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Stephen R. Covey, '7 Habits of Highly Effective People' author, dies

Stephen R. Covey book cover
Stephen R. Covey, author of the bestselling self-help book "The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People," died Monday, his family announced. Covey, 79, had been injured in a major bicycle accident in April.

Covey's signature work was published in 1989 and became a lasting bestseller — in 1994, it had been on the New York Times bestseller list for 220 weeks. Currently its sales are tallied at more than 20 million copies. He went on to write a number of sequels and spinoffs, including "The Third Alternative" (2011) and "The Eighth Habit" (2005). He was also a sought-after management advisor.

Covey was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. He got an MBA at Harvard, then returned to Utah to get a doctorate from Brigham Young University, where he taught business management.

The Salt Lake Tribune writes:

Covey’s management post at BYU led to "The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People," which launched a second career as management guru for companies and government agencies, among them Saturn, Ritz Carlton, Proctor & Gamble, Sears Roebuck and Co., NASA, Black & Decker, Public Broadcasting Service, Amway, American Cancer Society and the Internal Revenue Service.

The books have legions of adherents in corporate America who swear by its principles. But critics tend to see it as part of a cult of the self-help American frenzy of past decades or so that tends to trivialize big problems.

Covey founded a Utah-based management training center that sold books and videos and held training seminars. In 1997 it merged with FranklinQuest, a deal from which Covey was said to have made about $27 million in cash and stock.

"We believe that organizational behavior is individual behavior collectivized," he told Fortune magazine in 1994. "We want to take this to the whole world."

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'Encyclopedia Brown' author Donald Sobol has died

Nora Ephron, 71, has died

Science fiction pioneer Ray Bradbury, 91, has died

-- Carolyn Kellogg

Photo: Stephen R. Covey in 2003. Credit: Ric Feld / Associated Press.

'Encyclopedia Brown' author Donald Sobol has died

EncyclopediabrownDonald Sobol, author of the beloved children's book series "Encyclopedia Brown," died Wednesday in Miami. He was 87.

Sobol was born in New York and served in World War II. After going to college at Oberlin, he worked as a journalist in New York, then left to pursue a writing career in 1951. Although he was having some success, his "Encyclopedia Brown" manuscript was turned down two dozen times before it found a publisher. 

The first book, "Encyclopedia Brown: Boy Detective" was published by T. Nelson in 1963. It proved so popular that Sobol was soon following up with more stories about the 10-year-old Leroy "Encyclopedia" Brown and his partner, tomboy Sally Kimball. Eventually, there would be almost 30 books in the series, which has never gone out of print.

A fund in memory of Donald Sobol has been set up at the New York Public Library.

Sobol had moved with his wife and family from New York to Florida in 1961; the "Encyclopedia Brown" series was set in the fictional Florida town Idaville. Sobol tried to retain a measure of anonymity; he did not grant television interviews and preferred not to be photographed. "I am very content with staying in the background and letting the books do the talking," he told the Oberlin alumni magazine  in 2011.

Before "Encyclopedia Brown," Sobol had been publishing historical nonfiction aimed at children, with titles that included "The Double Quest" and "The Lost Dispatch: A Story of Antietam." He had a hit with the short column "Two Minute Mysteries," which was syndicated by newspapers from 1959-68.

Sobol, who continued writing into his 80s, used his own experience as a lesson for aspiring writers. "Persevere, and don’t take no for an answer," he said. "And if you really think [the publishers] are right, then look over the manuscript and polish it a little more."

ALSO:

Nora Ephron, 71, has died

Science fiction pioneer Ray Bradbury, 91, has died

Maurice Sendak, author of 'Where the Wild Things Are,' dies at 83

 -- Carolyn Kellogg

Nora Ephron, 71, has died

Nora Ephron
Nora Ephron died Tuesday at the age of 71 of acute leukemia in New York. If news of her severe illness was a surprise to some, her death was foreshadowed by gossip columnist Liz Smith, who published an online memorial to Ephron on Tuesday afternoon, before she passed away.

Ephron got her start as a writer in New York in 1962. A recent Wellesley grad, she wrote a parody of a New York Post story -- and then was hired by the Post. She wrote about her experiences as a journalist, among other things, in her final book, "I Remember Nothing." She was there when the Beatles first came to America -- but she didn't get the full effect. "I was at Kennedy Airport. I went to the Ed Sullivan show," she told the NPR show Wait Wait Don't Tell Me. "But I couldn't hear them."

