Browse Items (23 total)

%22As The Hour Nears%22 John Fitch IV Column Please Don't Go Away....jpeg
In this column, Cormier discusses the magic of Santa and the innocence of childhood. His daughter, seven going on eight, isn't sure if she believes in Santa any longer. But she writes to him just in case, and she tries her best to stay up late to…

%22Making Her Own Rainbow%22 John Fitch IV Column Please Don't Go Away....jpeg
In this column Cormier shares a sweet story about his daughter trying to make a rainbow using sunlight and water. He hopes that she will see a real rainbow one day. He closes with a story of three children and their father whose truck got stuck in…

%22'Love, The Fantom'%22 John Fitch IV Column Please Don't Go Away....jpeg
In this John Fitch IV column, Cormier shares a time when he saw a large, strong man and his very young daughter. The man said that the girl was his 'guardian.' Cormier considers that idea here - unpacking what it means to view your children as your…

%22Trying To Convince My Heart%22 John Fitch IV Column Please Don't Go Away....jpeg
In this column Cormier shares the bittersweet feeling of a parent saying goodbye to his child, over and over again, as she grows up. Even in the happy moments of children's summer trip to camp, the Cape, or their first crushes, he feels a pang of…

Paul Swaddle's email to Robert Cormier 3 February 1999.jpeg
This e-mail presents a series of interview questions to Cormier from the Waterstones "In Brief" team out of Newcastle. Questions cover several topics including Cormier's journalism experience, Frenchtown, adolescence, large institutions, controversy,…

Julie Hack's letter to Robert Cormier 16 December 1995.jpeg
This letter from a freshman in an English gifted and talented class asks Cormier a series of 11 rapid-fire questions. The questions range from personal ("what was your childhood like?") to professional ("how do you get your story ideas?").

%22An Interview with Robert Cormier%22 New Hampshire College Journal.jpeg
In this lengthy interview, Cormier discusses topics ranging from his early school writing, influential teachers, childhood traumas, autobiographical components of his writing, the young adult label, fear of large institutions, censorship,…

%22Advent and the Family%22 Visitor.jpeg
Though this story by "Bob" Cormier is written in the third person, about a girl and her father, it reads as autobiographical. He recounts the daughter's last Christmas party and her father coming to grips with her growing up.
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