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Author Archives: Brian D. Butler
Go Ask Alice
Those of you who visit TBTP on a regular basis know of my life-long affection for Lewis Carroll’s classic book. I have had many different editions since I was a child, but I have long found Ralph Steadman’s drawings for … Continue reading
Posted in Art, Books, Europe, Writing
Tagged Alice in Wonderland, book illustration, Lewis Carroll, Ralph Steadman
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Classically Alice
This is one of the first non-Tenniel illustrated Alices issued when British copyright expired in 1907. Pictured in a white pinafore decorated with pale pink roses and grey tights, Rackham’s Alice appears both thinner and taller than Tenniel’s heroine. Muted colors, … Continue reading
Posted in Art, Books, Europe, Writing
Tagged Alice in Wonderland, book illustration, Lewis Carroll
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Geography is just travel when it’s at home
This is a surprisingly nice copy of Pomponii Melae De Situ Orbis Libri III, by Abraham Gronovius. Printed in 1722, the book is about ancient geography and includes some wonderful illustrations and fold out maps to help you learn all … Continue reading
Keeping the UK Weird
Although the golden age of the zine seems to be over, every once in a while one pops up to grab our attention. I recently stumbled across the first edition of a new UK-based zine titled quite appropriately Weird Walk. The … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Art, Europe, History, Maps, Tourism, Travel Writing
Tagged Architecture, Britain, Geography, United Kingdom
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I’m an open book
Paul Éluard, Le Livre Ouvert III, Editions des Cahiers d’art, Paris, ca. 1944
NYC Tourist Hoax
Sculptor, prankster, and big-time hoaxster Joe Reginella has struck New York City once again with a marvelously silly faux memorial statue. This one “remembers” all of the missing tourists who have been eaten by subterranean packs of wild wolves. The … Continue reading
Not Columbus Day Any More
Happy Indigenous Peoples Day
American Voyageur
Few American writers have achieved the cultural impact of Herman Melville, author of the eternal classic Moby-Dick, yet he died unrecognized by his contemporaries for his genius. To commemorate the 200th anniversary of Melville’s birth, Philadelphia’s Rosenbach Museum and Library has … Continue reading
Posted in Art, Books, History, Libraries, Museums, Tourism, Uncategorized, USA, Writing
Tagged Herman Melville, Moby-Dick, Philadelphia, Rosenbach Museum and Library
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