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2009 September 01 - A Journey Through Literary America
A Journey Through Literary America
  • Archives
  • September1st

    Just last week, I came across an e-mail from Tamra from September 1, 2007. It read:”We officially hit the road.” That was the day Tamra and Jacob, and their dog, set out across the country. And today, two years to the day later, Toppan Hong Kong sent the last printed sheets of the book. The printing is done!

    The printed sheets will now be folded and then sewn together. This process is called Smyth Sewing, after a nineteenth century self-taught Irish American inventor named David Smyth (though I was told it was “Smythe” sewing, and have spelled it incorrectly ever since), who invented the curious looking machine and several other pieces of book making equipment. The Smyth Machine company operated in America for over a century, until the 1970′s, when it sold its intellectual property to Nuova Smyth of Italy, still operational. Over time, that pale young woman operating the treadle was automated. And now, probably the majority of the Smyth binding machines (suitably advanced but still atavistic-looking) are found in China.

    Smythe Machinery logo

    Smythe Machinery logo

    Nuova Smyth, logo updated with Italian flair

    Nuova Smyth, logo updated with Italian flair

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Old Smyth sewing equipment in use

    Old Smyth sewing equipment in use

    As I write this entry, an orange moon is rising into the heavens above Santa Monica, a result of the forest fires that have burned in the vicinity for 6 days. Over the weekend a fulminous cloud of smoke, its billows seemingly frozen in the air, rose above the city east of here. It looked very much like the result of some catastrophe, and yet business proceeded as usual, and the ocean breeze kept much of the ash at bay. This must be how the Pompeiians went through their days.

    I cannot remember ever seeing an orange moon before. But those whoare expert on such things say orange is supposed to be a lucky color. I am taking the orange moon as a good omen for the book. (I just couldn’t resist the Pompeii comment.) TRH

  • September1st

    Elegantly illustrated and written from a unique historical perspective, A Journey Through Literary America reacquaints the reader with the writers who established and continued our literary tradition. Beginning with Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper, the meticulously chosen photographs not only capture the natural wonders that have dazzled and influenced American writers for three centuries but also offer insight into the settings in which they lived and wrote. A beautiful and necessary book.

    — Elaine Kendall

    An author, journalist and playwright, Elaine Kendall has written four books of social history: The Upper Hand, an irreverent account of changing male/female roles; The Happy Mediocrity, an examination of American choices in architecture, food, clothing, manners and mores as they have developed over the centuries; Peculiar Institutions, an informal account of the development of women’s education from pre-revolutionary times to the present, and Seeing Europe Again: Confessions of a First World Traveler; a light-hearted comparison of European and American cultural attitudes.

    Her articles about art, theater, travel and various aspects of the changing American scene have appeared in Harpers, The New York Times Magazine, Performing Arts, Horizon, American Heritage, Vogue, The Dramatist, Playbill, and many other national magazines. From 1974 to 1997, she was a weekly book columnist for The Los Angeles Times. Elaine Kendall has also written and collaborated on libretti and lyrics for musical plays produced in New York, California, Hawaii and Connecticut. An American Cantata is an adaptation of the late John Sanford’s chronicle of American women, and is available from Samuel French, Inc. The Would-be Diva is a musical comedy based upon the extraordinary life of the Polish-born beauty Ganna Walska. Isadora is a musical drama about Isadora Duncan, and Kendall’s 2003 show is Cole & Will: Together Again, a unique revue melding Cole Porter’s memorable lyrics to appropriate moments from 15 Shakespearean dramas and comedies.

    Elaine Kendall is a member of The Authors Guild, The Dramatists Guild, and ASCAP.

    Reference quoted from: http://members.authorsguild.net/ekendall/