Eugene O’Neill & Tao House

29 06 2009

Eugene O'Neill at Tao HouseAmerica’s only Nobel Prize winning playwright, Eugene O’Neill, chose to live in Northern California at the climax of his writing career. Isolated from the world and within the walls of his home, O’Neill wrote his final and most memorable plays; The Iceman Cometh, Long Day’s Journey Into Night, and A Moon for the Misbegotten. While he was at Tao House, O’Neill refused requests to produce the plays he wrote there. He wanted to complete five of the cycle lays first, and he did not want the others staged until the war was over. During his years there he turned his back on the “show shop,” his jaundiced term for the theatre world, giving himself to “soul-grinding” work on the cycle and transforming his past into the autobiographical plays that made him one of America’s most important playwrights.

Saved from destruction, today visitors can tour the house and grounds of Eugene O’Neill State Historic Park by making reservations for the free docent led tour. On the day of your visit, a van shuttles you into the hills above Danville. Although it’s an urban area now, the Las Trampas Regional Wilderness west of Tao House and Mt. Diablo to the east allow visitors to easily imagine the landscape of the late 1930s and early 1940s. The restored house also reflects those years.

The Eugene O’Neill Foundation and National Park Service has a unique partnership aimed at preserving and promoting O’Neill’s home and his works. Eugene O’Neill’s Tao House is operated by the National Park Service. Public visitation by advance reservation, Wednesdays through Sundays, with guided tours at 10:00 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. (allow 2 hours).Office hours are Wednesday-Sunday 9 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Closed Mondays, Tuesdays, Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s Day.

Starting June 6 through August 29, 2009, NO RESERVATION SATURDAYS  are offered to the site. A park van will be waiting at the Museum of the San Ramon Valley (205 Railroad Ave.) at 10 a.m., 11 a.m., 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. to bring visitors up and down from the O’Neill home. No reservations are needed on these Saturdays this summer. If you are planning to bring a large group, please contact the park at (925) 838-0249.

A visit to Tao House stays with you. You leave with a sense of how Eugene O’Neill’s life struggles inspired plays that changed the history of American theatre and touch the souls of playgoers.

We have a beautiful site in the hills of the San Ramon Valley with one of the most beautiful views I’ve ever seen. This is the final home and harbor for me. I love California. Moreover, the climate is one I know I can work and keep healthy in.” — Eugene O’Neill (from a letter written to Barrett H. Clark on September 14, 1937)

Eugene O’Neill and his third wife, Carlotta, moved into Tao House (from the Taoist philosophy meaning “the right way of life”) in 1937. The design of Tao House, constructed of white adobe-like bricks with a black glazed tile roof, was left to Carlotta. Her choice of a Chinese motif reflected her interest in Chinese art and Eugene’s interest in Eastern philosophy. The house Eugene called his “final harbor” was at once a home, a working place and a fortress, built high on the hill, where few visitors were welcomed. Carlotta protected Eugene from the outside world, and he was able to write his most famous plays isolated behind three doors that closed off his study from the rest of the house.

In 1944, with Eugene’s failing health and having lost most of their help, including Herbert Freeman, to the war effort, the O’Neills were forced to sell Tao House. They stayed in San Francisco for awhile, but eventually returned east, settling in Boston. Eugene O’Neill never wrote another play after leaving Tao House. He died in Boston on November 27, 1953.

“We stayed at Tao House for six whole years, longer than we lived anywhere else. Of course, there were many hardships, but it was a beautiful place and I hated to leave.” — Carlotta O’Neill

What I am after is to get an audience to leave the theater with an exultant feeling from seeing somebody on the stage facing life, fighting against the eternal odds, not conquering, but perhaps inevitably being conquered. The individual life is made significant just by the struggle.” — Eugene O’Neill

Be sure to include O’Neill’s plays as part of your reading for Books Around the Bay game. You will find his plays in the call number 812.54 O’NEILL or on the adult summer reading game display at your local branch.





Join the Summer game @ the library

28 06 2009

It is a celebration of Bay Area authors , experiences, and life .These works make Bay Area a unique place where authors with the power of pen bring beauty, joy, and liberation. The choices are infinite…

“I Loved You So Much

I loved you

So much

That when

You left

It took

A lot

To keep me

Alive.”

ABSOLUTE TRUST in the GOODNESS of the EARTH     

The new poems by ALICE WALKER

From Alice Walker’s poetry to memoir of Frances Mayes are all works: that are considered as literally works around the Bay.

In UNDER THE TUSCAN SUN, France Mayes in a poetic language describes her decision leaving San Francisco and finding a different world in Tuscan, Italy. “I’ve learned here that simplicity is liberating. Simca’s philosophy applies totally to this kitchen, where we no longer measure, but just cook. As all cooks know, ingredients of the moment are the best guides. Much of what we do is too simple to be called a recipe-it’s just the way to do it.”
Books around the Bay seems to be a simple theme for the summer reading game at the library .The theme is wide open to all different titles that were created here or the writers lived here part or all of her career , or the story starts ,ends, or take place in San Francisco. Two above titles are sample of the list. Both are non fiction …however if you like to read fiction, just search the catalog for San Francisco (calif.) fiction! Or stop by the information desk so we can share the other Bay Area authors that wrote fiction about other places in the world. The example for that would Isabel Allende, and Khaled Hosseini. Just join the game!
 




