Down and Out in Paris and London

Regular visitors to this humble blog are aware of my deep appreciation for George Orwell’s writing. I was chuffed to discover a new Orwell project set to launch this week. The Orwell Daily is a newletter which will offer tranches of Orwell’s writing—between 1,000 and 1,500 words—every day. The newsletter will launch on October 28th with a serialization of Down and Out in Paris and London, which will run until late December.

According to the Orwell Daily editor Jeremy Wikeley, “Really this about starting a conversation and a community around the books and the words themselves. Orwell is, obviously, everywhere. To say he’s influential doesn’t really cover it. For so many people Nineteen Eighty-Four and Animal Farm aren’t just good reads or wise parables, they’re living, breathing texts, books that make sense of the world and offer a way through it. The essays and the non-fiction too. The Foundation exists to keep that legacy alive.”

 

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The Haunted Castle

In honor of the Halloween season, here’s the first horror film, Georges Méliès’ The Haunted Castle. Originally released in 1896, the year before Dracula was published, it had been thought to be lost until 1988, when a copy was discovered in the New Zealand Film Archive.

Though it’s full of horrific trappings, in general Méliès intended it to amuse and astonish rather than to shock. The filmmaker himself appears as Mephistopheles, and the woman conjured from the cauldron is Jehanne d’Alcy, who would become his second wife.

 

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Ghost Stories of an Antiquary

Each year the Halloween season seems to engender new found interest in both popular and lesser known spooky stories. Those of us raised on classic ghost tales likely are familiar with the work of M.R. James, but younger generations may not have had the opportunity to enjoy the thrill of his iconic stories. His work has influenced writers of horror, from H. P. Lovecraft to Steven King.

“The stereotypical Jamesian ghost stry involves a scholar or gentleman in a European village who, through his own curiosity, greed, or simple bad luck, has a horrifying supernatural encounter. For example, in “ ‘Oh, Whistle, and I’ll Come to You, My Lad,’ ” a professor finds himself haunted by a mysterious figure after blowing a whistle found in the ruins of a Templar church, and in “Count Magnus,” a writer’s interest in a mysterious and cruel figure leads to horrific consequences. Other stories have the scholar as an antagonist, like “Lost Hearts” and “Casting the Runes,” where study of supernatural rites gives way to practice. James’ stories find their horror in their atmosphere and mood, and strike a balance in their supernatural elements, being neither overly descriptive nor overly vague.”

Now it’s possible to sample all of James’ ghost stories in a single volume for free at Standard Ebooks, the home of free, high-quality, public-domain texts.

This collection includes all the stories from his collections Ghost Stories of an AntiquaryMore Ghost StoriesA Thin Ghost and Others, and A Warning to the Curious and Other Ghost Stories.

 

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Ô Canada

I have to admit that I am a bit of a airline safety video nerd. It’s the height of creativity to create a safety video that can both keep the attention of air travelers and be simultaneously entertaining. Created in 2019, the release of this new video was delayed by the pandemic. It is a departure from Air Canada’s past safety videos, which focused on passengers completing appropriate safety actions while in a plane. Instead, the nearly six minute video shows a number of beautiful scenes from across Canada, integrating safety information and actions into a bilingual ode to Canada.

NB: If the video fails to launch, please visit our homepage.

 

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How Clean Is Yours

The Environmental Performance Index (EPI) ranks 180 countries on climate change performance, environmental health, sanitation, and ecosystem vitality from the cleanest to the dirtiest in the world. There are few surprises in thie top ten list described in the short video below, although I expected to see New Zealand and Iceland among the top ten countries.

NB: If the video does not appear in your email, please see our homepage.

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A story is a form of telepathy

 

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Tudor Books

Recently, my favorite museum in North America the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City opened an impressive new exhibition, The Tudors: Art and Majesty in Renaissance England. Spanning King Henry VII’s seizure of the throne in 1485 to the death of his granddaughter Queen Elizabeth I in 1603, the Tudor era was a period when the arts thrived. In this exhibition, more than 100 objects bring all of that to the fore through vibrant portraits, tapestries, sculpture, armor, and, of course, Tudor books and manuscripts.

Books and manuscripts on view include:

The Book of Hours of Mary of England, Queen of France (pictured above), tempera on vellum ca. 1495-1500 with miniature attributed to the Master of Claude de France, ca. 1514. This book was gifted by King Louis XII to his bride, Mary, sister to Henry VIII. She later presented it to Henry.

Two editions of Astronomicum Caesareum, an astrological text used by royalty to map the stars to make critical decisions, printed in 1540 by Georg and Petrus Apianus with hand-colored woodcuts by Michael Ostendorfer. According to the Met, “Henry VIII, who owned the finest contemporary books on the market, likely kept his copy alongside other astronomical books in the Secret Jewel House at the Tower of London.” Watch this book “in motion” here.

