In Bruges

Most of the world has made unprecedented changes to social, work, school, and travel arrangements as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. One of Europe’s most visited destinations has found a unique way to support the local community during the crisis. If you have been to Brugges, it’s likely that you climbed the historic Belfort tower in the heart of the city. Now that the 13th century monument is closed to tourists, it has been turned into a social distant study hall for students.

Here’s a little piece on how the stunning space has welcomed young people who need to escape from the confines of home.

 

 

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This Time Next Year (fingers crossed)

Like most folks, we have been forced to cancel or postpone our travel plans due to the pandemic. As U.S. citizens, we don’t have many options since most countries won’t admit us anyway. But that doesn’t mean we have abandoned all of our travel plans just yet. Prior to the plague outbreak, we had been looking forward to another visit to Iceland. It’s been one of my favorite countries for decades and we had a long road trip penciled in for next year already. For the moment, all we can lean on are our travel memories and amazing films like the one below.

Videographers and artists Jonathan Besler, Kevin May and Florian Gampert created this extraordinary video trekking and hiking Iceland with a Phantom 4 drone. The resulting footage provides all the incentive that anyone could possible require for a visit to Iceland. Titled The North Awakens, the video demands to be played full screen.

 

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Books and Maps

A big thanks to TBTP follower Maria W. for sending me the link to the wonderful video below from the British Library Learning series on Vimeo. What could be better than antiquarian books and maps together.

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Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere

This wonderful volume is the 1934 Limited Editions Club re-issue of Erewhon by the English Novelist Samuel Butler, with a special introduction by Aldous Huxley, and illustrated with 10 color lithographs and reproductions of 30 line drawings by American artist Rockwell Kent. The edition of 1500 copies was hand-set in Garamond types and designed and printed by Elmer Adler at the Pynson Printers’ shop in New York. The binding is full silk, printed with a design by Rockwell Kent, and the edition is signed by the artist.

Erewhon, a Utopian narrative set in a fictional country and intended as a satire on Victorian British society, was originally published anonymously in 1872 by  Nicholas Trübner in London. It was quite popular in its day, went through many editions in the 20th century, although no one seems to be reading it these days.

I’ve long been a fan of Rockwell Kent the prolific illustrator of books, but he only illustrated two Limited Editions Club publications, Erewhon and Leaves of Grass in 1929. An avid voyager and adventurer, Kent’s illustrations for Erewhon were produced during a time when he lived above the Arctic Circle in the tiny fishing settlement of Illorsuit, Greenland.

 

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This Side of Paradise

 

Scribner has just issued a set of new,elegant editions of F.Scott Fitzgerald novels. The series of five “collectible” hardcover editions feature new dust jacket designs. The titles include The Great Gatsby, Tender is the Night, The Beautiful and Damned, The Last Tycoon, and This Side of Paradise, which also happens to be celebrating its centennial this year. This Side of Paradise Fitzgerald’s first novel, written when he was only twenty-three. While not a financial success, the book did earn some positive reviews. Even H.L. Mencken called it the “best American novel that I have seen of late.” Still, The Great Gatsby, published five years later, is widely considered the author’s masterpiece. A  graphic novel adaptation of Gatsby is also being released, with an introduction by Blake Hazard, Fitzgerald’s great-granddaughter.

The publisher is celebrating the re-issues with a contest offering prizes that include a set of the new editions, original art work, and other Fitzgerald memorabilia. You can read all about the novels and enter the to win books right here.

 

 

 

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You have to see this place

Two years ago, former journalist David F. Gallagher launched a clever Kickstarter project that was recently completed and posted online. He solicited backers to designate a geographic location anywhere in the world by address or latitude/longitude and promised to send them a photograph that he had taken closest to the spot. The finished project resulted in a digital exhibition that you can view here. This seems like a great project for other photographers to emulate.

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The Misery of Manila Folders

DOLOR

Theodore Roethke

I have known the inexorable sadness of pencils,
Neat in their boxes, dolor of pad and paper weight,
All the misery of manilla folders and mucilage,
Desolation in immaculate public places,
Lonely reception room, lavatory, switchboard,
The unalterable pathos of basin and pitcher,
Ritual of multigraph, paper-clip, comma,
Endless duplicaton of lives and objects.
And I have seen dust from the walls of institutions,
Finer than flour, alive, more dangerous than silica,
Sift, almost invisible, through long afternoons of tedium,
Dropping a fine film on nails and delicate eyebrows,
Glazing the pale hair, the duplicate grey standard faces.

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Magical Mystery Tour

Vanity Fair magazine commissioned the marvelous video below guaranteed to warm the heart of any Beatles fan. It’s a 12 minute tour around the world using Google Maps, highlighting locations mentioned in the Beatles lyrics, from Liverpool to the Black Mountain Hills of Dakota to Moscow. It may contain some cringe-worthy inaccuracies, but Beatles lovers won’t mind much.

The video starts out exactly where you would expect it to, in Liverpool with a tour of Penny Lane, Strawberry Field, and the childhood homes of John Lennon and Paul McCartney. It travels up to Scotland, down to London for a variety of locations, number one being Abbey Road studios.

It jets to India, where we get to see the remains of the ashram in Rishikesh, now lovingly adorned with all sorts of Beatles fan art, and over to America. All in all, the total miles on this Magical Mystery Tour add up to 25,510, and all using Google.

So, if you can overlook the geographical goofs, it’s a 12 minutes well spent.

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An American Tale

Jamaican-born author Claudia Rankine is the author of Citizen: An American Lyric. It was named one of the best books of the year in 2014 by numerous media outlets, including The New Yorker, The Atlantic, National Public Radio, and Publisher’s Weekly. The book lays bare moments of racism that often surface in everyday encounters. It combines poetry with commentary, visual art, quotations from artists and critics, slogans, and scripts for films. In the video below, Rankine reads an excerpt from the powerful book-length poem.

Claudia Rankine’s Citizen: An American Lyric, published by Graywolf Press in 2014, is the first work of poetry to become a New York Times bestseller for multiple weeks on the paperback nonfiction list. It won the National Book Critics Circle Award in poetry. It is a touchstone for talking candidly about racism. Through a series of vignettes, the book recounts everyday moments of racism.

To learn about using Citizen: An American Lyric check out this resource on the publisher’s website.

 

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How Books Have Helped

Washington D.C. is blessed with an abundance of excellent bookstores. One of my favorites has long been the wonderful Second Story Books in the Dupont Circle neighborhood. Now they have partnered with the Center for the Book at the Library of Congress on a project to create a crowdsourced online archive on how books have helped people cope during these plague times. You can check it out and participate by visiting the Second Story Books website.

 

 

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