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a lonely and rather tragic character: when the class present him with a new briefcase with the initials "M.P." on it as a birthday present, he is at first puzzled since his first name does not begin with M; then realizes that the letters stand for "Mr
Parkhill" and that he cannot remember the last time anyone addressed him by his first name.
156:
is the point-of-view character in the stories, a staid, kind-hearted, mild-mannered teacher with a tendency to think of his pupils in terms of classical literature. Mr
Parkhill is rigorously fair-minded, often to his own detriment when faced with Mr Kaplan's very individual brand of logic. He is also
125:
Mr Kaplan usually signs his name in colored crayon with green stars between red letters outlined in blue. In the last story of all, "Mr K*A*P*L*A*N the
Eumoirous", he signs a note to his teacher simply "Hyman Kaplan", but addresses it to "Mr P*A*R*K*H*I*L*L". Mr Parkhill wonders if he will ever again
109:
Mr Kaplan is an immigrant and a pupil at a New York night class in
English. He is extremely diligent and enthusiastic, but seems completely incapable of learning: the teacher, Mr Parkhill, is eventually driven to conclude that, although Mr Kaplan admits that English has rules – "good rules, sensible
222:, the only Greek in the class, whose dogged pursuit of English is accompanied by near-constant muttering to himself. His one moment of enthusiasm comes when Mr Parkhill begins pointing out how many English words have Greek roots. He eventually returns to Greece.
345:
Staff (March 2, 1938), "Booksellers Give Prize to 'Citadel': Cronin's Work About
Doctors Their Favorite--'Mme. Curie' Gets Non-Fiction Award TWO OTHERS WIN HONORS Fadiman Is 'Not Interested' in What Pulitzer Committee Thinks of Selections",
121:
Mr Kaplan is extroverted and highly assertive, particularly when his moral sense has been outraged by some perceived injustice in class or in
American history, and he frequently gets into noisy disagreements with other class members.
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of the beginners' grade", a large, lugubrious middle-aged lady who is baffled by the
English language and spends much of the time asleep, waking only to punctuate a particularly intimidating fact with a despairing exclamation of
173:(in the second book; renamed Olansky in the combined version), both of whom are better than Mr Kaplan at grasping the rules of English, but who somehow end up on the losing side of the arguments that erupt between them.
141:. This would seem to be confirmed when Kaplan calls flowers "bloomers", and a fellow student reminds him not to mix up two languages, leading the teacher to reflect that Mr Kaplan's native language refers to flowers as
200:, an emotional old Russian woman, a retired ballerina who recalls the Imperial days with nostalgia and despises Communism. Her compositions often deal either with her former life or with her interest in
179:, a quiet, shy young woman whose grasp of English is almost perfect, but who generally withers before the force of Mr Kaplan's rhetorical passion. Eventually she starts a relationship with the ebullient
137:) that his birthday is October 12. From his pronunciation of English (the characters' various idioms are a major source of the stories' humor), it appears that Mr Kaplan's native language is
291:
may have been a contender for the
Fiction, the Bookseller Discovery, or the Most Original Book, most likely the latter (not the Nonfiction award). Next-day coverage by
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named the four Awards and their winners first, of course, and later named the four "close seconds" in order that cannot match. The Most
Original Book and
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415:. Retrieved April 5, 2012. (Linked to Library of Congress Online Catalog listings for Rosten.)
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as he habitually signs himself, is a fictional character in a series of well-received
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251:
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321:
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118:, Kaplan's English pronunciation has improved substantially between semesters.)
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258:; PZ3.R7386 Oad — "New, completely rewritten H*y*m*a*n K*a*p*l*a*n, combining
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With many changes, Rosten rewrote the two books as one, published as
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52:. Rosten noted that he was frequently asked if Mr Kaplan was his
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by
Leonard Q. Ross. New York: Harcourt, Brace. 1937. PZ3.R7386 Ed
408:
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with a new introduction." (Library of Congress Online Catalog)
216:, an Italian woman prone to loud disagreement with Mr Kaplan.
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rules" – he is quite unable to admit that the rules apply to
27:
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133:, has lived in America for fifteen years, and claims (on
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56:, and that he often felt it was the other way around.
244:. New York: Harper. 1959. (OCoLC)391898; PZ3.R7386 Re
231:Hyman Kaplan is featured in three books by Rosten.
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44:in the 1930s and later collected in two books,
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323:The Comic Imagination in American Literature
299:were both fourth on their respective lists.
63:, 1937) was a "close second" for one U.S.
287:gave awards in four categories, of which
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189:, characterized by Mr Parkhill as "the
432:Literary characters introduced in 1935
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353:
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236:The education of H*Y*M*A*N K*A*P*L*A*N
98:The Education of H*Y*M*A*N K*A*P*L*A*N
46:The Education of H*Y*M*A*N K*A*P*L*A*N
390:Robert van Gelder (August 29, 1937),
320:Louis Decimus Rubin Jr., ed. (1973),
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250:. New York: Harper & Row. 1976.
411:. Library of Congress Authorities.
392:"A Mr. Malaprop in the Bronx Idiom"
242:The return of H*Y*M*A*N K*A*P*L*A*N
116:The Return of H*Y*M*A*N K*A*P*L*A*N
50:The Return of H*Y*M*A*N K*A*P*L*A*N
13:
402:
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326:, Voice of America, p. 398,
285:American Booksellers Association
369:. NBF. Retrieved April 5, 2012.
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76:National Book Award for Fiction
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248:O K*A*P*L*A*N! My K*A*P*L*A*N!
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95:play produced in 1968, namely
83:O K*A*P*L*A*N! My K*A*P*L*A*N!
1:
442:Male characters in literature
360:"National Book Awards – 1960"
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297:The Education of Hyman Kaplan
437:Comedy literature characters
210:, a loyal ally of Mr Kaplan.
74:, 1959) was one of eighteen
7:
10:
463:
379:Internet Broadway Database
161:Other members of the class
365:January 13, 2015, at the
70:. The second collection (
409:"Rosten, Leo, 1908–1997"
270:
169:(in the first book) and
447:Fictional American Jews
129:Mr Kaplan was born in
59:The first collection (
34:, published under the
214:Miss Carmen Caravello
38:"Leonard Q. Ross" in
24:H*Y*M*A*N K*A*P*L*A*N
413:Library of Congress
187:Mrs Sadie Moskowitz
78:finalists in 1960.
65:National Book Award
16:Fictional character
396:The New York Times
348:The New York Times
293:The New York Times
333:978-0-8135-0758-3
198:Miss Olga Tarnova
177:Miss Rose Mitnick
171:Mr Reuben Plonsky
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88:The books were
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256:0-06-013676-6
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289:Hyman Kaplan
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227:Bibliography
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202:Spiritualism
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135:Columbus Day
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90:adapted as a
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49:
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23:
20:Hyman Kaplan
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154:Mr Parkhill
149:The teacher
30:stories by
426:Categories
307:References
264:The return
32:Leo Rosten
85:in 1976.
61:Education
54:alter ego
36:pseudonym
363:Archived
28:humorous
350:, p. 14
139:Yiddish
93:musical
68:in 1938
330:
254:
143:Blumen
72:Return
271:Notes
194:"Oy!"
191:Niobe
22:, or
328:ISBN
262:and
252:ISBN
131:Kiev
114:(In
112:him.
48:and
428::
394:,
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101:.
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183:.
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