Maps, Fictional & Real on the Point!

I had a very fun morning on The Point with Mindy Todd and special guest Chris Polloni, retired information specialist from the U. S. Geological Survey in Woods Hole. Thanks so much for your calls and e-mails. If you missed it, you can listen online!

Chris’s Picks

The Illustrated Longitude by Dava Sobel and William J.H. Andrewes

Infinite Perspective: two thousand years of three dimensional mapmaking by Brian Ambroziak

Maps and Memes: Redrawing Culture, Place and Identity in indigenous Communities by Gwilym Lucas Eades

The Art of Illustrated Maps: a complete guide to creative mapmaking’s history, process and inspiration by John Roman

Children’s books of interest!

Map Mania by Michael A. DiSpezio, Illustrated by Dave Garbot

Mapping the World by Sylvia A. Johnson

Maps! by Andrew Haslam

Jill’s Picks

“The Map” in Complete Poems by Elizabeth Bishop

“Map” by Wisława Szymborska in MAP: collected and last poems

Maps of the Imagination: the writer as cartographer by Peter Turchi

A History of the World in 12 Maps by Jerry Brotton

Maphead: charting the wide, weird world of geography wonks by Ken Jennings

Plotted: a literary atlas by Andrew DeGraff

The Dictionary of Imaginary Places by Alberto Manguel and Gianni Guadalupi

Maps by Aleksandra Mizielińska and Daniel Mizieliński

Mapping Penny’s World by Loreen Leedy

Listener Picks

The Map Thief by Michael Blanding

The Natural World of Winnie-the-Pooh: a walk through the forest that inspired the Hundred Acre Wood by Kathryn Aalto

“Brief History of an Atlas” a poem by Jeffrey Harrison which appeared in The New Yorker

Places To See Maps!

The Mapparium

At the Boston Public Library: Women in Cartography: five centuries of accomplishments

At Mystic Seaport: Ships, Clocks & Stars: the quest for longitude

Fairy Tales on THE POINT!

Mindy Todd and I were joined this month by Vicky Titcomb of Titcomb’s Bookshop in East Sandwich, and we talked about fairy tales for young and old. From the Grimm Brothers to Bruno Bettelheim to Anne Rice’s erotic fairy tales! Fairy tales are no longer for children only! The show will be repeated tonight at 7:00 PM or listen online at http://www.capeandislands.org.

As I mentioned on the radio this morning, we could have done an entire show on just one fairy tale! There are so many spectacular books written about fairy tales, as well as the fairy tales themselves. You’ll see this particular list includes lots of titles that we did not have a chance to talk about this morning. An hour simply isn’t enough for a fairy tale discussion!

Vicky’s Picks

A Wild Swan: and other tales by Michael Cunningham

Briar Rose by Jane Yolen

The True Story of Hansel and Gretel by Louise Murphy

The Snow Child by Eowyn Ivey

The Sleeper and the Spindle by Neil Gaiman

After Alice and Mirror, Mirror by Gregory Maguire

Jill’s Picks

Grimm’s Fairy Tales, illustrated by Fritz Kredel

Anderson’s Fairy Tales, illustrated by Arthur Szyk

Fairy Tales from the Brothers Grimm: a new English version by Philip Pullman

The Bloody Chamber by Angela Carter (Included in Burning Your Boats: the collected short stories)

The Brothers Grimm Hansel and Gretel, edited & abridged by Martin West, illustrated by Sybille Schenker

Hansel & Gretel: a Toon Graphic retold by Neil Gaiman and illustrated by Lorenzo Mattotti

Fairy Tale Baking: more than 50 enchanting cakes, bakes, and decorations by Ramla Khan

The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty by Anne Rice writing as A. N. Roquelaure (part of The Sleeping Beauty Quartet)

The Uses of Enchantment: the meaning of importance of fairy tales by Bruno Bettelheim

The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Folktales & Fairy Tales edited by Donald Haase

Not Enough Time For:

Once Upon a Time: a short history of fairy tale by Marina Warner

The Annotated Hans Christian Andersen, edited with an introduction and notes by Maria Tatar

Transformations by Anne Sexton

Mirror, Mirror on the Wall: women writers explore their favorite fairy tales edited by Kate Bernheimer

The Wild Girl by Kate Forsyth. A novel about Dortchen Wild, who “told the Grimm brothers almost a quarter of all the tales in their first collections of fairy stories, when when was just nineteen years old.”

