Discovering Literature

rymer james malcolm varney 066062

Last week the British Library launched Discovering Literature, an online treasury of more than 1,200 items from the Romantic and Victorian periods, including first editions, manuscripts and rare illustrations.

A wealth of contextual material – newspapers, photographs, advertisements and maps – is presented alongside personal letters and diaries from iconic authors. Together they bring to life the historical, political and cultural contexts in which major works were written: works that have shaped our literary heritage.

hardy-thomas-thomas-B20143-48

William Blake’s notebook, the first vampire novels, childhood writings of the Brontë sisters, the manuscript of the Preface to Charles Dickens’s Oliver Twist, and an early draft of Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest are just some of the unique collections available on the site.

dickens charles first B20150-31

Discovering Literature features over 8000 pages of collection items and explores more than 20 authors through 165 newly-commissioned articles, 25 short documentary films, and 30 lesson plans.

jerrold-william_blanchard-london-B20124-72

 

Posted in Books, Europe, History, Libraries, Maps, Writing | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Books Are A Stepping Stone

streetartnews_tinho_frankfurt_germany-1

The celebrated Brazilian street artist Walter Nomura—aka Tinho—completed these wonderful pieces last fall in Frankfurt, Germany. Beginning as a grafiteiro at the tender age of 12 and gained notoriety in his home country with moving wall art depicting missing and exploited children. His newer work is political, challenging and inspirational too.

streetartnews_tinho_frankfurt_germany-2

streetartnews_tinho_frankfurt_germany-3

streetartnews_tinho_frankfurt_germany-4

Posted in Art, Europe | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Cultivating Thought

_i_2_chipotle-cups

One day the writer Jonathan Safran Foer was sitting in a Chipotle Mexican Grill enjoying a veggie burrito (they’re quite good and GMO-free) when he realized that he had nothing to read. This sparked a clever idea for the author of Everything is Illuminated : Why don’t they print mini-stories on the cups and paper bags.

CultivatingThoughtCups_SILVERMAN_011

Being a celebrity, Foer shot an email to the Chipotle CEO offering to curate a series of short reads by popular writers for the restaurant’s customers. Last week the chain rolled-out the first text adorned bags and cups with original pieces by Foer, Toni Morrison, Malcolm Gladwell, Sarah Silverman, George Saunders, Judd Apatow, Michael Lewis and Sheri Fink.

CultivatingThoughtBags_APATOW-14

If you don’t have a Chipotle near you, here’s a sample from Cultivating Thought:

Two-Minute Seduction By Toni Morrison

I took my heart out and gave it to a writer made heartless by fame, someone who needed it to pump blood into veins desiccated by the suck and roar of crowds slobbering or poisoning or licking up the red froth they mistake for happiness because happiness looks just like a heart painted on a valentine cup or tattooed on an arm that has never held a victim or comforted a hurt friend. I took it out and the space it left in my chest was sutured tight like the skin of a drum.

As my own pulse failed, I fell along with a soft shower of rain typical in this place.

Lying there, collapsed under trees bordering the mansion of the famous one I saw a butterfly broken by the slam of a single raindrop on its wings fold and flutter as it hit a pool of water still fighting for the lift that is its nature. I closed my eyes expecting to dissolve into stars or lava or a brutal sequoia when the famous writer appeared and leaned down over me. Lifting my head he put his lips on mine and breathed into my mouth one word and then another, and another, words upon words then numbers, then notes. I swallowed it all while my mind filled with language, measure, music, knowledge.

_i_5_gladwell-chipotle-cup

These gifts from the famous writer were so seductive, so all encompassing they seemed to make a heart irrelevant.

Two-Minute Personality Test By Jonathan Safran Foer

What’s the kindest thing you almost did? Is your fear of insomnia stronger than your fear of what awoke you? Are bonsai cruel? Do you love what you love, or just the feeling? Your earliest memories: do you look though your young eyes, or look at your young self? Which feels worse: to know that there are people who do more with less talent, or that there are people with more talent? Do you walk on moving walkways? Should it make any difference that you knew it was wrong as you were doing it? Would you trade actual intelligence for the perception of being smarter? Why does it bother you when someone at the next table is having a conversation on a cell phone? How many years of your life would you trade for the greatest month of your life? What would you tell your father, if it were possible? Which is changing faster, your body, or your mind? Is it cruel to tell an old person his prognosis? Are you in any way angry at your phone? When you pass a storefront, do you look at what’s inside, look at your reflection, or neither? Is there anything you would die for if no one could ever know you died for it? If you could be assured that money wouldn’t make you any small bit happier, would you still want more money? What has been irrevocably spoiled for you? If your deepest secret became public, would you be forgiven? Is your best friend your kindest friend? Is it any way cruel to give a dog a name? Is there anything you feel a need to confess? You know it’s a “murder of crows” and a “wake of buzzards” but it’s a what of ravens, again? What is it about death that you’re afraid of? How does it make you feel to know that it’s an “unkindness of ravens”?

_i_3_morrison-chipotle-cup

CultivatingThoughtCups_FOER_011

Posted in Art, Books, USA, Writing | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Library in the Tram

tumblr_n4p73jeyRg1rnvzfwo1_1280

I love libraries and I love trams, so how could I resist this story about the Library in the Tram—Tram to the Library out of Brno, Czech Republic. This winter, Moravia’s capital city and the historic Jiri Mahen Library launched the award-winning project which is designed to promote library use among tram riders. The colorfully decorated tram, which is equipped with special library displays and QR codes for downloading free ebooks, travels the 35 mile transit route sparking interest in the city libraries. Don’t you want one in your home town?

