Misplaced Pages

Due to Lack of Interest, Tomorrow Has Been Canceled

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
1969 book by Irene Kampen
Due to Lack of Interest, Tomorrow Has Been Canceled
AuthorIrene Kampen
LanguageEnglish
PublisherDoubleday & Co.
Publication date1969
Publication placeUnited States

Due to Lack of Interest, Tomorrow Has Been Canceled is a 1969 book by American writer Irene Kampen, an account of her return to school at the University of Wisconsin–Madison after 25 years, and how she learned to adapt to the student culture of the late 1960s. While it is listed as non-fiction, Kampen included fictionalized students and other characters in the book. The book is referenced in the film The Last of England (1987), directed and written by Derek Jarman.

The expression is also the title of the last track of the 1968 jazz record, "America the Beautiful", by arranger Gary McFarland, and it is a line in the Kaiser Chiefs' 2007 song "Ruby". It was also used as the title of a 1971 BBC Horizon documentary on predictions of ecological disaster, focusing on the work of Paul Ehrlich.

References

  1. Kampen, Irene, Due to Lack of Interest, Tomorrow Has Been Canceled. Doubleday & Co., Garden City, NY, 1969.
  2. Due to Lack of Interest, Tomorrow Has Been Cancelled at BFI Database


Stub icon

This article about a biographical book on writers or poets is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: