Chapter 481 Larry McMurtry on Libraries

I recently finished reading Larry McMurtry’s memoir of his life as a bookman, Books. Though McMurtry is probably best known to the general public for his novels and screenplays (Hud, The Last Picture Show, Terms of Endearment, Lonesome Dove, etc.), he is best known to the antiquarian bookselling community as a bookseller. He still owns an open shop, Booked Up, which was in Washington, D.C. for many years and now operates out of the “booktown” of Archer City, Texas.

Much of what McMurtry had to say about his years as a bookseller resonated with me, and I enjoyed seeing in print the names of some booksellers familiar to me. Simply put, the book is a good read and more so if you also happen to be an antiquarian bookseller.

One of the many topics the memoir addresses is the transformation of libraries into places other than repositories of books. Though I have written on this same topic on several occasions, McMurtry puts my point-of-view into words better than my own. Here’s what he has to say:

“Today the sight that discourages book people most is to walk into a public library and see computers where books used to be. In many cases not even the librarians want books to be there. What consumers want now is information, and information increasingly comes from computers.

That is a preference I can’t grasp, much less share, though I’m well aware that computers have many valid uses. They save lives, and they make research in most cases a thing that’s almost instantaneous.

They do many good things.

But they don’t really do what books do, and why should they usurp the chief function of a public library, which is to provide readers access to books? Books can accommodate the proximity of computers but it doesn’t seem to work the other way around. Computers now literally drive out books from the place that should, by definition, be books’ own home: the library.”

I like that this writer values the importance of print. Anyone want to make a pilgrimage to Archer City?

See you in the stacks!

Published in:  on October 14, 2009 at 6:49 pm Comments (1)

Chapter 469 No Words

I really did not want you to have to start the weekend this way, but I just can’t believe this.

I have no words.

Neither, apparently, will this school library when they’re finished with it.

It will have a $50,000 coffee shop and a $12,000 espresso machine. You’ve heard stories like this one before: it’s not a high school library where one is expected to browse, to read, and to learn; it’s just another groovy place for a frappuccino, and an expensive frappuccino at that.

As a former teacher, I have no words (except expletives) for any educator who says things like, “When I look at books, I see an outdated technology, like scrolls before books.” Mind you, it’s not the first time I’ve heard such a sentiment expressed, and it’s true that there are many who have accepted the hypothesis that electronic information is superior to printed books, and who believe that if this is so, then books should be discarded. That said, I’d like to point out that one important difference between the replacement of papyrus with print and the replacement of books with electronic information might be that society didn’t deliberately discard and destroy scrolls when books came along.

See you in the stacks — the ones that remain anyway.

UPDATED: Jeremy at Philobiblos has more to say on the subject here.

Published in:  on September 4, 2009 at 8:29 am Comments (2)

Chapter 449 Rare Book School, Part 3

Before I pick up where I left off yesterday, I should say that you might want to start with Parts 1 and 2 of the story of my journey to Rare Book School at the University of Virginia.

And now for Part 3:

Twelve students assembled in the small classroom filled with books and boxes of illustrations and printing plates at the back of a warren of other rooms in the basement of the Alderman Library. Our group was composed of four antiquarian booksellers — myself, Ian Kahn of Lux Mentis, James Bryant of Carpe Diem Fine Books), and Bruce Barnett of The Book Block — a couple of librarians, some professors, a doctor, and a newspaper editor and publisher. Our T.A., the extraordinary Tess Goodman, rounded out the group. Our instructor, Terry Belanger, the Founder of Rare Book School was also the teacher for the course, Book Illustration Processes to 1900. To read a bit more about Terry Belanger, click here.

Read it. I’ll wait.

I asked myself several times during the week how I got lucky enough to be in a class with such amazing people taught by one of the true legends of the rare book world.

I still don’t have a good answer. I just know I am extremely fortunate to have been given the opportunity to attend the class and learn about books.

Each day, our class began with a discussion of the different printing processes used prior to 1900, largely following Bamber Gascoigne’s book, How to Identify Prints. (If you don’t have this book, I highly recommend it. Terry Belanger calls it “indispensable; both comprehensive and excellent.” It was one of the main textbooks for the course.)

It was good to receive instruction as to the chronology of illustration processes and the way each process worked, but what really made the class stand out was the instructor’s wit and his use of numerous real-life examples of each of the different types of printing processes. During the course of the week, we handled numerous prints, cards, leaves of books, books, and printing plates from all eras. Rare Book School, no doubt thanks to Terry Belanger’s efforts, has amassed an astounding collection that can be used to teach.

Any good bookseller will tell you that there is no substitute for the experience of seeing and handling as many books of all kinds as you can. My visit to Rare Book School increased that experience for me exponentially.

As a further lesson in the appreciation of printing processes, each of us students had to try our hand at early processes, making a woodcut, a drypoint etching, and an etching on a zinc plate with a ground. It certainly gives me an appreciation for how much practice it must have taken artists to create each lovely illustration for a book.

Here are my “creations” from my extremely unpracticed hand:

“Woodcut” (actually done on a linoleum block). It’s supposed to be an elephant. I placed the print next to the block itself so you can see what it looks like on a page:
elephantwoodcut

Drypoint etching of a ship and its corresponding print:
drypointetching

Etching of another ship with a personified sun and moon and its corresponding print:
sunandmoonetching

All in all, it was a fabulous week, so good it was almost like a dream. I learned a lot, made some new contacts and renewed some old contacts, and had a lot of fun in the mix. Be sure and check out Rare Book School for yourself. As you can see, you don’t have to be a bookseller to attend. I highly recommend this as part of any bibliophile’s education.

Dream big. Give it a try.

See you in the stacks!

Published in:  on August 5, 2009 at 9:31 pm Comments (3)

Chapter 448 Rare Book School, Part 2

I entered Alderman Library at the University of Virginia on the fourth floor.

That’s right. The fourth floor.

The fourth floor is the main entrance to the building, which, from the front, looks to be maybe two stories high:
locations_alderman_01

But looks can be deceiving. Hidden far beneath the entrance to the Alderman Library is a treasure. It’s deep down in the building, somewhat hidden away from those who are not already aware of its existence. The treasure is Rare Book School.

At the back of the fourth floor of the library is an elevator. I got in and pushed the button for the first floor, three floors below the fourth floor. I exited the elevator in what looked like standard basement-level book stacks. Following the narrow, labyrinthine hallway around the perimeter of the stacks, I began to wonder where the Rare Book School could possibly meet. Lucky for me, there were signs pointing the way.

I entered a room that would be used for all of the various classes to meet for refreshments at break time. There was more to the room than that. A printing press stood at the back of the room, and a sink and a couple of work tables. Various art and printing tools hung on the walls, and running on clotheslines across the high part of the walls were freshly printed sheets of paper, the scent of wet ink wafting through the air.

I fortified myself with tea and a muffin, said hello to my classmates, and then wandered to a doorway at the rear of the room.

This would be the place where my class, Book Illustration Processes to 1900, would meet. Stepping across the threshold into the windowless room deep in the bowels of the building, I have to admit that I felt a little bit like Luke Skywalker arriving in the remote swamps of Dagobah to receive his secret Jedi training from Yoda. There was a kit at my seat with a loupe, a small 25x microscope, a linoleum block, some tools, and — this is where the Jedi training comes in — some light sticks (Zelco Micro Fluorescent Lanterns) that, to my pop culture eye, looked like miniature light sabers.

I took my seat, wondering what would await me in this magical place. Though I’m no Jedi warrior, I knew for certain that my training as an antiquarian bookseller would be greatly improved by the end of the week.

To be continued tomorrow . . .

Published in:  on August 4, 2009 at 10:18 pm Comments (1)

Chapter 447 A Fine Home for Fine Books

It feels like years since I wrote a blog post, and I am so glad to resume posting, especially so I can tell you all about my visit to Rare Book School, where I took a class called “Book Illustration Processes to 1900″, taught by the founder and outgoing Director of Rare Book School, Terry Belanger.

Rare Book School was fantastic. I’ll tell you all about it over the next day or two. Today, I’ll begin by setting the scene. University of Virginia, which is the home of Rare Book School, is a fine home for fine books. Established by Thomas Jefferson in 1819, the university’s buildings are a lovely mix of white columns and red brick. What a gorgeous place:

Here’s the Rotunda, the center of campus:
rotundabuilding

Jefferson envisioned the Rotunda as the heart of the University. It originally housed what I contend is the heart of any good university — the library. While the library long ago outgrew this stately home, the old shelves still remain. Can you see the glass-fronted cabinets tucked in behind the columns?
rotundalibrary

I can just picture myself studying at a table in the center of the room, leather and gilt bindings piled high around me, surrounded by the towering white columns, the soaring roof, and the beautiful old books. Too bad I didn’t live in 1819. In 2009, I find myself sitting in a modern building at a table with metal legs with my Kindle at hand and the frappucino cafe nearby. Functional, but not nearly as beautiful. ;)

