Thursday, June 30, 2011

The Autocoprophagy Of Mark Twain


Sippican Cottage reviews The Autobiography of Mark Twain.
I realize assault and battery and eye-gouging and mayhem and attempted murder are, if not strictly illegal, at least frowned upon in literary circles, but I'm willing to sit in an electric chair by the hour as long as the mouthbreathing, windowlicking, buttsniffing, dimestore intellectuals that dug up Mark Twain's literary corpse and rifled through his pockets are forced to sit in my lap. I bet I can outlast the whole lot of them on pure spite alone.
I don't think he cared for it
.
Read the rest of the review at Sippican Cottage

Thanks Bruce!

Social Telegrams

This booklet will come in handy when you're sending a telegram and are at a loss for words.


Read the booklet at HOW TO BE A RETRONAUT

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Robert Frost's The Road Not Taken - Poetry in Motion

Poetry in Motion based on Robert Frost's "The Road Not Taken" was created by stop motion animation.
Via Kuriositas

Friday, June 24, 2011

Herman Melville’s Travel Desk



MELVILLE'S TRAVEL DESK.
Victorian brass-mounted mahogany traveling lap desk, third quarter of the 19th century. The rectangular top opening to a hinged brown velvet-lined writing surface before fitted compartments and a pen well, the lid interior with a red leather folio with brass securing clips, the writing surface lifting to reveal a storage well and removable guard concealing three secret drawers; the sides with brass bale handles. Height 5in (13cm); length 17in (43cm); depth 10 1/2in (26.5 cm).
Enclosed in the desk are a gilt-metal-mounted agate snuff box, two small pen knives, one inscribed "E M Marett," a molded glass inkwell with associated cap, a pair of tweezers, a glass intaglio seal engraved "EMM," and a gilt-metal and mother-of-pearl pen.
The lid interior mounted with caricature prints, and two period small yellow sheets inscribed "Our Box at the Post Office is 1162" and "Herman Melville / 104 East 26th St / New York" respectively.


Link - Via Uncertain Times

A Chair on Wheels Made of Books






Tuesday, June 21, 2011

The Chocolate Stowaways


Mark James attended Edgeborough Prep School in Farnham, Surrey and at year's end in 1967, he was given a book to read by his teacher, Steven Baines. Mark, thoroughly uninterested in the title, tossed the book in the back of his closet and it never saw the light of day again. That is, until 1985 - 18 years later.

Find out what happened next at My Rusty Sieve

British Library to put 250,000 books online free

"The British Library has announced a partnership with Google to digitise 250,000 out-of-copyright books from its collection and make them available free of charge to users on the library's website and Google Books.

The project will digitise printed books, pamphlets and periodicals dated 1700 to 1870, the period that saw the French and industrial revolutions, the Battle of Trafalgar and the Crimean War, the invention of rail travel and of the telegraph, the beginning of UK income tax, and the end of slavery."

Saturday, June 18, 2011

A Design Observer Father’s Day Special

A tattoo, a toothbrush and a pipe. Three stories for Father's Day.

Read them at Design Observer

The best holiday reads

"Anna Karenina on the beach, The Corrections in Patagonia, Death in Venice overlooking the Lido ... Writers recall their most memorable holiday reads" The Guardian

Friday, June 17, 2011

The Alice Behind Wonderland

Simon Winchester's The Alice Behind Wonderland focuses on the photograph above, offering  a biographical sketch of Chalres Dodgson, detailing what is known about Dodgson's relationship with Alice, her siblings, and the Liddell family, providing a detailed explanation of the new science of photography and why serious amateur photographers of the time came to prefer the collodion process rather than the daguerrotype, explaining how Alice prompted Dodgson to write Alice in Wonderland, and detailing some of Alice's later life as a housewife and a celebrity.
Read more at TYWKIWDBI

For Whom the Bell Tolls: A psychological autopsy

Hemingway’s suicide has remained a sticking point for many of his biographers as it seemed incongruous with his adventurous, hard drinking and robustly out-going character.In 2006, psychiatrist Christopher Martin published an examination of Hemingway’s death in the form of a psychological autopsy‘ to better understand his final decision.

