Saturday, June 13, 2020

Bookshelf Traveling - June 13, 2020

Time for another round of Bookshelf Traveling in Insane Times which is being hosted by Judith at Reader in the Wilderness.   The idea is to share one of your neglected bookshelves, and this bottom shelf is truly a mixture of books read and unread.
My mother read The Sword in the Stone to my sister and me when we were about 6 and 9, and I read the rest of The Once and Future King as a teen, finding a copy identical to hers at the Barnes & Noble buying office around 2000.   It was like a treasure trove there and I rarely left empty-handed.  Back in the day, the B&N bookstore buyers received a copy of nearly every book published, most of which they didn’t want, so would pile them on shelves in the hall.  Even after budgets got cut, we still sent copies of books we thought someone would like or should see.   However, once with great difficulty, I got Ken Dryden’s memoir autographed for the sports buyer and on my next visit I saw it discarded on a shelf.   “Lisa!  Did you even notice it was inscribed to you?!” I said with annoyance, forgetting the client is always right.   The freebies were really not meant for the publishers’ sales reps but if we saw something we wanted we would either grab it or ask for permission to grab it!

I haven't felt the same about T.H. White since I read H is for Hawk, which was fascinating but very disturbing.   Sometimes one is better off not knowing much about an author.
Laura Lippman gets the most attention.  One day, many years ago, Carrie Feron, a gifted editor at what was then Avon Books, pitched a debut mystery with a wonderful sense of place called Baltimore Blues.  “Wait a minute!” I said, “I’ve read her work.”   Laura is an unabashed Betsy-Tacy and Beany Malone fan, hiding a mention or clue of one or the other in each of her books.  She is currently writing big standalone suspense novels and made time to come to Deep Valley, MN two years ago as keynote speaker at the last Betsy-Tacy convention.
Fans of Walden will appreciate,
but don't call me Connie!
Jane Langton, who died two years ago, provides one of those shelving dilemmas.   She is best known for her children’s books, which live upstairs and are big favorites. But she also wrote a few quirky adult mysteries, set in Boston, that reside downstairs.  There was a lunch for her while I was working at Penguin and I told her how much I loved The Diamond in the Window, et seq., and she drew me a map of the actual house that inspired her.   After the lunch, she sent me an autographed copy of God in Concord in which she had sketched Henry Thoreau on the front endpaper.  Very thoughtful!  But on the facing page, she inscribed it to Connie!  Of course, she didn’t know I hate that nickname but it sort of wrecks the book! I don’t even like her mysteries but how can one give away an autographed book with a Transcendentalist sketch?
There are books about Irving Berlin and the Gershwin brothers; the AMA Family Medical Guide from my last job in publishing; a really good thriller called Vertical Run; two mysteries I haven't got to; Dancing on Thorns, which I have read but don’t remember;  and Her Father’s House, which I have not read but it looks like Cath can add to her Cornwall list!  I’ll have to read it to be sure . . .

5 comments:

Cath said...

What an interesting post. I've not heard of Her Father's House but will add that to my Cornish books list as I looked at it on Goodreads and it does appear to be mostly set in Cornwall. In fact 'Veryan' - the main character's surname - is a village in Cornwall.

TracyK said...

That is a very interesting story about Laura Lippman and the Betsy-Tacy books. My only familiarity with the Betsy-Tacy books is from your blog. I guess I should look into them.

I have read a few of Jane Langton's mysteries and like them mostly for the drawings. I can read them if I space them apart. The last one seemed very sexist, with Homer Kelly discounting everything his wife says.

Judith said...

So interesting to see several Jane Langton books on the shelf! Do you by any chance have a favorite book among hers? Curious about the Irving Berlin book as well. And Her Father's House--will add that one to my list!

Katrina said...

It sounds like you had a dream of a job. I also loved the T.H. White books and they set me off on a bit of an Arthurian binge later.

CLM said...

I was thinking about Jane Langton this week when I was in Concord because she loved it too and lived in Lincoln, the town next door. As the NYT says, "In her more than 30 books, most of them mysteries and children’s books, she frequently summoned the revolutionary past and the transcendental spirit of Emerson and Thoreau in Concord, a picture-postcard monument to Americana that Boston magazine has called 'the world’s quaintest town.'”

My favorite book is not one of her adult mysteries, which I don't really care for, but The Diamond in the Window, about two orphans who live in a mysterious old house in Concord. In early May, I sent my extra copy to my niece in New York. More than two months later, USPS still does not know what happened to the box of books they mistakenly sent to North Carolina. Thank goodness there was nothing incredibly valuable but it still makes my blood boil. Instead of trying to find it, they keep telling me to ask the post office where my sister was staying, where their staff tell me indignantly they would deliver any box given them.

Katrina, my job didn't seem like a dream when I had it, but it was certainly great in retrospect. If the industry had not been so flattered and excited by Amazon, maybe it could have avoided the situation it now finds itself, in which one large customer can dictate practically everything.

Tracy, a lot of people start Betsy-Tacy as adults and are enchanted so I usually recommend starting with Heaven to Betsy. However, you have a giant TBR as it is, so I would say no rush.

Katrina, I think those Arthurian binges come at some point in many readers' lives, sometimes culminating in The Mists of Avalon! Which makes me wonder, have you ever been to Glastonbury? Should I include that in my next visit to Britain?

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/26/obituaries/jane-langton-dead.html

https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/bostonglobe/obituary.aspx?n=jane-langton&pid=191573160&fhid=6713