A news item involving Daniel Keyes was featured on Wikipedia's Main Page in the In the news section on 18 June 2014. |
This article is rated C-class on Wikipedia's content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
Error
editAssistance please, there is an error in the listing itself, before the portions that are editable. Daniel Keyes, the author, has NO middle name or initial! How can this be fixed? Thanks! Dkselph (talk) 18:11, 19 March 2009 (UTC)
Essay
editSomeone dropped a school essay into the article. Perhaps parts are useful, so I put it here: -SCEhardT 20:21, 29 November 2005 (UTC)
Typos or vandalism in Early life section
editThe early life section starts by refering to what he did at age 67. Either there was a cut and paste error, or the article has been badly vandalised.
Help is urgently needed in creating / recreating the article.
Plagiarism
editIs this Daniel Keyes also the author of the book Charlie, whose cover was stolen from deviant art? http://gnato.deviantart.com/journal/11346085/#journal —Preceding unsigned comment added by 65.93.196.131 (talk • contribs)
- If you read the article, you will see the movie Charley is based on the Keyes story. Whatever accusation you're making otherwise is inappropriate for this page. --Tenebrae 01:01, 8 January 2007 (UTC)
- Tenebrae, he said nothing about a movie. How is it inappropriate? It would fit perfectly in "Controveries." MattTheMan 02:15, 8 January 2007 (UTC)
- From what I see at the link above, an apparently African publisher has used the noted piece of art. That's the publisher, and it may not even be an authorized edition -- for one thing, it misspells the name of the story, and it shows a young boy where there is none in the story. To jump from that to blaming Keyes personally is an astonishing leap of logic, particularly since authors have very little or no control over what a publisher does. The half-baked slander that some anonymous IP put into the article, without the barest attempt to ascertain the truth, is just reprehensible. At the very least, that kind of unconfirmed personal attack is against Wikipedia policy, and I'm happy to see it was quickly removed. --Tenebrae 01:27, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
Interpretations
editDidn't change it but the effects of Charlie Gordon's operation don't merely "wear off" - he dies. This is the implication of the title. The flowers are for Algernon's (the mouse) grave. Algernon died as a result of the operation therefore so will Charlie. Eggerst 21:46, 26 September 2007 (UTC)
- I can respect your interpretation, but others interpret it different, that Charlie survives but as he was. I may be right, or you may be, but since Keyes does not state Charlie's fate, whatever we read into it is our individual POV. --Tenebrae 22:26, 3 October 2007 (UTC)
Yeah, and black is white, white is black, it's my POV
That's impossible. For sure he will die because the mouse died. To interpret it another way is to put a few of your own words in it or completely skip the part. Since Keyes does not provide a counterexample or any hint at all that Charlie would survive the reader must assume that Charlie's path is a soon to come death. I mean come on that is like saying Harry marries XXXXXXX in the end and not XXXXXXX like the author stated in Harry Potter. You can't change an ending to your liking on Wikipedia.--Velanthis 05:07, 3 December 2007 (UTC)
- That's your interpretation, and you have every right to it. We can only go by what the author actually says, and not extrapolate what we believe to be the ending. I could argue that medical experiments on mice serve only as indicators of possible human effects -- feel free to look up the literature on that, from a range of scientists to animal-rights activists.
- I'm not saying Charlie lives. I'm saying the author does not, in point of fact, explicitly state whether Charlie lives or dies. He's the author. If you or I say Charlie lives or dies shortly after the story's end, that's our interpretation. But it's not something the author wrote, and that's all Wikipedia can go by. --Tenebrae (talk) 03:53, 5 December 2007 (UTC)
Middle initial
editI can find no evidence of Keyes having a middle initial, and the page history shows it was put there by an IP-address user in the middle of a number of mischievous edits. I've therefore changed the opening sentence from "Daniel F. Keyes" to just "Daniel Keyes" Rojomoke (talk) 13:48, 13 November 2009 (UTC)
Bibliography
editI have commenced a tidy-up of the Bibliography section using cite templates for books and articles, as well as tables for organising short stories, poems and/or book reviews. Capitalization and punctuation follow standard cataloguing rules in AACR2 and RDA, as much as Wikipedia templates allow it. ISBNs and other persistent identifiers, where available, are commented out, but still available for reference. This is a work in progress; feel free to continue. Sunwin1960 (talk) 01:42, 21 August 2020 (UTC)