More at Mind Hacks

Thursday, June 16, 2011

List: Famous Opening Lines from Novels Updated for the Modern Age.

“Alice was beginning to tire of sitting by her sister on the bank. She took out her iPhone and played Angry Birds for the next three hours-

“Call me Ishmael_65.“

"Mother died today. I posted it as my Facebook status.”

“It is a sin to write this. Well, in anything but Helvetica.”

Read more at McSweeney’s Internet Tendency

It's Bloomsday

On this day in 1904, James Joyce and Nora Barnacle had their first date, thus giving Joyce the day upon which he would base Ulysses, and giving the rest of us 'Bloomsday.' Had Nora not stood Joyce up on their scheduled first date, this most famous of literary days would have been June 14; had that first date not happened at all, there very well may never have been any Bloomsday, or any Ulysses.
Read More Here

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Turn Your Favorite Book Into Art Poster




Postertext: This poster takes a book’s text and arranges the whitespace to depict a memorable scene from the book.

The 100 greatest non-fiction books

"After keen debate at the Guardian's books desk, this is our list of the very best factual writing, organised by category, and then by date."
Although I mostly read fiction I have read a number of these. Slouching Towards Bethlehem, News of a Kidnapping and In Cold Blood are on my list of favourites. I would have liked to have seen a Bruce Chatwin in the travel category.

Friday, June 10, 2011

Wednesday, June 08, 2011

A Little Stranger

I started this blog to keep track of what I've read and I try to post a little summary of a book as soon as I've finished. My life has been less settled over the past few months - nothing bad, just frantic - so I've been remiss both about reading and reporting on it. I read Kate Pullinger's A Little Stranger in tiny bits when I could grab a few moments here and there. It was a surprisingly easy read given the difficult subject matter.
Fran seems to have an okay sort of life. She's married to Nick, a nice chap; they live in London and have a lovely (most of the time) baby boy, Louis. She has left a job she liked because it didn't pay enough to cover the cost of child care. Like all mothers Fran feels oppressed by the day to day grind of motherhood but, unlike most, one day she decides she's had enough and walks out the door leaving her husband and baby behind. She has no destination in mind and, on a whim, ends up in Vegas. From Vegas, almost but not quite by chance, Fran travels to Vancouver, her childhood home, where her sister and father still live.
Maternal desertion is the theme of this book. As the story unwinds we find that Fran's mother, Ireni, is an alcoholic who repeatedly abandoned her husband and two daughters until finally she disappeared altogether. This is where Fran's view of herself as "a rubbish mother" began. When she experiences the frustration most new mothers without a family network feel she fears that she is like Ireni who has left a damaged family in her wake.
Fran feels a strong need to reconnect with her mother, now living among the tragic ranks of Vancouver's homeless. When she does she is finally able to exorcise the demon Ireni that has occupied a space inside her. We are left believing that Fran will now return to her husband and baby and will be a better mother, wife and person with a clearer understanding of herself after discovering why her own mother did the things she did. I'm not so optimistic.
This was a well written book about the ripple effects of maternal abandonment.


Read it and weep

Shaunna Raycraft loves to get lost in a good book. But 350,000 is another story.
That’s 350,000 good and not-so-good books. Enough to fill more than 7,000 boxes and an entire house from floor to ceiling. Enough to pack a 72-passenger bus — seats ripped out — nine times over.
I don't think I own as many books as the Raycrofts but I stopped counting years ago. The Book Depot in St. Catharines is to me what a neighbourhood bar is to an alcoholic. We used to shop there every Saturday morning followed by a leisurely brunch at a local greasy spoon where we'd pore over our literary finds. During the federal election I worked 7 days a week and had no time for book shopping - in fact I barely had time to brush my teeth! That 6 week respite from the Book Depot seems to have broken the addiction for the time being but I could have a relapse at any time.

Friday, June 03, 2011

Candy Books

Edible books crafted from fruit leather and honey scented white modeling chocolate. Learn to make them HERE . Via Edible Crafts