Dave Cullen's Blog

Conclusive Evidence of My Existence

Dave Cullen

Dave Cullen
Location
New York, New York, USA
Birthday
June 03
Title
Author/Journalist
Company
Written for NY Times, W Post, Slate, Salon, Daily Beast. Publisher Twelve (Hachette)
Bio
An expanded paperback edition of my book COLUMBINE came out March 1, 2010. Links to the book and my bio below: http://www.davecullen.com/columbine.htm

Editor’s Pick
APRIL 8, 2011 1:10PM

This makes writing 'Columbine' worth it. Again

Rate: 22 Flag
Two years after the birth of my book, I had quietly come to the unconscious conclusion, that it had finished surprising me. Then went downstairs for today's mail.

Truthfully, I ran down to get my royalty check, which I really need, and it wasn't there, but something better was. Four bulging manila envelops from the same address: Fremd High School, where I'd appeared at their Writer's Week last month.

It was an incredible day and I am so behind on posting about it--which I will, with great pictures. But the gist was: two great sessions with students, back-to-back in their auditorium, maybe 600-800 each, followed by two hours in the teacher's lounge talking to students and teachers in small groups and signing their books. They were bright and energized and it was amazing. But it didn't prepare me for this:


This was the best I could capture on my iPhone. It's about a two-inch stack of thank you letters:
mostly typewritten, quite a few handwritten, and all sorts of different stationary and cards. Each one from a different kid, expressing the impact it had on her or him.

I open the first envelop and sort of gasped. I read a few, tore open the next one, and I was crying by the third.

Maybe this is what teachers feel, or ought to. When I do these events, the rush of emotion is overwhelming. Kids are so expressive and I can see right there are excited they are and interested, and it's invigorating hear them describe what they can't wait to learn next.

But it's one big rush, more than I can really absorb. And I wonder, too, how much of the enthusiasm will last. Next week, will they remember? Will they really dig into that subject or will some new idea replace it thirty minutes later? Maybe that replacement idea will be better. Maybe I was just the excitement of the moment.

I never see them the day after.

I've gotten reports the weeks after. Teachers often write me to say the kids are still talking about it. Librarians email about their waiting list. Those are reassuring. Very. But I've never been bowled over like this.

Thank you so much to every kid and adult at Fremd High who wrote one of those messages. And to whatever teacher organized this wonderful gesture. (I think I know who.) What a difference it made.

What an amazing feeling to know hundreds of kids were touched in some way by my work. I hope it makes them read more. I hope it makes some of them write.
___

It's also a nice time to reflect on the book itself. I knew the anniversary of the tragedy was approaching, because I've heard rumblings from the survivors and always worry about them this month. I had forgotten the book had its own birthday as well--this past week I guess.

It's out there now--two years on a life of its own. It's even more like parenting than I had imagined. I birthed it, and I still feel responsible, but it detached from me publication day and started a separate life I can neither forsee nor control.

I can help it here and there, open doors for it--like these events, skypes with schools and the Columbine Teacher's Guide. I think that helps, but only on the margins. Most of it comes from readers--especially students and teachers and book clubs--and weird outside forces and the book itself.

I saw a Broadway play last night, and was talking with my friend outside the theater afterward about how exciting it will be when the stage-play version of my book comes out. (We optioned those rights to a very talented writer.) Someday, I'm sure there will also be a film. Who knows when.

Oddly, I was conflicted, talking about how excited I am about my new book project, and finally ready to put Columbine behind me. But not for good. Just off the front burner. I expect it to return several more times for who knows what developments. Definitely the play and the film. A few other possibilities I can foresee. I never saw this one coming.

___

And if you're curious what one of these school events looks like, I actually had a student tape the sessions at Fremd, and posted one of them on my youtube page. It's here.   (I can't get it to embed here.)

Author tags:

students, writing, columbine, books

Your tags:

TIP:

Enter the amount, and click "Tip" to submit!
Recipient's email address:
Personal message (optional):

Your email address:

Comments

Type your comment below:
What an inspiring post, Dave. Thank you! You richly deserve those kudo from the kids.
Touching people's lives in a good way, kudos to you Dave! Great post.
I left education in 1996. I still get e-mails from students via Facebook that make me break down and sob--not cry. I had three last week. Now you know the importance, and power, of teaching. And why we have to preserve it, and this country, which includes unions.
I really like your comparison of a book to a child. As one who has birthed both, I think you are right on (not that I'm comparing my success - or lack thereof - to yours). It's an incredible experience to write something that, once it's out in the world, becomes owned by those who read it, interpret it, love it, hate it. It becomes other-than the writer. Congratulations on your anniversary.
thanks, everyone. who knew what joy could be down there in that mailbox.
"When I do these events, the rush of emotion is overwhelming." What greater gift could there be from such a tragedy? Gratitude in the education you by giving voice to the children of both sides of this tragedy - the best type of silver lining I know. Congrats to you.
This is wonderful Dave. It reminds me that I am remiss in posting my thoughts on my reading of your very good book! I think I mentioned on Facebook the other night, a community near here had students report a boy planning a shooting spree. He was stopped. A day later they arrested his accomplice (and maybe the ring leader).
Columbine is a great book, Dave. I'm so glad these students learned so much from it, and were touched by it. To inspire students is a great service to and a great gift. I'm with From The Midwest--teaching, AND the acquisition of an education is and should be about so much MORE than merely being prepare to take dull, standardized tests. To reduce a school down to mere 'cost-effective accountability' is to gradually kill the soul of every one at that school, and to rob education of it's great richness.

I'm so glad those kids gave you the response that they did.
Dave, thanks for sharing this post. I haven't published a book, but I know how it feels when your work is done and away from you. It has become a part of you. You kind of miss feeling and living with it. Nice work! R
I haven't read your book, but now I think I'll have to!
I'm not surprised by the response that you get. Columbine was the first book I read on my iPhone, and it lost nothing coming through that medium.

I'm not a book critic, and I don't know if you would agree with this, but I don't think that the book is even about "Columbine." Columbine is just the setting. It's really about human nature, and the wonderful and terrible mystery of human nature, and the stories we tell each other about that.

Having read the book on my iPhone, I could also do word counts. Some form of the word "story" appears around 80 times in the book, even in the first sentence. When we humans have something important to communicate, we don't write philosophical arguments; we tell stories. The stories may be true or they may be false, but telling each other stories is how we struggle to comprehend human nature, the good and the bad.

So for me, Columbine is a story about stories -- the stories that the killers told each other about themselves, the stories that people told about the killers, the stories that the victims told about their own experiences, the stories that families told about their dead loved ones, and the stories that everyone told in an attempt to make sense of it all.

So I'm not surprised that people are deeply moved by the book, and I hope that any theatrical production or movie doesn't lose that sense of story and how we use it to understand the mystery of our own natures.
Absolutely! I cannot imagine a more rewarding experience then to know the words you have written to have stirred these young people deeply enough to express their gratitude and to know you are part of something good. thank you for sharing this lovely exchange.
This is so inspiring Dave! I think you've earned every moment of this, after such a long haul to get Columbine written. My husband, Dan, just finished reading it and was deeply moved by the depth of your insight, As was I. I don't think you can ever anticipate exactly how far good works will work their magic. Sometimes we get to know but more often we don't know what we have given others with our work.

I'm glad that you got to know.
What wonderful validation from those kids on your work and the impact it had and is continuing to have on those who read it. I have nothing of your magnitude to compare it to, but those child-scrawled notes I get from my third grade students, or from previous students, make me know I have chosen the right profession.
fyi, i forgot to mention, that i had a student tape my sessions at fremd and posted the second one online. it's here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CXNviWIVCkY

(i'll add that to the body of the post this afternoon.)
i'm just catching up on reading all the responses now. you guys made me feel really good. thanks.
Dave: I can only hope to achieve a quarter of your fame (I'm sorry; I should say, a sixteenth...or smaller ;-) But I did get some thank-you notes from a presentation at a high school and there is NOTHING better than hearing from young people that you made sense!

Congrats to you and your new project...and your new place and your new, well, everything!
Very inspirational, Dave. Looking forward to reading your book.
Even if a teacher asked them to do it, that stack of letters is amazing. I'm so glad you took your book and made it a national conversation, especially with students. Who knows how many tragedies you may have prevented just through your dedication to outreach?
Columbine is an amazing book - I have given it as a gift, as you know (Dave graciously signed copies for me) and every person I have given it to or loaned it to has not moved from their chair while reading it - it is that compelling.

(I DO wish you would write about "survivor" again - or something equally innocuous - you are great at observing the absurd!)
Well deserved. It's an amazing book. Now I want to re-read it...
Dear i really want this kind of site. It is very handy and accommodating post. We need more good statements. pass4sure HP0-Y31 I really appreciate your way of presenting such an excellent suggestion. I will come back here to see more updates in future pass4sure HP0-J48 as well. My best wishes for you always so keep it up. Excellent post very interesting research, i will look more into this! keep it up. I found very good and pass4sure 650-195 informative blog and have bookmarked your site for future reference. I really appreciate your way of presenting such an excellent suggestion. I want more and i will come back here to see more updates in future as well. pass4sure 000-109 My best wishes for you always so keep it up.