Index to Fairy Tales 1949-1972, including Folklore, Legends and Myths in Collections by Norma Olin Ireland

Listener Picks

Water Babies by Charles Kingsley

At the Back of the North Wind by George MacDonald

Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll

The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern

Baba Yaga

Potluck on The Point with Mindy Todd!

This morning it was potluck on The Point with Mindy Todd, which meant we could bring anything that struck our fancy. I had lots of retro books, and Melanie was able to introduce us to another post-apocalyptic novel and a new genre for novels … clifi, for climate change fiction, a subset of lablit. If you want to reread Little Women, try Little Women: an annotated edition which was edited by Daniel Shealy. As it says in the introduction: “The textual history of Little Women provides valuable insight into the publishing world in the second half of the nineteenth century.” If that is just too big to lug to the beach, The Library of America has also come out with an Alcott volume, which includes Little Women, Little Men, and Jo’s Boys. The Library of America volumes always include great notes, and an attached bookmark!

Jill’s Picks

Perfectly Miserable: guilt, God and real estate in a small town by Sarah Payne Stuart

Grey Mask by Patricia Wentworth. (and all the other Miss Silver mysteries) While no CLAMS library owns a copy of Grey Mask it is available as a Kindle book, and there are many other Miss Silver mysteries available in the CLAMS network.

David Hockney: a bigger exhibition

The Hand of the Small Town Builder: Vernacular Summer Architecture in New England, 1870-1935 by W. Tad Pfeffer

Virginia Woolf’s Garden: the story of the garden at Monk’s House by Caroline Zoob

The Bloomsbury Cookbook: recipes for life, love and art by Janes Ondaatje Rolls

Once Upon a Playground: a celebration of classic American playgrounds, 1920-1975 by Brenda Biondo

The Games We Played: the golden age of board & table games by Margaret K. Hofer

Melanie’s Picks

The Admiral by James R. Gilbert

The Last Ship by William Brinkley

Man on the Run: Paul McCartney in the 1970s by Tom Doyle

The Mockingbird Next Door: Life with Harper Lee by Marja Mills

The Skeleton Crew: How Amateur Sleuths are Solving America’s Coldest Cases by Deborah Halber

Do Not Sell at Any Price: The Wild, Obsessive Hunt for the World’s Rarest 78 rpm Records by Amanda Petrusich

Books Always Everywhere by Jane Blatt

Bats in the Band by Brian Lies

Wayfaring Stranger by James Lee Burke

The Sun Also Rises by The Hemingway Library Edition

Not mentioned but worth it:

Travels with Casey by Benoit Denizet-Lewis

Boston and the Civil War: Hub of the Second Revolution by Barbara F. Berenson

Authorisms: Words Wrought by Writers by Paul Dickson

Listener Picks

Carol Chittenden of Eight Cousins Books recommended The Misadventures of the Family Fletcher by Dana Levy

The Point Picks for 2011

Today on The Point with Mindy Todd we talked about the books we most loved in 2011, and the books we looked forward to reading in 2012.

Listener Picks

The Summer of the Bear by Bella Pollen

A Monster Calls: a novel by Patrick Ness; inspired by an idea from Siobhan Dowd; illustrations by Jim Kay

The Cat’s Table by Michael Ondaatje via e-mail. Mindy didn’t have time to get to this one.

“Arresting book. What a fluid relationship this writer has between the mind and the hand penning just the right word and phrase. This contained story take splace on sea voyage taken by an eleven year old child who observes and later recalls everything that goes on in that small world the ship represents. This is partly autobiographical, but the point is the writing; Ondaatje’s is brilliant no matter the topic.”

Jill’s Favorite Books Read in 2011

Before Lunch by Angela Thirkell. You can read the article that started me reading Angela Thirkell here.

Await Your Reply by Dan Chaon

The Hair of Harold Roux by Thomas Williams

Higher Gossip: essays and criticism by John Updike, edited by Christopher Carduff

As Meat Loves Salt by Maria McCann

Why We Broke Up by Daniel Handler, with art by Maira Kalman

Sodom and Gomorrah by Marcel Proust (an ongoing project for me)

Jill’s Picks for 2012

Believing the Lie by Elizabeth George

When I Was a Child I Read Books: Essays by Marilynne Robinson

Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal? By Jeanette Winterson

11/22/63 by Stephen King

The Prisoner and The Fugitive by Marcel Proust

More of Angela Thirkell’s Barsetshire Novels

Quotation on sleep by Proust:

“Every night perhaps, we accept the risk of experiencing, while we sleep, sufferings that we consider to be null and void because they will be endured only in the course of a sleep that we believe is without consciousness. In fact, on the evenings when I returned home late from La Raspelière, I was very sleepy. But as soon as the cold weather arrived, I was unable to get to sleep right away, because the fire was so bright it was as if a lamp had been lit. It had only flared up, however, and – as with a lamp, or daylight when dusk falls – its too bright light was not long in dying down; and I entered into sleep, which is like a second apartment that we have, into which, abandoning our own, we go in order to sleep. It has its own system of alarms, and we are sometimes brought violently awake there by the sound of a bell, heard with perfect clarity, even though no one has rung. It has its servants, its particular visitors who come to take us out, so that, just when we are ready to get up, we are obliged to recognize, by our almost immediate transmigration into the other apartment, that of our waking hours, that the room is empty, that no one has come. The race that inhabits it, like that of the earliest humans, is androgynous. A man there will appear a moment later in the aspect of a woman. Objects have the ability to turn into men, and men into friends or enemies. The time that elapses for the sleeper, in sleep of this kind, is utterly different from the time in which a waking man’s life transpires. Its passage may now be far more rapid, a quarter of an hour seeming like a whole day; or at other times much longer, we think we have just dozed off, and have slept right through the day. And then, on sleep’s chariot, we descend into depths where the memory can no longer keep pace with it, and where the mind stops short and is forced to turn back.”

Marcel Proust

Sodom and Gomorrah

Translated by John Sturrock

Melanie’s Picks

Fiction:

The Troubled Man by Henning Mankell

Caleb’s Crossing by Geraldine Brooks

Autobiography of Mrs. Tom Thumb by Melanie Benjamin

Feast Day of Fools by James Lee Burke

Zone One by Colson Whitehead

Nonfiction:

Under Cape Cod Water by Ethan Daniels

The Triple Agent by Joby Warrick

Why Read Moby-Dick? by Nathaniel Philbrick

Midnight Rising by Tony Horwitz

Arguably by Christopher Hitchens

Unbroken Laura Hillenbrand

Washington: A Life by Ron Chernow

Local:

Perspectives on the Provincetown Art Colony by Deborah Forman

Cape Cod and the Civil War: The Raised Right Arm by Stauffer Miller

Kids

A Crow in Grandma’s Kitchen by Julia Whorf Kelly

My Side of the Car by Kate Feiffer

The Little Black Dog Has Puppies by J.B. Spooner

Do You Know Which Ones Will Grow by Susan Shea

Riding on Duke’s Train by Mick Carlon

The Tinsel Tail Mouse by Ken Boyd

The Curious Case of Misquotation

Update 5/18/2020

Yes, here we are in the middle of a pandemic, but we never stop looking for an author to this quote.  Turns out we are not the only ones to investigate who  might have said “It is never too late to be what you might have been.” According to  Garson O’Toole, author of Hemingway Didn’t Say That: The Truth Behind Familiar Quotations George Eliot was also said to be the author of these words. Turns out LOTS of people have possibly said this quote. You can read his complete article here. Many thanks to Garson O’Toole for all of his work.

Update 1/05/17

Happy New Year all you F. Scott Fitzgerald and Brad Pitt fans! I just wanted to share with you the most recent sharing of this post which was with two fellows who appear to be living in New Zealand. You can read their blog entry on Fitzgerald and Pitt here. As they write: “The above quote is a quote from the movie adaption of The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, even though F.Scott Fitzgerald gets a lot of the credit.” Thanks Wayne and Jackson for taking the time to correct the record. This librarian salutes you both!

Update 11/07/14: We have gotten more responses to this blog entry, than any other blog entry we have ever written. The most recent commenter writes: “It’s from a letter Fitzgerald wrote to his daughter, Scottie.” I just looked through Scott Fitzgerald’s Letters to His Daughter, and I couldn’t find any such quotation. Although there are some lovely tidbits of advice! Here is one such tidbit, as he asks his daughter about the man that interested her when she was eighteen. The letter is dated August 24, 1940.:

“You haven’t given me much idea of __________. Would he object to your working—outside the house I mean? Excluding personal charm, which I assume, and the more conventional virtues which go with success in business, is he his own man? Has he any force of character? Or imagination and generosity? Does he read books? Has he any leaning toward the arts and sciences or anything beyond creature comfort and duck-shooting? In short, has he the possibilities of growth that would make a lifetime with him seem attractive? These things don’t appear later—they are either there latently or they will never be there at all.”

ORIGINAL POST

Heavens to Murgatroyd, I’ve come across another faux quotation on the Internet. Actually in this case, it was actually a quotation that a friend of mine posted (not knowing putting up faux quotations in front of a Reference Librarian is like putting a red flag in front of a bull). Trouper that she is, she was happy to correct the attribution once I explained the details.

This was the quote as she wrote it:

“For what it’s worth: it’s never too late or, in my case, too early to be whoever you want to be. There’s no time limit, stop whenever you want. You can change or stay the same, there are no rules to this thing. We can make the best or the worst of it. I hope you make the best of it. And I hope you see things that startle you. I hope you feel things you never felt before. I hope you meet people with a different point of view. I hope you live a life you’re proud of. If you find that you’re not, I hope you have the strength to start all over again.”

And it was attributed to F. Scott Fitzgerald.

Well, it didn’t sound exactly like F. Scott Fitzgerald to me, so I thought I’d investigate. As it turned out my friend believed that it was a quotation from Fitzgerald’s short story “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button”. Happily we had a copy of the short story on the shelf … no such quotation in the story.

So … where else might it be? Well, I knew there had been a movie, and I found a copy of the screenplay. Here is the quotation I found:

“For what it’s worth … it’s never too late, or in my case too early, to be whoever you want to be. There’s no time limit. Start whenever you want. You can change or stay the same. There are no rules to this thing. We can make the best or the worst of it. I hope you make the best of it. I hope you see things that startle you. I hope you feel things you never felt before. I hope you meet people who have a different point of view. I hope you live a life you’re proud of, and if you’re not, I hope you have the courage to start all over again.”

The screenplay for the film was written by a fellow named Eric Roth, so I think it is safe to say that he wrote these lines. (Although my favorite attribution of the quote is Brad Pitt … because he said the lines, so he must have written them? ) You’ll notice there are some differences between even these two quotations … the most significant being the word strength substituted for the word courage. But guess what … Brad Pitt actually says the word strength when he says the line … so did he make the change or did someone on the set make the change? Even with a straightforward quote, there seem to always be questions. Want to see Brad Pitt say the lines? You can see that on Youtube.

Just another cautionary tale … don’t believe everything you read on the Internet! (And if you want to read about a faux E. B. White quotation you can read my blog entry here.)

Scary Books on The Point

Scary books was today’s topic on The Point with Mindy Todd on WCAI. Remember if you missed it, you can hear it tonight at 7:30 or listen to the podcast online.

“Horror is not a genre, like the mystery or science fiction or the western. It is not a kind of fiction meant to be confined to the ghetto of a special shelf in the ghetto of libraries or bookstores … horror is an emotion.”

–Douglas E. Winter in the introduction to Prime Evil

“Tragedy is when I cut my finger. Comedy is when you fall down the sewer and die. Horror is when you return from the dead and haunt me for laughing at your nasty trip down that sewer.”

–June Pulliam’s embellishment upon an old saw

Melanie’s Picks

General interest:

Horror! 333 Films to Scare You to Death byJames Marriott and Kim Newman

Houses of Horror Hans Holzer

Classic horror:

The War of the Worlds by H.G. Wells

The Third Fontana Book of Great Horror Stories ed. by Chrstine Bernard (especially “Green Fingers,” “The Specialty of the House” and “The Academy,” but all are good)

[Alas, no one in CLAMS has a copy of The Third Fontana collection, but you can read “The Specialty of the House” in the book The Mystery Hall of Fame : an anthology of classic mystery and suspense stories. The same story is also available in the collection: Murder on the Menu.]

The Tell-Tale Heart and Other Writings by Edgar Allan Poe (Bantam Classic)

Hawthorne: Selected Tales and Sketches or any collection of short fiction

Scary for what they’re about:

Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities

Edith Wharton, Ethan Frome

Upton Sinclair The Jungle

Elie Wiesel Night

Readers can also search for Top 10 and Top 100 lists of good horror books.  I found the “Horror Reading List” at the Horror Writers Assocation, horror.org

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Jill’s Picks

Hooked on Horror: a guide to reading interest in horror fiction by Anthony Fonseca & June Pulliam

We Need to Talk About Kevin by Lionel Shriver

The Bad Seed by William March

Burning Your Boats: the collected short stories by Angela Carter (particularly “The Fall River Axe Murders” & “The Bloody Chamber”)

Dracula’s Guest: a connoisseur’s collection of Victorian vampire stories edited by Michael Sims

Vampire Stories by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

Scary Stories illustrated by Barry Moser (includes “Man overboard” by Winston Churchill)

The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson

False Memory by Dean Koontz (includes haiku!)