Like much of her work, the collection of humorous essays took a look at the personal and found a way to make it funny. Ephron published it and 2006's "I Feel Bad About My Neck: And Other Thoughts on Being a Woman" with Alfred A. Knopf, her longtime publisher. The company said in a statement, "It is with great sadness that we report that Nora Ephron has died at the age of 71, after a battle with leukemia. She brought an awful lot of people a tremendous amount of joy. She will be sorely missed."

Ephron's first big publication was the sensational 1983 roman-a-clef "Heartburn." The novel was based on the dissolution of her marriage to famed Watergate reporter Carl Bernstein, co-author of "All the President's Men."

That same year, the film "Silkwood" was released; Ephron had written the screenplay, for which she recieved an Oscar nomination. Her film career took off: she wrote the screenplay for "Heartburn"  and for "When Harry Met Sally." Her directorial debut came with another romantic comedy she'd written, "Sleepless in Seattle." Her last release was "Julie & Julia"; Ephron directed the film and adapted the screenplay from the book of the same name by Julie Powell. Yet even with her Hollywood success, Ephron continued to write.

The Times' Mary McNamara reviewed Ephron's last book. "When I was a journalist just out of college, I worked at Ms. magazine and all my friends and I wanted to be Nora Ephron," she wrote in 2010. "She turned her divorce into a wise and hilarious novel, she wrote about events and people in such a way that was informative but also full of wit and stinging cultural analysis. She wrote about food before everyone was a foodie. She was smarter, darker and funnier than Anna Quindlen. Ephron's voice helped launch a whole new way of writing, and I still love to hear it...."

Read our complete obituary of Nora Ephron.

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Poet Adrienne Rich, 82, has died

Science fiction pioneer Ray Bradbury, 91, has died

Book review: "I Remember Nothing and Other Reflections" by Nora Ephron

-- Carolyn Kellogg

Photo: Nora Ephron in 2010. Credit: Charles Sykes / Associated Press

'Ethical historian' William Lee Miller has died

LincolnsvirtuesWilliam Lee Miller died in Manhattan on Tuesday at age 86. Although he had been ill, longtime publisher Knopf announced, he had continued writing. His latest book, "Two Americans: Truman, Eisenhower, and a Dangerous World," was published just last month.

Miller, who was born in 1926, graduated from Yale in 1950; he stayed on to earn a PhD there in Reglious Social Ethics. He taught at Smith, Indiana University and Yale before settling down at the University of Virginia.

He began publishing in the 1960s. He sometimes wrote books grounded in the present -- "Yankee From Georgia: The Emergence of Jimmy Carter" was published in 1978, just two years after Carter's election to the presidency. Yet he became known for histories, particularly those that grappled with ethics and religion.

His 1986 book "The First Liberty: Religion and the American Republic" was a finalist for the L.A. Times book prize. It was his first book with Knopf; he stayed with the publisher for another 26 years.

Miller's later books included "Arguing About Slavery: The Great Debate in the United States Congress,"  "Two Americans: Truman, Eisenhower, and a Dangerous World," and "Lincoln's Virtues: An Ethical Biography."

About Lincoln, Miller wrote, "Lincoln was human, he was not born on Mount Rushmore ... he acquired such moral distinction as he did by deliberate effort over time, and [his] moral excellence never was or would be anything like perfection."

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San Francisco literary figure Kathi Kamen Goldmark has died

Poet Adrienne Rich, 82, has died

Barney Rosset: 'Most important' U.S. publisher of the 20th century

-- Carolyn Kellogg

San Francisco literary figure Kathi Kamen Goldmark has died

Rock Bottom Remainders

Kathi Kamen Goldmark, a beloved figure in the San Francisco literary scene, died Thursday, her husband Sam Barry announced on her Facebook page. Her son Tony Goldmark added that his mother had succumbed to cancer. Kathi Kamen Goldmark, author of the novel "And My Shoes Keep Walking Back to You," was a founding member of the author rock band the Rock Bottom Remainders, highlighted above at a show with Steve Martin at UCLA's Royce Hall.

Goldmark's Facebook page soon began filling with heartfelt memorials from friends and fellow authors.

Novelist Luis Alberto Urrea: "Kathi--goodbye for now. You changed my life, but so many of us could say that. So sad, so terribly sad. But you were about the joy and the laughter and the love. Give me a minute, honey. I'll get there. RIP."

