Search  About Salon  Table Talk  Newsletters  Advertise in Salon  Investor Relations

To print this page, select "Print" from the File menu of your browser

Myla Goldberg

"Bee Season"

- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Myla Goldberg

Oct. 05, 2000 | Remember the sweaty-palmed, knee-knocking angst of your first elementary school spelling bee? In Myla Goldberg's debut novel "Bee Season," a young, otherwise unremarkable, girl learns she has an uncanny talent for spelling. Goldberg's wonderfully descriptive prose introduces us to this mysterious and nefarious world of spelling bees.

"Eliza Naumann is an 11-year-old girl in the slow class at school who's a disappointment to her gifted parents -- her father, Saul, a Judaic scholar and erstwhile mystic, and her mother, Miriam, a lawyer with a voracious intellect and a compulsion toward order. While Eliza was never particularly good at anything before, she discovers that she's good at spelling bees. When she wins a regional contest, her father begins to take notice of her -- and she soon begins to displace her smarter, more talented brother Aaron in his affections." -Salon.com

Listen to Myla Goldberg read from "Bee Season."

Bold Type features an interview and a short story by Myla Goldberg.

From "Bee Season" © 2000, Myla Goldberg. Used by permission of Random House, Inc. No reproduction of this material is authorized without the express written consent of the Licensor.

- - - - - - - - - - - -

Sound Off
Send us a Letter to the Editor

Salon.com >> Audio
 



Salon  Search  About Salon  Table Talk  Newsletters  Advertise in Salon  Investor Relations


Arts & Entertainment | Books | Business | Comics | Health | Mothers Who Think | News
People | Politics | Sex | Technology and The Free Software Project
Letters | Columnists | Salon Plus | Salon Shop


Reproduction of material from any Salon pages without written permission is strictly prohibited
Copyright 2005 Salon.com


Salon, 22 4th Street, 16th Floor, San Francisco, CA 94103
Telephone 415 645-9200 | Fax 415 645-9204
E-mail | Salon.com Privacy Policy