Obsession

cover design by Chip Kidd
notes: photography by Geoff Spear.

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The Penguin Book of Gaslight Crime

illustration by Jaya Miceli

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The Divine Romance

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The Book of Fathers

cover design by John Gall, collage by Nicole Natri

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Lucille Clifton, American Poet. 1936 – 2010


Lucille Clifton, a distinguished and prolific American poet and children’s book author, died on February 17th in Baltimore at 73. Clifton’s work was notable for it’s grace and it’s affirmation through her personal exploration of the experience of being black and female in the 20th century. She wrote her first poem in the late 1960’s at the end of the civil rights movement and published 30 books by her death earlier this month.

Clifton’s Good Times, the first volume in Good Woman: Poems and a Memoir, 1969-1980, was declared by the New York Times to be one of the year’s best books in 1969 for its “hard, angry poems.” Despite having written poems for Malcolm X and Eldridge Cleaver, Lucille Clifton disliked the impulse by critics to categorize her early work as part of the Black Arts Movement. In an interview with Charles H. Rowell in Callaloo, Clifton asserts that the Black Power Movement’s “sudden” realization and response to programmatic racial inequity seemed to her odd, although on the subject of The Movement she wrote:

“The Black Arts Movement was, in many ways, a movement to redefine the “black experience” in this country, to express the fundamental worthiness and beauty of black people in an America that had spent centuries trying to degrade people of African descent. The work of the artists of the Black Arts Movement became a significant part of the resistance to the forces that were killing us, both spiritually and physically”.

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Mary Titcomb: Librarian. Pioneer. Superstar.

A gold medal in the Librarian Olympics goes to Mary Titcomb. Born in Framingham NH in 1857, Mary Titcomb was an originator in Library and Information Science and a tireless and inspired advocate of library outreach. As the first librarian at the Washington Community Free Library in Maryland, Mary felt compelled to expand access to books to people in communities outside Washington County. She pioneered a system of outreach which sent boxes of books on a Library Wagon to 22 “deposit stations”. These stations would include general stores, post offices, barns, even front porches. The libraries would drop off requested books and readers would pick them up. The stations were located in different communities, so each reader would only have to travel to the nearest deposit station. By 1904, boxes with 30 volumes each were sent to 66 deposits, drastically increasing the number of people who had access to reading materials in the area.

A wooden bookcase placed outside a house became a book deposit station

Makeshift LIbrary in a Dry Goods Store

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Celebrating Black History Month, Old Skool Style

Originally published in 1974 at the height of the Black Arts Movement, The Black Book is a dizzying anthology of hundreds of archival documents, photographs, eyewitness accounts and observations compiled by folk historians and scholars to preserve and publicize profound aspects of the African American experience. It’s a rich and complicated story told through words and documentation, a photo album, a scrapbook, a treasure chest and a time capsule. It has been called “one of the most straightforward meditations ever published on the history of race relations in the United States” and a breathtaking testament to the wisdom, strength, talents and perseverance of black men and women throughout history. Henry Louis Gates, Jr calls The Black Book “the ultimate treasure chest of the black experience”. Toni Morrison wrote in her 1974 essay Rediscovering Black History: “Clearly, it was not a book to be put together by writers. What was needed were collectors––people who had the original raw material documenting our life.”

In 6th grade, we had read about the ships that brought Africans over to be sold as slaves in America and the traumatizing illustrations of the ship’s lower deck slave quarters burned fresh in my mind. My Social Studies teacher had a copy of The Black Book in his office. Here were photographs of actual slave owners and slaves, actual slavery ads for the public auction of slaves including one for a young mother and her three children who could be sold with only one or two the children “if it best suits the purchaser.” There were terrible stories abuse of slaves by their owners, thwarted attempts at escape by runaway slaves, of slave-catchers and black men who earned their freedom, and then turned around and purchased slaves themselves. There were photographs black men being flogged and in shackles, men burned to death and men hanging from nooses in trees. There were maps of the underground railroads of the gold coast, and antebellum rewards posters for the return of runaway slaves. Mercifully interspersed with all the traumatizing images were all kinds of images reflecting black history in America: black cowboys showgirls, dandies and hepcats, inventors and their patent applications, gorgeous church going folks in chimerical hats, jazzy jazz types and dancers, movie posters from Hollywood, and 20th century sheet music, and of highest priority to me, a list of black jockeys who’ve won the Kentucky Derby.   Continue reading

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The Chick Lit of Horror is Alive and Kicking

It may have taken a Young Adult genre explosion called Twilight – for which legions of grown women lined up to buy – to draw attention to a staggering surge in a sub genre to the science fiction/fantasy/romance world called “Paranormal Romance”, but according to the numbers, the genre is more popular than ever among both dreamy teens and libidinous adults.

What the hell is it? Well, it’s contemporary mythical fantasy that usually involves a hot female mortal and her interactions with otherworldy creatures or creatures out of legend. Often we are talking vampires, but also werewolves, good old fashioned ghosts, faeries, gods and goddesses, demons, telepaths and angels. What will be the new vampire? My money is on demons.   Continue reading

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Master of the Swedish Moors

Nicholas Wroe and Henning Mankell discuss the depressed detective, and why Mankell and Ingmar Bergman are called the “Swedish Brothers of Gloom”.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/feb/20/henning-mankell-interview

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New Guilty Pleasure Book Alert!

After closing the cover of Melissa Gilbert’s page turning memoir Prairie Tale last summer, my first question was “When the hell is Alison Arngrim going to dish her dirt?

Confessions of a Prairie Bitch: How I Survived Nellie Oleson and Learned to Love Being Hated
to be released June 14, 2010!

Stay tuned for more info!

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