640px-Jiri_Mahen_library

Posted in Books, ebooks, Europe, Libraries | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

See America

Yosemite_National_Park-600x776

The Print Collection produces museum quality prints of historic posters and photographs, as well as original prints that are inspired by earlier poster art. Their new “See America” series was created by artist Steven Thomas as an homage to the iconic posters from the WPA in the 1930s.

Sequoia_National_Park_Final_-600x776

Niagara_Falls_State_Park_hirez4-600x776

Joshua_National_Park_Final_-600x776

Grand_Teton_National_Park_hirez1-600x776

Everglades_National_Park_Final_-600x776

Golden_Gate_Rec_Area_hirez_-1-600x774

Bryce_Canyon_National_Park_Final_-600x776

Badlands_Nat_Park_correct

Acadia_Nat_Park_hirez_9_3_13-600x776

Posted in Art, Tourism, USA | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

So Many Books, So Little Time

 

 

tercerossevilla1472762_688535467838477_1539018342_n

994992_715568768468480_310053741_n

1001557_743106219048068_1808364397_n

1609629_725252287500128_737039406_n

1526626_712684932090197_1060214588_n

1383361_660765320615492_1391304226_n

600351_695697737122250_750686238_n

1978770_752166884808668_24163903_n

1511268_709440199081337_1359968815_n

578457_651555738203117_1483659514_n

10171836_764307710261252_1118376273148119653_n

1978870_745387988819891_558250703_n

1456646_689608884397802_2066166334_n

1010468_717533541605336_86296810_n

3304161_orig

1533724_760109917347698_3034868135487515356_n

IMG_1414

Posted in Books, Bookstore Tourism, Libraries, USA, Writing | Tagged , | Leave a comment

It Must be the Flag of My Own Disposition

crawfordillustration

A while back we posted a story on artist Matt Kalish’s awesome project to illustrate every page of Moby Dick . That challenging enterprise inspired Philadelphia-based illustrator Allen Crawford to hand-letter and illustrate his own version of Walt Whiman’s “Song of Myself” , the beloved long poem from Leaves of Grass.

crawfordillustration2

Here in the Philly area, where Whitman spent his last years, we take the American literary icon very seriously. This is how Crawford explains his passion for the project:

“I try to treat the poem as almost a landscape, in the sense that I’m exploring this unknown territory and I’m taking field notes from the mind of Whitman. He treats ‘Song of Myself’ as this broad, epic sweeping poem where he’s trying to include everything about American life he’s experienced. So it is a kind of landscape, a kind of world. It is a kind of continent in itself. And as you’re travelling through it, you have different impressions, your style will change, the type will change, sometimes the type will take the fore and you’ll get a very pictorial sort of a interpretation, or a symbolic one. Sometimes the image doesn’t necessarily jive, and isn’t depicting something that’s actually in the poem. I’m trying to provide a parallel narrative to Whitman’s in visual form.”

crawfordillustration3

crawfordillustration6

crawfordillustration7

crawfordillustration8

crawfordillustration9

crawfordillustration10

crawfordillustration11

crawfordillustration12

crawfordillustration14

crawfordillustration13

crawfordillustration15

Posted in Art, Books, USA, Writing | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

F*** Yeah More Maps

1

Brooklyn-based book illustrator Aaron Meshon has created a series of colorful illustrated maps of his neighborhood. Sure doesn’t look like the Brooklyn of my childhood, but it’s really cute. If you’d like to see more of Meshon’s vibrant, fun maps, or purchase your own prints, you can visit his Etsy shop.

2

3

4

5

 

Posted in Animation, Art, Maps, USA | Tagged , | Leave a comment

It’s Always Breakfast Time Somewhere

3

Global Breakfast Radio is a simple, but brilliant concept: Live streaming morning radio shows from across the globe as they happen. The website is the brainchild of Seb Emina and Daniel Jones, who describe the service as “the equivalent of a plane flying west with the sunrise, constantly tracking chatter and music of people across the planet. In the background of breakfast is radio, soundtrack to a billion bowls of cereal or congee, shakshuka or api, porridge or changua.”

The live streaming service works seamlessly from any web browser and on most mobile devices. Give it a spin; it’s like traveling the world by live radio.

top

Posted in Tech, Tourism | Tagged , | Leave a comment

You Are Here

f689ec0402b1100356547eb102b18fc9_large

Portlandian graphic artists and printmakers Lyn Nance-Sasser and Stephen Sasser create these remarkable archival pigment prints by superimposing popular, local,iconic spots on vintage 50s tourist maps. Their clever You Are Here In The City series currently features prints from hometown Portland, Seattle, San Francisco and NYC. The couple plan to expand the series to include cities such as Miami Beach, Nashville and Baltimore. To further that end, they’ve launched a Kickstarter campaign. Check it out here. I’m already in for a t-shirt.

Powells%20City%20of%20Books%20100%20dpi

SF%20Golden%20Gate%20final

san%20francisco%20coit%20tower%20final

nyc%20statue%20of%20liberty%20final

NYC%20Rockefeller%20Center%20final

chrysler%20building%20final

brooklyn%20bridge%20final

voodoo

old%20town%20portland%20sign

02%20hung%20far%20low%20nw

06%20bicycle%20se

f1d455173209a49af602292a3d1de46d_large

 

Posted in Art, Maps, Tourism, USA | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment