is one difficult book with so much richness in it. The most difficult book we read (started) in that Postwar American Fiction class, for sure (though Lolita might have been a match for sheer complexity). In Slow Learner you get how he was getting started, trying out ideas he would elaborate on for the rest of his career, so in that sense it is worth it to check it out..
Jonathan wrote: "Professor S! How have you been this summer?""I'm good. Not teaching in this second summer session, so reading and writing a bit more… you?
Nick wrote: "In the past, I'd typically hop on my computer (or now, more realistically, my phone) between 6 am and 7 am and go to the following sites, in no particular order: Facebook, gmail, reddit. Your profi..."I only just saw this now! Hi!
Nick wrote: "In the past, I'd typically hop on my computer (or now, more realistically, my phone) between 6 am and 7 am and go to the following sites, in no particular order: Facebook, gmail, reddit. Your profi..."Jane wrote: "Hi David!"
Hi, Jane! Do I know you? Either way, hi! :) Welcome to my Goodreads world!
In the past, I'd typically hop on my computer (or now, more realistically, my phone) between 6 am and 7 am and go to the following sites, in no particular order: Facebook, gmail, reddit. Your profile alone has managed to make goodreads usurp reddit in that rotation. I just don't have the requisite time to browse reddit these days, but I always have the time to read a review or two... :)(Just a random thought, as I'm currently on, and there's not a 6:30 am review for me to read for a change. sadness.)































































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Aug 05, 2021 10:11AM