July 10, 2009

BOOKPATHS

If land has determined books, than have books also exalted land. -- Lawrence Clark Powell

Bookpaths brings together literature and place. Through books we can strengthen our connection with all places on earth and through travel we can enrich our reading experience by stepping into a book's setting. Bookpaths is growing slowly. Check weekdays for new entries or browse the archives by place or date to find books, links to articles, and destinations that inform our sense of place. Click on "Literary Events" for a monthly list of upcoming book fairs, literary festivals, and other book-related events.

Helpston, Cambridgeshire, England

Poet John Clare’s (1793-1864) renovated cottage will open to the public on July 13.

Jonathan Bate, a Romantic poetry professor and the author of a biography on the poet, said Clare had hugely influenced modern poets writing on the environment. ‘Many of the young poets interested in the environment today, such as John Burnside, Paul Farley, and Alice Oswald, are deeply influenced by Clare,’ he said. ‘It's partly his style of writing about nature with great precision, but also his concern with the local. His imagination is always grounded in a sense of place, which is a huge issue for modern poets - being universal by being local.’ – from “Poet John Clare’s Home Renovated to Celebrate Rural Britain,” by Adam Vaughan, The Guardian

Montana...

Jim Harrison was the featured poet on yesterday’s News Hour.  Listen, read, watch.

Brown:  It’s poetry, in fact, that has remained Harrison’s first love.  His new collection is called In 'Search of Small Gods'. 

Harrison:  You sense those spirits in certain, often remote, places whether it’s the spirit of animals, the spirit of trees…those are the 'small Gods.'

Born on July 10th

Frederick Marryat
1792 in London, England

Robert Chambers
1802 in Peebles, Peeblesshire, Scotland

Finley Peter Dunne
1867 in Chicago, Illinois, USA

Marcel Proust
1871 in Auteuil, France

The Kolb-Proust Archive for Research, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Société des Amis de Marcel Proust et des Amis de Combray (includes link to La Maison de Tante Léonie-Musée Marcel Proust)

Edmund Clerihew Bentley
1875 in London, England

John Wyndham
1903 in Birmingham, Warwickshire, England

The John Wyndham Archive, University of Liverpool Library

Mildred Wirt Benson
1905 in Ladora, Iowa, USA

The Mildred A. Wirt Benson Website

The Mildred Wirt Benson Digital Collection, The University of Iowa Libraries

Salvador Espriu
1913 in Santa Coloma de Farners, Catalonia, Spain

Webpage Devoted to Salvador Espriu

James Aldridge
1918 in White Hills, Victoria, Australia

Earl Hamner, Jr.
1923 in Schuyler, Virginia, USA

Jean Kerr
1923 in Scranton, Pennsylvania, USA

Julian May
1931 in Chicago, Illinois, USA

Alice Munro
1931 in Wingham, Ontario, Canada

July 09, 2009

Born on July 9th

Ann Radcliffe
1764 in London, England

The Victorian Web

Matthew Lewis
1775 in London, England

Franz Boas
1858 in Minden, Westphalia, Prussia [Germany]

Dorothy Thompson
1894 in Lancaster, New York, USA

Dorothy Thompson Papers, Syracuse University

Mervyn Peake
1911 in Kuling, Kiangsi Province, China

Mervyn Peake Official Website

Gormenghast Website

David Diop
1927 in Bordeaux, France

Oliver Sacks
1933 in London, England

Oliver Sacks Official Website

June Jordan
1936 in New York, New York, USA

June Jordan Official Website

Dean Koontz
1945 in Everett, Pennsylvania, USA

Dean Koontz Official Website

Larry Brown
1951 in Oxford, Mississippi, USA

Maria Flook
1952 in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

Maria Flook Website

July 08, 2009

Literary Walk, Central Park, New York


William_shakespeare_central_park_manhattan Take a “literary walk” in New York’s Central Park.

Jamaica, and beyond….

