PD and former BJ pop culture critic Mark Dawidziak’s latest book, “The Shawshank Redemption Revealed: How One Story Keeps Hope
Alive,” is on Amazon.com.
$15.39 for the Kindle
version and $29.95 for the hardcover version.
The release of Mark’s Rowman & Littlefield’s Lyons Press book coincides with
the 25th anniversary of “The Shawshank Redemption,” based on a
Stephen King book. The 1994 film co-stars Tim Robbins and
Morgan Freeman.
It didn’t do much in the theaters but cable and home video made it
one of the top-rented movies of 1995.
“Shawshank” keeps creeping up in the all-time rankings of movies.
Mark’s subtitle is “how one story keeps hope alive.”
Among the 70 interviews that Mark did for the book were with author Stephen King, director-screenwriter Frank Darabont, the film’s stars Tim Robbins, Morgan Freeman, Clancy Brown, Bill Sadler and Jeffrey DeMunn.
Among the 70 interviews that Mark did for the book were with author Stephen King, director-screenwriter Frank Darabont, the film’s stars Tim Robbins, Morgan Freeman, Clancy Brown, Bill Sadler and Jeffrey DeMunn.
Mark added:
“Everyone, from King to extras hired to play
convicts, had great stories to tell. If this book is any good, it’s because
everyone had great stories to tell. All the stories behind the story were
wonderful. And they hopefully add up to one great story. I was having so much
fun listening to these stories, I easily and happily could have done 70 more
interviews.”
Mark will be discussing, signing and selling his “Shawshank” book at 7 p.m. Thursday, September 19 at the main branch of the Akron-Summit County Public Library at 60 S. High Street in Akron.
Mark lives in Cuyahoga Falls with wife Sara Showman and daughter
Becky. Mark and Sara founded the Largely Literary Theatre Company that performs
shows based on Mark Twain, Edgar Allan Poe and Charles Dickens. Mark will be discussing, signing and selling his “Shawshank” book at 7 p.m. Thursday, September 19 at the main branch of the Akron-Summit County Public Library at 60 S. High Street in Akron.
Mark
came to the BJ from Tennessee in 1983, where his Television Editor was John
Olesky, and grew up on New York City’s Long Island. Previously, Mark's career took him to the Kingsport Times-News
in Tennessee,
the Bristol Herald Courier in Virginia, the Associated Press’ Washington bureau
and Knight-Ridder Newspapers’ Washington bureau.
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