Be a traveler in your own backyard!

26 06 2009

samurai2If your budget calls for a “staycation” this year, the good news is that the Bay Area is a great place to explore even if you’ve lived here your whole life.

 Check out our Books Around the Bay travel booklist for ideas about places to go and things to do on your own, with friends or with the kids. There are some great online resources, too. If you love the outdoors, archived copies of Tom Stienstra’s Chronicle column can give you some new ideas for places to go. SFGate also has a page full of Weekend getaways to inspire you. The Bay Area Backroads Website offers new destinations each week; this week it features Glide Memorial Church and free things to do in Oakland.

Remember too that all branches of the Alameda County Library offer family passes to the Asian Art Museum for checkout, so this summer you can even travel back in time to the age of the samurai!





Oprah’s summer reading picks

24 06 2009

Oprah readingOprah’s love for reading still shines through years after she first established her popular book club. She even appears on the July  issue of O Magazine with her face partially hidden behind a book!

Inside the magazine (or online), you’ll find a variety of great reading suggestions, from lighthearted beach reads to fascinating memoirs, from the bestselling Pride and Prejudice and Zombies to Hemingway’s classic Moveable Feast.

At least one title on the list fits our Books Around the Bay theme: Farm City is about how a community created an urban farm in Oakland.





Celebrating the Bay Area in Literature

22 06 2009

 

If  you have been recently to the Dublin Library, you’ve noted the display for the “Books Around The Bay” adult summer reading game located near the public access computers.  This reading game  from June 15 to August 15.  We encourage adult library members to read or listen to a books that was either written by an author from the San francisco Bay Area, or which takes places in the Bay Area. 

Fill out an entry form for each book you read or listen to and then drop it in the entry box at your library.  One complete entry form will be drawn each week for a prize.  All entries (including weekly prize winners) are eligible for a grand prize drawing at the end of the summer. 

One of our circulation staff, Carmin, wrote that she recently read the entire series of Tales of the City by Armistead Maupin.   “These books are great for the summer, they are funny and a fast read.  The series takes place in San Francisco so it is very easy to visualize the scene.  The entire series takes the reader from a time when there was less to worry about through the introduction of a new disease that was killing off a lot of San Francisco residents to a cautiousness most people practice today.  You’ll laugh and cry and wish there was more!”

I wholeheartedly agree with Carmin that the series definitely reflects the time in which it was written, a time that some of us look back upon with a little bit of nostalgia. 

Of course, the Bay Area is also known for great weather, restaurants, and great access to the natural beauties of northern California.  Written and recorded books are available through your library on these and other topics.  

Join in the reading game and celebrate life and culture of the best part of California!





Coming (very) Soon–Books Around the Bay!

5 06 2009

Summer is upon us and (hopefully!) we will soon have plenty of  sunshine nudging us to slow down some of our crazy, hectic habits and bask in a little warm weather, blue skies, blossoming vegetable gardens and maybe even take time to pick up a good book.  From Oprah to NPR the question is, what will you be reading this summer?

 For years, the Library has offered a summer reading game for children as a central part of fostering a passion and love for reading beyond the all new peopleclassroom, while keeping those reading skills polished.  But why can’t adults “play” too?  Indeed the concept of “adult” and “play” seem almost like an oxymoron when stacked up against an 80 hour work week and a family to tend.  There’s always plenty of work to do, it seems, but not plenty of “play” to do. 

 And summer is the quintessential play time….time for vacations and beach reads, after all.  And though reading is rather solitary by nature the sharing of it is not.  So the Library, for the past 3 years, has offered a summer reading program for adults. The adult reading game inweekend advvites readers to connect with each other by offering a theme, and makes it fun, by offering prizes. 

 This year’s theme is Books Around the Bay.  Simply read anything that has to do with the Bay Area, fill out an entry form and drop it in the entry box at your local branch library.  Each week, one entry will be randomly selected for a prize. Read ANYTHING as long as it either takes place in the Bay Area or is by a Bay Area author.  We’re talking mystery, fiction, nonfiction, memoir, poetry, cooking, travel and anything else you can come up with. The reading game committee has created a few booklists to help get you started; take a look at  them posted here or you can pick one up at your local branch library. We invite you to share your favorites as well as view what other readers have to say. And every branch will have a display with that entry box prominently available.  We also have a few links to author websites and literary news of the Bay Area; again, feel free to post your own suggestions.

 Prizes have been locally purchased with funds from the various Friends of the Library organizations with assistance from the Alameda County Library Foutales of the cityndation.  Most libraries opt for gift cards for the weekly drawing and a grand prize at the end of the program.

Books Around the Bay starts June 15 and continues until August 15.  Happy reading!