Posted by WMAQs Gonna Make Me Rich on July 26, 2009 at 19:19:04:
In Reply to: David W. Berner's 'Lessons' from the school of life posted by chicagomedia.org on July 26, 2009 at 08:51:22:
Is this book & WMAQ gonna make Dave rich?!
I'm very interested so yes I'll buy it.
: David W. Berner, former WMAQ-AM radio host and host at Canada's CKNW, now current Assistant Professor at Columbia College Chicago, has written a book about his life's "Lessons." From the Chicago Tribune:
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: 'Lessons' from the school of life
: Julia Keller | CULTURAL CRITIC
: July 26, 2009
: Overnight, or so it seemed to David W. Berner, he lost everything: The 52-year-old Naperville resident was laid off from his job as a radio journalist, received word of his father's terminal illness and realized his marriage was over. So he started all over again, becoming a teacher at East Aurora High School, which he describes as "one of the Chicago area's most troubled," filled with "difficult, sometimes unruly students, some with histories of violence or neglect."
: Berner (davidberner.com), father of two sons, wrote "Accidental Lessons: A Memoir of a Rookie Teacher and a Life Renewed" (Strategic) about his experiences.
: Here's an edited transcript of a conversation with Berner, who, since leaving East Aurora, has been teaching at Columbia College Chicago:
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: Q. Writing a memoir is difficult, isn't it?
: A. Yes. First, I had no plans for writing this. I'd come back from teaching at East Aurora, and tell my family stories about it. I had a lot of people tell me, "Are you writing this down?" I began to write it down, feeling obligated. I thought, "Maybe I should be more formal about it." I was slightly reluctant, being from the journalism world, to open myself up like that. I knew I had to be honest. Go deep. You have to go deep, to get to the good stuff.
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: Q. What was your writing process?
: A. I found a pattern. I'd get up really early on Saturday and Sunday. I'd work for several hours -- sometimes at home, sometimes at Starbucks. I'd be very uncritical of myself at that time. I'd just write. I had a fairly rough outline, but it wasn't really worked out. I just knew where I wanted to go. One thing I found when I started to write it: It wasn't a teacher's story. It was about rediscovering yourself. Finding a new passion.
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: Q. Have you heard from your former students?
: A. Oh, yes. And from the teachers [laughs]. One of them, I've heard, wasn't too happy.
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: Q. What are you working on now?
: A. Essays on fatherhood. About fathers and sons. And I just started on a novel. Very daunting -- as a journalist, I never had to make stuff up.