Novelist Andrew Sean Greer tells us why we “must read” A High Wind in Jamaica, by Richard Hughes.

The story begins almost whimsically in Jamaica, with five English children surviving a hurricane. Later on, as the ship is returning to Europe, we enter Treasure Island territory when the vessel is boarded by pirates. – from “You Must Read This,” by Andrew Sean Greer, NPR Website

United States

Novelist Chris Hannan chooses his “top 10 tales of the American frontier.”

I suppose when you think of the frontier – any frontier, a gold rush or an oil workers' camp – the people are the same size but somehow the place is lonelier and seems bigger, and that makes people go just a little bit mad. The American west in 1862 was – in terms of suicide, drug consumption, divorce and sexual freedom – a hundred years ahead of its time. What went on in their heads? Then, when I started writing Missy, I got interested in other writers and all their completely different ideas of the frontier ... – Chris Hannan, The Guardian

Born on July 8th

Jean de La Fontaine
1621 in Château-Thierry, France

Musée de la Fontaine, Château-Thierry

Fitz-Greene Halleck
1790 in Guilford, Connecticut, USA

The Fitz-Greene Halleck Society

Halleck Statue in Central Park, New York

Käthe Kollwitz
1867 in Königsberg, East Prussia (now Kaliningrad, Russia)

Käthe Kollwitz Museum Köln

Käthe Kollwitz Museum Berlin

William Vaughn Moody
1869 in Spencer, Indiana, USA

Veikko Antero Koskenniemi
1886 in Oulu, Norway

Richard Aldington

1892 in Hampshire, England

Alec Waugh
1898 in London, England

Gwendolyn Bennett
1902 in Giddings, Texas, USA

J. F. Powers
1917 in Jacksonville, Illinois, USA

Minnesota Author Biographies Project

Shirley Ann Grau
1929 in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA

Anna Quindlen
1953 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA

Anna Quindlen Website

July 07, 2009

Vitebsk, Belarus; France; Russia

But I’m not joking.  If my art played no part in my family’s life, their lives and their achievements greatly influenced my art. – from My Life, by Marc Chagall

My Life, by Marc Chagall; Dorothy Williams, translator (London, England: Peter Own Publishers, 2003; first French translation in 1932; first English translation in 1965)

Chagall Marc Chagall (1887-1985) completed My Life in 1922, but it wasn't published until 1932.  Containing fifty illustrations by the artist, Chagall’s memoir is reminiscent of his art, at once whimsical, dreamy, and touching.  Of particular interest, are Chagall’s memories of his family’s “deep roots in Jewish tradition,” his ties to his homeland, and his entry into the Paris art world.

However, when my grandfather, with the long, black beard, died in all honor, my father, for a few roubles, bought another place.

In that neighborhood, no longer near an insane asylum as at Pestkowatik.  All about us, churches, fences, shops, synagogues – simple and eternal, like the buildings in the frescoes of Giotto.

Around me come and go, turn and turn, or just trot along, all sorts of Jews, old and young, Javitches and Bejlines.  A beggar runs towards his house, a rich man goes home.  The cheder boy runs home.  Papa goes home.

In those days there was no cinema.

People went home or to the shop.  That is what I remember after my trough.

I say nothing of the sky, of the stars of my childhood.

They are my stars, my sweet stars; they accompany me to school and wait for me on the street till I return.  Poor dears, forgive me.  I have left you alone on such a dizzy height!

My town, sad and gay!

As a boy, I used to watch you from our doorstep, childishly.  To a child’s eyes you were clear.  When the walls cut off my view, I climbed up on a little post.  If then I still could not see you, I climbed up on the roof.  Why not?  My grandfather used to climb up there too.

And I gazed at you as much as I pleased.

Here, in Pokrowskaja Street, I was born a second time. – from My Life, by Marc Chagall

Related Websites

Publisher’s Website

Marc Chagall Museum, Vitebsk, Belarus

Chagall Musée National, Nice, France

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