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Archive for the ‘Books I Love’ Category

Found at a used book store for .25 each!

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Art Wolfe http://www.artwolfe.com/

Jim Brandenburg http://www.jimbrandenburg.com

Ansel Adams http://www.anseladams.com

Gregory Colbert http://www.ashesandsnow.org

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I picked up this beautiful coffee table book at the Boston Book Festival this past weekend.  I got it for a steal, at about $3, though the normal bookstore price is about $45.  If you can’t find a copy, see if your library can get it for you.  Stunning artwork in brilliant colors.  I’m still making my way through it.  It’s easy to get lost in a single page!

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Voice from Afar Poems of Peace

Voice from Afar Poems of Peace

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As a child I was shy.  In elementary schools, I often spent time by myself in the library, roaming through the stacks.   The librarians took pity on me.  Sometimes, one of them would catch my eyes, smile at me and say softly, “Come with me.”  She’d take me to a magical place — the room holding the unshelved new books.  “Pick one,” she’d say.  “Whichever one you like.”  I was not so well-read that I knew authors by name, but usually some combination of title and cover art would entice me in my selection.  That was how I selected the first book in Patricia McKillip’s Riddlemaster Trilogy.  Today, if you were to catch me off-guard and say, “Quick!  Tell me the titles of your favorite books.”  I would say The Riddlemaster and after that I might say McKillip’s The Forgotten Beasts of Eld.  Twenty, thirty years later, I cannot tell you the specific storylines of any of these books but I can tell you of the memories she left me with through her words.  I can tell you of the images implanted in my mind of lush forests, crashing seas, loyal beasts.  I can tell you of the music evoked by her characters.  Her writing is lyrical, deep and rich.  It is that lyricism, depth and richness that I hope to rediscover this winter by re-reading her books.  Some of the books I own and must dig out of a box.  Others I will have to track down at local used book stores and at my public library.  When I am done, perhaps I will give them to a young relative or to someone older who is young at heart.  We’ll see. 😉

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The Sun Masquerading as a Sunflower

On this brisk, rainy morning, I rose and made a pot of coffee.  I sat down at my kitchen table with Annie Dillard’s Pilgrim at Tinker Creek.  I randomly opened the small volume and my eyes fell on the following words.

“There is a muscular energy in sunlight … ”

She goes on to describe horsepower generated by the sun on earth and ends the paragraph with the following sentence that made me close the book, not wanting to read anymore until these words had fully sunk into my brain.

“These “horses” heave in every direction, like slaves building pyramids, and fashion, from the bottom up, a new and sturdy world.”

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I do wonder why … all the time.  Which is probably why I picked up the children’s book of the same title this past weekend.  I paid a little bit more than I usually do for vintage children’s books, about $10, but I think it was a good investment.  The illustrations are lovely and quirky with cherub faced children that on occasion look quite devilish.  The illustrator is M.T. “Penny” Ross.  His bio can be found here:  http://www.spencer-n-ross.com/artist.html

I Wonder Why illus by RossI Wonder Why illus by Ross

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This weekend, I chanced upon a beautiful little book called How Sing Found the World is Round by Sydney Reid.   It was published by Volland in the early part of the twentieth century.  You can read more about Volland here:  http://www.loganberrybooks.com/juvcat-volland.html

The illustrator is Katherine Sturges Dodge, the mother of Hilary Knight who is the illustrator of the very popular Eloise series.  The book can be viewed  online through the Children’s Books Online website:  http://www.childrensbooksonline.org/How_Sing/index.htm

So far, I haven’t been able to find much of a biography for Katherine Sturges Dodge.  If anyone out there knows of any resources, please let me know.  I’d love to learn more about her.

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It has sat on the shelf for years, so long that I had forgotten why I’d kept it.  Then this weekend, during one of the incessant rains that has marked this New England summer, I pulled it down, read the first paragraph and remembered. A beautiful book (literally — I love the jacket) with lovely language throughout.

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“The poet is an anomaly in our culture.  The goal of our culture is money and power.  And that’s not exactly what poetry is about.  What is it about?  That’s a hard question.  It’s about anything the human mind and unconscious can produce.  And that’s infinite.”

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