Oscar Villalon, editor of the magazine Zyzzyva: "Kathi Kamen Goldmark was a great person, one of the best I've ever met. For all of us who had the pleasure of knowing her -- and there are many who did, because she was such a warm woman -- we mourn her death."

Janet Fitch: "What sad news that Kathi has passed. What a bright spirit. What a tactful critic. She brought the party with her."

Andy Ross: "As a former roadie for The RBR, I'll miss you and think good thoughts. Thanks for making our lives richer and happier."

Kevin Smokler: "San Francisco lost Kathi Kamen Goldmark today, a giant of this town's cultural life. We are better for her having been here, colder and grayer for her passing. I will miss her terribly."

Victoria Shoemaker: "Kathi, you gave me some of the brightest moments I've had in all of my bookselling, publicity, agent years. Your grace, immense talent, generosity, and wicked humor made all of us fall in love with you. Save room in your next band for us. I will miss you and love you always."

Author Julie Klam: "I am so so sad and so so sorry to hear we lost such a wonderful woman. RIP, Kathi. xxx"

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Poet Adrienne Rich, 82, has died

Berenstain Bears co-creator Jan Berenstain has died

Barney Rosset: 'Most important' U.S. publisher of the 20th century

-- Carolyn Kellogg

Photo: The Rock Bottom Remainders -- Dave Barry, Roger McGuinn, Steve Martin, Kathi Kamen Goldmark and Ridley Pearson -- at UCLA's Royce Hall in 2003. Credit: Lawrence K. Ho / Los Angeles Times

Adrienne Rich in the L.A. Times

Adriennerich_nbasPoet Adrienne Rich, who died Tuesday at the age of 82 (see our complete obituary), was also known as an essayist. Rich moved from Massachusetts to Santa Cruz in 1984, later saying, "I don't think it's a bad thing in your life to have your whole orientation completely switched geographically." She became an occasional contributor to the L.A. Times, writing essays and criticism for the paper.

She started off explosively In 1997, when she explained her decision not to accept the National Medal of Arts; it was not about a looming vote about NEA funding, she wrote. "My 'no' came directly out of my work as a poet and essayist and citizen drawn to the interfold of personal and public experience." In her 1,800-word piece, Rich went on to conclude:

In a society tyrannized by the accumulation of wealth as Eastern Europe was tyrannized by its own false gods of concentrated power, recognized artists have, perhaps, a new opportunity to work out our connectedness, as artists, with other people who are beleaguered, suffering, disenfranchised --precariously employed workers, trashed elders, throwaway youth, the "unsuccessful" and the art they too are nonetheless making and seeking.

I wish I didn't feel the necessity to say here that none of this is about imposing ideology or style or content on artists; it is about the inseparability of art from acute social crisis in this century and the one now coming up.

We have a short-lived model in our history for the place of art in relation to government. During the Depression of the 1930s, under New Deal legislation, thousands of creative and performing artists were paid modest stipends to work in the Federal Writers Project, the Federal Theatre Project, the Federal Art Project. Their creativity, in the form of novels, murals, plays, performances, public monuments, the providing of music and theater to new audiences, seeded the art and the consciousness of succeeding decades. By 1939, this funding was discontinued.

Federal funding for the arts, like the philanthropy of private arts patrons, can be given and taken away. In the long run, art needs to grow organically out of a social compost nourishing to everyone, a literate citizenry, a free, universal, public education complex with art as an integral element, a society without throwaway people, honoring both human individuality and the search for a decent, sustainable common life. In such conditions, art would still be a voice of hunger, desire, discontent, passion, reminding us that the democratic project is never-ending.

For that to happen, what else would have to change? I hope the discussion will continue.

That discussion surfaced in her 2004 review of "The Price of the Ticket: Collected Nonfiction, 1948-1985" as she wrote, "Tracing the writer's development (and steadfastness) through the history he recounted of those years sharpened my sense of what's missing from the desperate, hysterical public non-conversations in which we're presently mired." She continued:

He, more than any American writer I can think of, had to make his way through the contradictions of early literary success, later iconization, vilification and incomprehension, particularly as a black writer, that fell onto his shoulders. Determined to remain a serious writer and not become a mere celebrity or spokesman, he lived for long periods, and died, outside the United States. He became a participant in the history of the civil rights movement somewhat reluctantly, seeing himself as a writer, not an activist, yet he knew he could and must bear witness to that history as it was being made, with respect and critical astuteness.

