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Printing Process - A Journey Through Literary America
A Journey Through Literary America
  • Printing Process
  • August4th

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    The idea for A Journey Through Literary America came to me in January of 2008 in Kawasaki, Japan (near Tokyo), where I was visiting my wife’s family.

    On the plane on the way over, I had devoured American Pastoral by Philip Roth. The book is narrated by one of Roth’s literary alter egos, Nathan Zuckerman, but it mostly concerns itself with the life of someone he grew up worshiping: one of the greatest athletes that Zuckerman’s Jewish Newark neighborhood of Weequahic had ever known: “Swede” Levov. So named because he looked so Swedish rather than Jewish, the Swede had married a Miss New Jersey (Catholic, much to the horror of his parents) and waved goodbye to a promising baseball career in order to take over his father’s glove factory in Newark.

    His house is the second from the left.

    The Roth house (second from the left). Photo: Thomas Hummel

    Weequahic is not only Nathan Zuckerman’s stomping ground but also the neighborhood where Philip Roth grew up. One might use the term “predominantly Jewish” nowadays for how it was, in order to be respectful of other races that might have lived there, but back then I am sure it was known simply as the Jewish neighborhood. That is, solidly, squarely, any way you slice it—like a Snickers bar is packed with peanuts—Jewish. That was then. Nowadays, the neighborhood is quite mixed.

    plaque

    Photo: Thomas Hummel

    There is a plaque on the house Roth grew up in, and a nearby intersection is named “Philip Roth Plaza,” The term seems misleading to me. I usually think of a plaza as a place to gather. I wouldn’t recommend gathering in the middle of a Newark intersection.

    It is proper of Newark to honor Roth with at least an intersection, because some of his best writing is about Newark, starting with Portnoy’s Complaint (1969)—the novel that made him a household name and suggested a heretofore unheard-of (in literature anyway) use of liver for a sex-crazed boy. American Pastoral (1997) features vivid descriptions of Newark, from World War II through the Newark Riots in the 1960’s, and beyond. It sparked something in me back in 2008. I remember, for example, marking the passage where Roth writes about the Newark viaduct, “the Swede’s first encounter with the manmade sublime that divides and dwarfs. (American Pastoral, 220).” As Roth went on to say:

    “That grim fortification was the city’s Chinese wall, brownstone boulders piled twenty feet high, strung out for more than a mile and intersected only by half a dozen foul underpasses. Along this forsaken street, as ominous now as any street in any ruined city in America, was a reptilian length of unguarded wall barren even of graffiti. But for the wilted weeds that managed to put forth in wiry clumps where the mortar was cracked and washed away, the viaduct wall was barren of everything except the affirmation of a weary industrial city’s prolonged and triumphant struggle to monumentalize its ugliness.” (p. 219)

    viaduct

    Photo: Thomas Hummel

    What was so special about American Pastoral that it lit the fuse for a book? I think Roth did it for me by the way he attached importance to surroundings. In one passage he writes:

    “Perhaps by definition a neighborhood is the place to which a child spontaneously gives undivided attention; that’s the unfiltered way meaning comes to children, just flowing off the surfaces of things.” (p. 43).

    As Samuel Johnson once said, “The true art of memory is the art of attention.” And what Roth created—and sold me on—was a truly artful job of memory and art. Through a preponderance of evidence, real and imagined, he brought the particular character of the city of Newark to life on the printed page.

    After reading American Pastoral, I wanted to go to Newark with my brother, who lives in New York City and is always up for poking around a down-at-the-mouth area, and photograph the Viaduct. Put images to Philip Roth’s text. Part of the spark, then, came because I felt sure that the Viaduct was still there, and as Roth had described it. If I had to follow the river of this book’s inspiration all the way to its headwaters, this would be it: the little spring at which it all started was the idea of capturing places in pictures that great authors have described.

    My original intent was to write text that was more like what you would find in a guidebook. Lively, yes, but mostly spare and functional. A side dish. And then what happened is that fervor of the writers gripped me. A side dish wasn’t good enough. I needed to do them justice, as much as I could. And at times, I felt as though I were competing with them. I did so with a pure pleasure in the sport of it, as I might get from leaping to catch a baseball, or a running down a fly ball.

    I sometimes think that in 2007 I was inching my way towards an early senescence. I got tremendously tired at night. There was hardly a movie that I didn’t fall asleep in the middle of. I still had the lifelong desire to write but the novel I was working on sometimes put me to sleep while writing it. That fog has now lifted. Willa Cather once claimed that in order to write well she had to “get up feeling 13 years old and all set for a picnic.” Since I started working on A Journey Through Literary America, I have gotten up feeling, well, not that good but with a relish for life and for writing that I think must be akin to what Cather felt. TRH

    Author’s note: capturing the Viaduct the way that Roth described it turned out to be nearly impossible—for me anyway. Tamra Dempsey, who took all the photographs for this book, had more success than I. But the best picture of it that I have seen remains the picture of it that Roth created, using words, in his book.

  • August2nd

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    A few of the press proofs. On the top is Kaaterskill Falls, New York, the best place Leatherstocking ever found in the woodsJuly 31

    Today we uploaded the files for the jacket and the endsheets. The only element that hasn’t been sent off to Toppan Printing is the layout for the foil stamping on the spine of the book. After two years and seven months of inspiration, travel, and toil, A JOURNEY THROUGH LITERARY AMERICA is on the verge of being fully realized. Only a slight sliver of foil remains.

    We have seen first and second proofs for the main part of the book. These are called “press proofs” or sometimes “wet proofs.” They are printed on the same paper that the book will eventually be printed on (Japanese Oji White A Matte), on proofing presses that aren’t as large as the behemoths that will print the book, but are still quite formidable pieces of equipment. So, what I am actually holding in my hand is about as good a facsimile of how the book will look when it is finally printed as one could get. Sadly, press proofs are on their way to becoming an obsolete technology, to be replaced by digital proofs.

    Main Street o Sinclair Lewis's home town - Sauk Centre, Minnesota

    It still seems like magic to me how, using the bright inks of cyan, magenta and yellow—in shades which seem the opposite of “rich”—combined with black, the printer can reproduce anything from Monet to Manuel Alvarez Bravo—and everything in between and besides. There is artistry, often overlooked, involved in the separation of the colors to CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, black). More about that later, perhaps. What I should say now is that the proofs are looking very fine. I do not believe I am saying this as a father would say he loves his son. For in the 12 years I have been working at Toppan I believe I have overseen close to one thousand projects, and I believe I have attained a level of objective distance, professional detachment—enough perspective to look coolly on in judgment. I look at these proofs and the quality of the reproduction of the images—and the proofing—looks first rate. I owe it all to photographer and designer Tamra Dempsey and to Bright Arts colour separation house in Hong Kong.

    Thoreau's cabin at Walden Pond

     

    Now we just waiting to see a few dangling elements: the long awaited map, and the front matter and back matter. The front matter includes the title page, half-title page. copyright page, preface, and table of contents. All of these things I knew about but I was always fuzzy on until the wheel turned and it was my own book. The back matter includes the map, the footnotes, and endnotes, a few odds and ends. My father was an English teacher at Rice High School in Burlington, Vermont for over thirty years. He taught term paper writing by the book, with index cards, outlines, footnotes and bibliographies, and trips to the University of Vermont library (which seemed immense at the time) to do research. There was no way that this book, my first, would go without endnotes and a bibliography—compelling evidence of a well-researched work. In fact, at last count, it had 388 endnotes. They are unobtrusive. Just like the two extra buttons a shirtmaker sews on a dress shirt below all the others. There if you need them. Don’t let the endnotes throw you; A JOURNEY THROUGH LITERARY AMERICA is not written in the prose of high academia. It is a book about the lives of some of the most interesting people who ever walked the American earth – America’s writers – and the places that inspired them, with over 140 photographs, and hand drawn maps by Sinclair Lewis and William Faulkner. The book would appeal to anyone from a perspicacious high school student on up.

    I am not sure if it was the best idea to start this blog “in the middle of things.” But perhaps this brings you closer to the (measured) excitement I feel than if I had anesthetized you first with relentless verbiage (the term has always made me think that was what rabbits would eat, if they ate words) about the book, its origins, purpose, etc.

    Georgia peacock - from the Flannery O'Connor entry

  • August1st

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    A Journey Through Literary America is finally at press!