The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman

Half-Minute Horrors edited by Susan Rich

And you can find Neil Gaiman’s idea for giving a scary book on halloween on his blog, which also includes some other great scary author suggestions! And if you want lots more horror suggestions, stop by the Horror World web page which reviews new horror fiction.

The Point Reading List … books featuring foreign lands

Here are today’s reading lists. As always you can hear the repeat at 7:30 p.m. on WCAI or listen to the podcast online.

Patron Suggestions

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer & Annie Barrows.

In a Far Country : the true story of a mission, a marriage, a murder, and the remarkable reindeer rescue of 1898 by John Taliaferro. (I’ll make sure we order a copy!)

Jill’s Suggestions

China: 3,000 Years of Art and Literature edited by Jason Steuber

Healing Spaces: the science of place and well-being by Esther M. Sternberg

Swann’s Way by Marcel Proust (translated by Lydia Davis)

Paintings in Proust: a visual companion to In Search of Lost Time by Eric Karpeles

Darling Jim by Christian Moerk

Ocean Wide, Ocean Deep by Susan Lendroth, illustrations by Raul Allen (picture book)

The Way of Herodotus: travels with the man who invented history by Justin Marozzi

Caravans by James A. Michener

My Name is Red by Orhan Pamuk

Three books I didn’t get a chance to mention:

Eiffel’s Tower and the World’s Fair Where Buffalo Bill Beguiled Paris, the Artists Quarreled, and Thomas Edison Became a Count by Jill Jonnes

Dreaming in Hindi: coming awake in another language by Katherine Russell Rich

Previous Convictions: assignments from here and there by A. A. Gill (Includes a chapter on Edward Hopper which talks about Cape Cod.)

Melanie’s Suggestions

The Archivist’s Story by Travis Holland

However Tall the Mountain: A Dream, Eight Girls & a Journey Home by Awista Ayub

Tomato Rhapsody by Adam Schell

Baking Cakes in Kigali by Gaile Parkin

The Ayatollah Begs to Differ: The Paradox of Modern Iran by Hooman Majd

Evil for Evil: A Billy Boyle World War II Mystery by James R. Benn

And she would have mentioned, but ran out of time: Strength in What Remains by Tracy Kidder

Summer Reading on The Point

Here is today’s list of suggestions. If you missed the show you can hear it on WCAI tonight at 7:30 or listen to the podcast.

Listener Suggestions:

Anything by Christopher Moore! Especially Fool and Lamb (those are two different titles I might add!)

A Stopover in Venice by Kathryn Walker

Gone Tomorrow by Lee Childs

Jill’s Suggestions:

Beowulf on the Beach: what to love and what to skip in literature’s 50 greatest hits by Jack Murnighan

Summer by the Seaside: the architecture of New England Coastal Resort Hotels, 1820-1950 by Bryant F. Tolles, Jr.

The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barbery

The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield

The Wildwater Walking Club by Claire Cook

Blindspot by Jane Kamensky (Set in Boston 1764)

And I forgot to mention, but really enjoyed The Little Stranger by Sarah Waters (set in the 1940s part ghost story, part commentary on English class system, part love story, really well told although it drags a bit in the middle).

Summer Reading Lists to Look at:

Steven King’s 7 Great Books for Summer

Cape Cod Life’s Thirty of the Best Books About Cape Cod and the Islands

Library patron suggestions from our twitter feed (you can follow us a falpublib):

Cocaine Blues: a Phryne Fisher Mystery by Kerry Greenwood (this was the one described as “picture James Bond by Angelina Jolie during the roaring twenties).

Codex 632 by Josse R. dos Santos (secret identiy of Christopher Columbus)

Turning Tables by Heather & Rose MacDowell (laugh out loud funny)

English garden mysteries by Anthony Eglin

Breakfast at Sally’s: one homeless mans’ inspirational journey by Richard LeMieux

Glimmer Palace by Beatrice Colin

Melanie’s Suggestions

Sargent’s Daughters: Biography of a Painting Erica E. Hirshler (Editor’s note: This book is due out in October! Melanie must have gotten a review copy.)

Death and Honesty Cynthia Riggs

Diamondhead Patrick Robinson

The Story Sisters Alice Hoffman

Life Without Summer Lynne Griffin

Pleasure Island Robert McLaughlin

The Nantucket Reader edited by Susan F. Beegel

Josh, the Baby Otter by Blake Collingsworth

The Cods of Cape Cod written by Ed Shankman and illustrated by David O’Neill

Pocket Posh Crosswords Andrews McMeel Publishing