The artist, Baldwin wrote in a 1959 review of a collection of Langston Hughes poems, needs to be "within the experience and outside it at the same time." His own awareness of this difficult position (If I am, in spite of all, an American, what does this mean, for me and for America?) was, I think, a supreme artistic strength, giving him prescience, narrative power and an early and vivid anticipation of the real internal trouble toward which this nation, in its blur of wealth and fantasies, has been heading.

In March of 2001, Rich looked back at her prose pieces collected in the April 2001 book "Arts of the Possible: Essays and Conversations." In our pages she wrote:

For more than 50 years I have been writing, tearing, up, revising poems, studying poets from every culture and century available to me. I have been a poet of the oppositional imagination, meaning that I don't think my only argument is with myself. My work is for people who want to imagine and claim wider horizons and carry on about them into the night, rather than rehearse the landlocked details of personal quandaries or the price for which the house next door just sold.

At times in the past decade and a half I have felt like a stranger in my own country. I seem not to speak the official language. I believe many others feel like this, not just as poets or intellectuals but as citizens -- accountable yet excluded from power. I began as an American optimist, albeit a critical one, formed by our racial legacy and by the Vietnam War. In both these cases it was necessary to look hard truths in the face in order to change horrible realities. I believed, with many others, that my country's historical aquifers were flowing in that direction of democratic change. I became an American skeptic, not as to the long search for justice and dignity, which is part of all human history, but in the light of my nation's leading role in demoralizing and destabilizing that search, here at home and around the world. Perhaps just such a passionate skepticism, neither cynical nor nihilistic, is the ground for continuing.

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Poet Adrienne Rich, 82, has died

Nobel Prize-winning Polish poet Wislawa Szymborska dies at 88

Juan Felipe Herrera is appointed California Poet Laureate

-- Carolyn Kellogg

Photo: Adrienne Rich accepting the Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters at the 2006 National Book Awards. Credit: Stuart Ramson / Associated Press

Poet Adrienne Rich, 82, has died

Adrienne RichAdrienne Rich, a pioneering feminist poet and essayist who challenged what she considered to be the myths of the American dream, has died. She was 82.

The recipient of such literary awards as the Yale Young Poets prize, the National Book Award, the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize and the Dorothea Tanning Award given by the Academy of American Poets, Rich died Tuesday at her home in Santa Cruz of complications from long-term rheumatoid arthritis, said a son, Pablo Conrad.

She came of age during the social upheavals of the 1960s and '70s and was best known as an advocate of women's rights, which she wrote about in both her poetry and prose. But she also wrote passionate antiwar poetry and took up the causes of the marginalized and underprivileged.

PHOTOS: Notable deaths of 2012

From her first book of poems in the early 1950s, Rich, a Baltimore native who attended Radcliffe College, showed her feminist bearings. Twenty years later, her image was set when universities began introducing courses in women's studies and Rich was among the most likely writers to be included.

Selected for the National Medal for the Arts in 1997, the highest award given to artists, Rich refused it.

“The radical disparities of wealth and power in America are widening at a devastating rate,” she wrote in a letter addressed to then-President Clinton. “A president cannot meaningfully honor certain token artists while the people at large are so dishonored.”

A full obituary will follow at latimes.com/obits.

RELATED:

Nobel Prize-winning Polish poet Wislawa Szymborska dies at 88

Juan Felipe Herrera is appointed California Poet Laureate

National Book Award finalists announced -- with an extra title

-- Times staff reports

Photo: Adrienne Rich. Credit: Robert Giard / Norton

Andrew Brietbart, writer and provocateur, dead at 43

Andrewbreitbart_2010

Andrew Breitbart, the tireless blogger and bestselling author, died early Thursday morning. He was 43.

Breitbart, a controversial proponent of right wing ideas and tea party values, grew up in an environment of liberal privilege in Southern California. He was adopted by moderately conservative Jewish parents and attended two of L.A.'s most exclusive private schools — Carlthorp and Brentwood. "It was so awkward, the thoughts I was having," Breitbart told the L.A. Times, describing his political transformation.

Breitbart was editor of the Drudge Report for close to 10 years and helped launch the Huffington Post, until striking off on his own. "I always knew he was going to build something big," his political opposite Mickey Kaus told The Times in 2010. "He has that crazy Ted Turner look in his eye."

Breitbart had just published his second book, "Righteous Indignation," and been at the center of a recent controversy when he appeared at the 2011 Festival of Books, where he called himself a "reluctant culture warrior." Here is our report from Mary McVean:

Right, left or center, the audience who waited for provocateur and right-wing media guru Andrew Breitbart to race from LAX to USC ("I broke some laws to get here," he said) had a rollicking time as he talked with L.A. Times reporter Robin Abcarian at the Etc. Stage on Saturday at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books.

Breitbart's second book, "Righteous Indignation," came out this month, and it's part handbook, part memoir of his journey from wanna-be hipster to star of the "tea party" movement. As Abcarian wrote in a Times profile, Breitbart was transformed from a "liberal, West Side child of privilege into a Hollywood-hating, mainstream-media-loathing conservative."
 
Breitbart burst into the news last summer when he posted on his Big Government website an item with two videos that had a USDA official named Shirley Sherrod telling an NAACP chapter that she once didn't give enough help to a white farmer. In the ensuing hoopla, Sherrod was condemned and then absolved when a longer video of her talk was released. Abcarian asked Breitbart if he still believed, as he earlier told Newsweek, that if he had a do-over he would have waited to see the longer version.
 
It wasn't easy to get a yes or no answer. 

Continue reading »

Berenstain Bears co-creator Jan Berenstain has died

Jan Berenstain with two of her books

Jan Berenstain, who with her husband created the Berenstain Bears books for children and preschoolers, has died. Berenstain was 88. Since the first book featuring the family of bears in was published in 1962, 260 million copies have been published in 23 languages, the Associated Press reports:

The gentle tales of Mama Bear, Papa Bear, Brother Bear and Sister Bear were inspired by the Berenstain children, and later their grandchildren. The stories address children's common concerns and aim to offer guidance on subjects like dentist visits, peer pressure, a new sibling or summer camp.

The first Berenstain Bears book, "The Big Honey Hunt," was published in 1962. Over the years, more than 300 titles have been released in 23 languages — most recently in Arabic and Icelandic — and have become a rite of passage for generations of young readers.

"They say jokes don't travel well, but family humor does," Jan Berenstain told The Associated Press in 2011. "Family values is what we're all about."

Jan met Stan in 1941 when they were both 18 and starting art school. After he returned from World War II, they married. They worked together, publishing their first book with the help of Theodor Geisel, aka Dr. Seuss. Stan Berenstain died in 2005; they are survived by two sons and four grandchildren.

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Lost Dr. Seuss stories to be published

-- Carolyn Kellogg

Photo: Jan Berenstain with two of her books. Credit: Associated Press

Barney Rosset: 'Most important' U.S. publisher of the 20th century

Barney Rosset, with Norman Mailer, is hailed by The Times' David Ulin.
Barney Rosset died last week at the age of 89, news that rippled through the publishing community.

Rosset was known and admired for leading Grove Press from 1951 to 1985, deliberately setting a course to open up American shelves to fiction that had been considered too outrageous for our shores.

First he brought "Lady Chatterly's Lover" by D.H. Lawrence to the U.S., and after that censorship battle wound through the courts -- Rosset won -- he turned to Henry Miller's "Tropic of Cancer." And then his foundation was set.

Book critic David L. Ulin writes that Rosset was, "the most important American publisher of the 20th century." He continues:

Look at the writers Rosset published: Henry Miller, Samuel Beckett, William S. Burroughs, Eugene Ionesco, Jean Genet, Malcolm X. Look at the books that he brought into the center of the culture: "Tropic of Cancer," "Waiting for Godot," "Naked Lunch," "Our Lady of the Flowers," "A Confederacy of Dunces," "Cain's Book." ...

For Rosset, the mission was simple: Books mattered, they could be dangerous, they could change your life. Writers were heroes, "cosmonauts of inner space," to borrow a phrase from "Cain's Book" author Alexander Trocchi, their function less to reassure than to destabilize, to challenge the assumptions by which society was made.

This could happen in all sorts of ways -- Beckett's unflinching absurdism ("Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try Again. Fail again. Fail better"), Burroughs' scabrous cynicism ("A functioning police state needs no police"), Miller's sense of living at the end of history, when all the so-called verities had collapsed beneath their own sanctimonious lies.

Algonquin Books, which had been working with Rosset on his autobiography "The Subject Was Left-Handed," hopes to release the book within a year.

RELATED:

Nobel laureate Wislawa Szymborska dies at 88

Project Gutenberg founder Michael S. Hart has died

Christopher Hitchens, writer and intellectual, dies at 62

-- Carolyn Kellogg

Photo: Barney Rosset, left, with Norman Mailer in an undated photo. Credit: Evergreen Review

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