My class was held in the also-beautiful Alderman Library, not far from the Rotunda. My classroom was exactly the way I imagined that a room for the study of old books ought to be: deep in the basement of the building at the back of a warren of small rooms filled floor to ceiling with books and prints, old printing presses, printing equipment, and the smell of ink. If I were to build a movie set of the classrooms for people who study antiquarian books, this would be it. Here’s a shot of the exterior of Alderman Library. If you want to see the classroom for yourself, sign up for Rare Book School.
locations_alderman_01

Outside the library, there are lots of charming areas to sit and discuss with colleagues or to contemplate ideas in solitude:
benches

Back near the Rotunda are a series of student rooms and a huge green lawn. Not surprisingly, the area is reffered to as “The Lawn”. Every room on the lawn comes with a rocking chair, and it is a tradition that, in the evenings, residents of The Lawn put their rocking chairs outside and socialize with one another. And, yes, students at Rare Book School can stay on The Lawn for the duration of their course.
lawnrockingchair

I did not stay on the Lawn, but some of my colleagues did, and after seeing their rooms, I certainly will try to stay on The Lawn the next time I attend Rare Book School. (Oh, yes, there will be a next time!) Here are a few more shots of other places I saw on campus during my week’s stay:

literary societysign

houses2

lawnview

rooms

lawnview3

Such beauty. Except for the fact that I missed Thoughful Husband and Tom and Huck, it’s a wonder I returned to California at all.

See you in the stacks!

Published in:  on August 3, 2009 at 11:40 am Comments (5)

Chapter 446 Charlottesville, Virginia, Here I Come!

I want to tell you the tale of the quote I recently sent to a library, but that story is long and is going to require that I tell it in parts, and, as I am leaving for the University of Virginia Rare Book School in just a couple of days, I have so much to prepare around here that I don’t have the time to do it justice. It is a tale I look forward to telling in the near future. I got a scholarship to attend this school almost two years ago, and I am glad I can put it to use now. (RBS has many scholarships, and it’s worth applying for one if you plan to take a course there.)

I’m sorry. I just hate that I don’t have the time to blog daily right now, but as it is bookselling rather than blogging that pays the bills, blogging gets lower priority when things are busy. I’m studying, packing, selling books (!), and trying to get Tom and Huck and Thoughtful Husband set up with plenty of food and groceries and clean laundry until I get back. If I do those things, it makes the load lighter for Thoughtful Husband, who must go to work every day, care for Tom and Huck, and for his mother. My mom will help Thoughtful Husband while I’m away. She’s got a few adventures planned for the boys while Thoughtful Husband is at work each day. He’ll work during the day, handle the night shift here at home and will take care of his mother.

I mention this because I want to emphasize that I could not do the things a good bookseller needs to do — like go to Rare Book School and participate in out-of-town book fairs — without the help, love, and unequivocal support of my family. I want to say thank you to each of them for instantly saying things like, “That’s great!” and “How can I help?” when I tell them I will be going out of town to attend Rare Book School for a week and ask them if they would they mind taking on my duties here at home while I’m away. Thank you, Family. It’s because of you that I will be able to truly enjoy myself and to focus on learning about books while I’m away.

I’m going to take a blogging break until I return from Rare Book School. Expect to see a post again on Monday, August 3 and expect to hear all about Rare Book School and all about quoting books to institutions.

In the meantime, I will be taking a class called Book Illustration Processes to 1900 taught by Rare Book School Founder Terry Belanger.

Here are three of the things I’ll see while I’m away:

The rotunda on the campus of the University of Virginia:
University_of_Virginia_Rotunda_2006

The Alderman Library at University of Virginia:
locations_alderman_01

Monticello, home of President Thomas Jefferson:
family-vacations-monticello

See you in Virginia!

Published in:  on July 22, 2009 at 7:23 pm Leave a Comment

Chapter 445 Adding To My Bookselling Repertoire, Or, The Tale Of A Quote, Part 1

Booksellers have a range of options when it comes to selling books — open shop, online, print catalogue, and book fair. These venues are effective for selling most books, but what can an antiquarian bookseller do to highlight a particular book (or books) to a particular collector or library?

Quote.

Quotes are detailed descriptions of a particular book or group of books, usually sent to a specific customer. Sometimes, the customer will see you have a book he wants and ask for a quote. Other times, you may feel that a particular collection (whether privately held or owned by an institution like a university library) is the best home for a specific title and you want to bring that title and its significance to the institution’s attention.

I recently finished writing and mailing my first quote to a library. I have sold to libraries before, but only at book fairs, where I have been able to talk to the librarians in person and hand sell the books. The book I recently quoted to a library was the first ever where I decided that the book I had would be an excellent fit for the library’s existing Western Americana collection. It remains to be seen whether they will choose to purchase the book. In the meantime, I’ll tell you a bit about the book and how I researched it and what went into my quote.

To be continued tomorrow . . .

Published in:  on July 20, 2009 at 10:42 pm Comments (1)

Chapter 414 Odds and Ends

I mentioned before that I have some thoughts on this topic, but others have expressed them much more eloquently than I could. Here’s Nicholas Basbanes with an update on the USF (Univesity of San Francisco) sale.

Ian weighs in on USF as well.

Also, I enjoyed this video of one of my favorite women of the west: Annie Oakley.

Things I need to do to prepare for Rare Book School at the University of Virginia:

Plane ticket. Check.

Lodging. Check.

Ground transportation. Check

Acquire books required for the course. Check.

Read and retain knowledge from books required for the course. Hoping to get to this over the weekend.

Figure out how I will make time to see Monticello, home of Thomas Jefferson while I am in Charlottesville. When I was 13, my family took a trip to the East Coast, the only time I have ever been there. Prior to the trip, I had written a school report on Thomas Jefferson and decided he was my favorite president. I was thrilled to visit Monticello and spent all the money I had earned babysitting (probably $10 or $20) in the souvenir shop. After doing so, we took a tour of the gardens at Monticello. Somewhere in those gardens, I put my bag of Thomas Jefferson goodies down and forgot about it until we were 200 miles away. I was so mad about it that my mother still remembers it all these years later. It is a definite goal to get to Monticello and see it with adult eyes this time. I hope I won’t forget any souvenirs. ;)

Monday is a holiday (Memorial Day) and I may not post again until late Monday night or early Tuesday. I’ll be reading those books and taking notes for Rare Book School.

See you in the stacks!

Published in:  on May 21, 2009 at 4:46 pm Comments (1)

Chapter 409 Libraries and Universities and Economic Realities

I’ve got some thoughts on this, and I’d like to share them but I have to finish getting ready to leave for the Gold Rush Book Fair. Here are the details, received today via the Ex-Libris email list from Terry Belanger, University Professor, Honorary Curator of Special Collections, and Director of the Rare Book School at the University of Virginia. Full disclosure: Professor Belanger will be teaching the course I am planning to take at Rare Book School this summer. Also, USF President Stephen Privett worked at my alma mater, Santa Clara University, before moving on to USF. I did receive permission from Professor Belanger to reprint his post to the Ex-Libris list in its entirety:

From Professor Belanger:
“The following, just in from a source I trust:

‘During his tenure at the University of San Francisco (USF), President Stephen Privett has been devoted in giving all his time and energy to its benefit. In the current economic crisis, he is tasked with painfully difficult, thankless, and unpopular decisions: to identify academic programs to discontinue and assets to sell, if necessary, to stabilize USF’s finances. On Sunday, 10 May 2009, the San Francisco Chronicle published a story on the cancellation of USF’s M.A. in Theology program amid protest. Earlier, on April 30th, the lead story in the campus newspaper, The Foghorn, told of assets identified for possible sale, primarily USF’s renowned rare book collections, but even including the possibility of the Lone Mountain campus. The story may be accessed here (or search Google for “foghorn rare books”).

Faculty and library donors and supporters have been appalled and dismayed that the Library could be stripped of its collections, virtually all of which were donated to the Library or purchased with donated funds. In the last 50 years, under the visionary leadership of Fr. William Monihan, S.J., Bay Area families and others worldwide have generously contributed books, manuscripts, artworks and funds to create the Gleeson Library and its Donohue Rare Book Room which, together, State Librarian emeritus Kevin Starr has described as “an epicenter of Jesuit Humanism” and “a library second to none.” Donors reasonably anticipated that their collections might have a permanent and secure home there.

Unfortunately, President Privett, has not only identified library treasures for sale, he has already quietly and anonymously
started to consign them for sale at auction. He recently stripped from the Timken-Zinkann Collection, an early founding core collection of the Library, a series of original woodcuts and engravings – mostly iconic images of Catholic and Christian tradition – by leading Renaissance artist and author, Albrecht Durer, in effect destroying the integrity of the collection. Together with an early, original Rembrandt etching, the Durer prints were anonymously offered for sale at auction Tuesday morning, 11 May, at Bonhams, despite a valiant last-minute effort on the part of faculty and library supporters to persuade Privett to suspend the sale.

See this link to the Bonhams website for a record of the sales.

In a down market, only the Rembrandt and a few of the Durers sold. Those of us who support the integrity of the Library’s collections, hope the unsold items may be returned to their home of many years for the continued benefit of students, researchers and faculty.