“Acts of the Apostles and the Apocalypse,” a stunning Flemish manuscript on vellum, ca. 1519–27, with a miniature attributed to Lucas Horenbout (Flemish, Ghent 1490/95–London 1544) or Susanna Horenbout (active ca. 1520–1550). The illustrations show the Tudor dragon and greyhound, Tudor roses, and the Beaufort portcullis of Henry VIII’s grandmother.

The Psalter of Henry VIII . This tempera on parchment prayerbook, with miniatures by the French artist Jean Mallard, was used by the king himself—it even features his handwritten annotations.

Two Bibles are highlighted: The Coverdale Bible, printed in 1535, with title page designed by Hans Holbein the Younger, and The Great Bible of 1540, printed on vellum, with title page attributed to Lucas Horenbout; the hand-tinted and parchment-printed edition on view was owned by Henry VIII.

Instruction of a Christen Woman by Juan Luis Vives was printed in London in 1557. Was this one of Queen Elizabeth I’s favorites? According to the Met, it was originally written in Latin for the young princess Mary.

Tabula Cebetis, and De Mortis Effectibus,” a 1507 scholarly manuscript transcribed by an Italian friar, was meant to be a gift for Henry VII.

Octonaries Upon the Vanitie and Inconstancie of the World,” ca. 1600, is an ink and watercolor manuscript made by a woman, Esther Inglis (French or British), who transcribed and painted devotional texts.

The First and Chief Groundes of Architecture Used in All the Auncient and Famous Monymentes (1563) by John Shute is the first architectural treatise printed in English. Shute wrote it at the request of King Edward VI, but it was published during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I.

The exhibition will remain on view through January 8, 2023.

 

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The Right to Read

In response to the ongoing rightwing hysteria of school students free access to books Federal legislation was introduced last week that would expand access to school libraries and codify student First Amendment Rights. The Right to Read Act (S. 5064 and H.R. 9056), introduced by Rhode Island Senator Jack Reed and Arizona Representative Raúl Grijalva, would put a certified school librarian in every public school library across the country.

Among the Right to Read Act provisions:

  • Up to $500 million in Comprehensive Literacy State Development Grants
  • An increase in the Innovative Approaches to Literacy Program to $100 million
  • A concerted investment in the recruitment, training, and retaining of certified school librarians
  • Reaffirming student First Amendment Rights to access school library materials, with expanded liability protection for teachers and school librarians.

“Literacy is the cornerstone of a high-quality education in every society, yet today we are seeing our nation’s children subjected to politically led efforts to block access to books. Censoring our education system based on bias is national travesty.” said Rep. Grijalva in the press release for the Right to Read Act. “We must ensure that our school libraries are equipped to empower and engage students from every background which is why I am proud to introduce the Right to Read Act with Senator Reed. This legislation will support the development of effective school libraries, including recruitment and retention of librarians, and provide federal funding for literacy resources in high need communities. This bill will also help protect the right to access diverse, inclusive school library collections. Together, we will build and develop effective school libraries with diverse and robust resources to deliver positive and formative opportunities for students.”

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Room to Swing

It’s always good news when the U.S. Library of Congress announces the release of a reissued classic. The Library of Congress Crime Classics series features some of the finest American crime writing from the 1860s to the 1960s. Drawn from the Library’s unequalled collections, series editor and mystery expert Leslie S. Klinger has selected scarce and lesser known titles that represent a range of genres, from “cozies” to police procedurals. Priced and formatted for wide readership and classrooms, each volume includes the original text, as well as a contextual introduction, brief biography of the author, notes, recommendations for further reading, and suggested discussion questions. Crime Classics are published by Poisoned Pen Press, an imprint of Sourcebooks, in association with the Library of Congress.

Room to Swing  by Ed Lacy, published by Poisoned Pen Press, in association with the Library of Congress features Toussaint Moore a Black, college-educated, decorated war veteran. When he’s hired by producers of a reality television show to keep tabs on the whereabouts of an accused rapist, the gig goes quickly south; Moore finds the man murdered and himself framed for the deed. Moore flees to the small Ohio town where the dead man committed his crime but encounters a whole new level of resistance and racism as a Black man asking questions in a small-minded, predominantly White town. Using his wits, he sets a trap for the real killer in this  1958 Edgar Award-winning novel.

Ed Lacy was the pen name for Leonard S. Zinberg, a New Yorker who wrote more than 30 Noir crime novels published as paperback originals (“Go for the Body,” “Shakedown for Murder,” “Sin in Their Blood”) and more than one hundred short stories in a career that spanned nearly three decades. He was Jewish, married to a Black woman, a communist for many years, and an early and ardent advocate of civil rights for Black Americans. (Ralph Ellison, who moved in many of the same New York literary and social circles, reviewed Zinberg’s first book in 1940 in New Masses, a Marxist magazine.) When Zinberg died in Harlem of a heart attack in 1968 at age 56, the New York Times reported his pulp paperbacks had sold more than 28 million copies.

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Last Orders

 

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