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Up the down staircase book
Up the down staircase book






I remember reading it and there was one section, in particular, which made me laugh so hard that I still remember it, years later, almost word for word.

up the down staircase book

I read it because my cousin Susan, who was a year older than myself, and basically the coolest and most admirable person alive to me was reading it (and yes, if she had jumped off a bridge, I would have too) – her guffaws of laughter made me intrigued. 40 visitor/ article_display.aspx?articleID=731.I read this laugh-out-loud funny book about a woman who goes to teach in an inner city school when I was a kid. 727-730 advancement/ publicrelations/ news/ 2001/ 182ndcommencemt/ 182ndcommencemt.html New York Times, December 16, 1964, pg. Sources: Jewish Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia, pp. public schools in history." The book was made into a 1967 film starring Sandy Dennis and into a stage play a decade later.īel Kaufman will receive a lifetime achievement award from the Jewish Women's Archive at its annual luncheon on March 10, 2013. Time magazine has called it "easily the most popular novel about U.S. It has been translated into 16 languages, and has sold 6.5 million copies. The book spent 64 weeks on the best-seller list. The novel uses a series of memos, directives, student comments, teachers' notes, and various materials drawn from school wastepaper baskets to detail a new idealistic teacher's encounters with the administrative bureaucracy of an inner-city school. Her experiences there were the inspiration for Up the Down Staircase. After earning a master's degree at Columbia, Kaufman taught in the New York City public schools for three decades.

up the down staircase book up the down staircase book

Bel graduated magna cum laude from Hunter College at age 22.

up the down staircase book

She is the granddaughter of Sholem Aleichem, and her mother Lyalya Kaufman was a regular columnist for the Yiddish Forverts. Because Esquire in the early 1940s had refused to publish fiction by women, Belle Kaufman had submitted her work under the androgynous first name "Bel," and has published under that name ever since.īorn in Germany and raised in Russia, Kaufman came to the US at age 12. When Bel Kaufman published Up the Down Staircase on January 27, 1965, she was already a published writer, whose short stories had appeared in magazines like Esquire and The Saturday Review.








Up the down staircase book