According to the Foghorn Online story cited above, Privett insists that, if the items compiled from the Rare Book Room were ever sold, they would be “non-book items, duplicate volumes, or single volumes, not part of a series or collection.” As for the Durer collection, Privett said, “They (the prints) were discovered by accident. We have an art gallery, not a museum. We didn’t have a place for them.”

Sadly, one of the Durer engravings sold (for $67,100 including buyer’s premium) is “St. Jerome in His Study,” an image which noted author Stephen Mitchell has described movingly in his writing. St. Jerome is the patron saint of librarians whose feast day is September 30th. Traditionally, every September his engraving was exhibited in the Gleeson Library to bring blessings and protection to the Library itself, to the librarians who selflessly work there, and to all those who research and patronize it. Whose or what image will now bless and protect USF’s Gleeson Library? Perhaps, come next September, some one will hang black mourning cloth where once the image of St. Jerome was displayed.

Ironically, President Privett has stated that money made from the sale of Rare Book Room items will go towards the renovation of the room itself. Once collections are compromised and books, manuscripts, artworks, ephemera and related items have been cannibalized from them, for what pupose will the Rare Book Room be renovated?

Both history Professor Martin Claussen, claussenm@usfca.edu, and Gleeson Library Associates Co-President, Walrave Jansen, wallyj@ix.netcom.com, have written eloquently about saving USF’s rare book collections and are actively working to do so. President Privett has agreed to meet with faculty tomorrow (Thursday 14 May), to discuss the situation.

President Privett emphasized in the campus newspaper that he was only making worst case scenario contingency plans. The fact that he had already quietly and secretly consigned items from the Library for sale at auction – courageously uncovered and exposed by history Professor Martin Claussen – belies the contingent nature of his plans. Contingencies have a way of becoming realities all too quickly!

When one thinks of Gleeson librarians Father William Monihan and D. Steven Corey, and all the collectors and donors who
contributed to make the rare book collections of USF what they are, it is dismal to recognize what is happening today.
In addition to Prof. Claussen, Walrave Jansen, Gleeson Library Associates Co-President, has been doing remarkable work to attempt to staunch the bleeding of the Donohue Rare Book Room holdings. One thing that amazes me is that the University President seems to have taken over and is attempting to micromanage deaccessioning, something that I would think should be the responsibility of the Library Dean and Library staff members.

Should you wish to express yourself to USF President Stephen Privett, or Library Dean Tyrone Cannon, they can be addressed respectively at privett@usfca.edu and cannont@usfca.edu.’

I have not yet been able to verify all of the details of this story, but (for openers) it’s clear that the prints were indeed auctioned off. The most offensive part of this sad tale is that the sales were conducted surreptitiously.

I think that the first order of business is to alert journalist friends and colleagues; there’s an important story percolating here.”

-Terry Belanger

It sounds to me like more details may be forthcoming from various sources. After writing about a recent experience at the library of my alma mater, I was graciously invited to visit with the Vice Provost for Information Services and Chief Information Officer and the University Librarian at Santa Clara University. Having done so, I am now well aware that many libraries and universities have to address the current economic challenges the best they can. That means that sometimes painful decisions (but why secret?) have to be made. That said, there’s no reason that those of us who love and use the printed book (especially rare books) shouldn’t make our advocacy for the accessibility and primacy of that media known. Wish I had time to say more now, but family and book fair demands mean it will have to wait until sometime next week.

{UPDATE: Jeremy has been able to post about this with the commentary I wish I had time to write. Click here to read.}

UPDATE #2: More commentary from Book Patrol.

Published in:  on May 13, 2009 at 7:02 pm Comments (2)

Chapter 401 That’s Entertainment, Or, Celebrity Excuses for Overdue Library Books

Back in February, I posted about the pilot of the airplane that safely crash-landed in the Hudson River, Captain Chesley Sullenberger, having a good excuse for not returning on time the library books he’d had with him on the airplane. Turns out I’m not the only one who thinks so. The San Francisco Public Library tapped “Sully” and several other minor celebrities to do some public service announcements about the Library’s Fine Amnesty Week — May 3-16, 2009. During this week, library patrons can return overdue books without the penalty of a fine.

Click here to see Sullenberger’s PSA, in which he explains how the books that landed in the Hudson are now being freeze-dried and restored. Among several other PSA’s on the site, the one by comedian and “sometime reader” Josh Kornbluth is also worth watching.

And for those of you who are San Francisco locals, get over to the San Francisco Public Library and return those overdue books.

What’s your excuse?

See you in the stacks!

Published in:  on May 3, 2009 at 9:25 pm Comments (4)