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text 2015-02-18 00:33
Traveling with Books: Deciding Who Makes The Cut
Woman of No Character: An Autobiography of Mrs. Manley - Fidelis Morgan
Making the Mummies Dance: Inside the Metropolitan Museum of Art - Thomas Hoving,Eve Metz
Americans in Paris: Life and Death under Nazi Occupation 1940-1944 - Charles Glass
Platypus: The Extraordinary Story of How a Curious Creature Baffled the World - Ann Moyal
Emily Post: Daughter of the Gilded Age, Mistress of American Manners - Laura Claridge
A Monkey Among Crocodiles: The Disaster... A Monkey Among Crocodiles: The Disasterous Life of Mrs. Georgina Weldon - Brian Thompson
Gellhorn: A Twentieth-Century Life - Caroline Moorehead
The Big Picture: Money and Power in Hollywood - Edward Jay Epstein
Tube: The Invention of Television (Sloan Technology Series) - David E. Fisher,Marshall Jon Fisher
John Phoenix, Esq., The Veritable Squibo... John Phoenix, Esq., The Veritable Squibob: A Life of Captain George H. Derby - George R. Stewart

My last post was about the paper books I'm not taking with me. Now the hard part - figuring out which books are going along! This isn't that big a deal, I'll check back in here in two months so I can bring more along later. This is all fun decision making compared to the other important stuff that I can get too anxious over.

 

So far I have three that will definitely make the list. (I say this now, four days before my flight.) But I also have a pile of 27 books to go through and I'm betting a few of those I can't resist. Because that always happens when I'm packing. (In the past I've had to pay airlines extra for over-weight suitcases thanks to book weight.)The first two I've already blogged about here (in January) - both are new enough for me to want to read now.

 

A Woman of No Character: An Autobiography of Mrs. Manley

by Fidelis Morgan

 

Making the Mummies Dance: Inside the Metropolitan Museum of Art

by Thomas Hoving

 

Americans in Paris: Life and Death Under Nazi Occupation

by Charles Glass

This was a $1.50 thrift store find, and I've set it aside as a travel book for months. It's paperback and thus lighter, which helps. Contents aren't exactly what I'd call cheerful though, so I may waffle over it.

 

So far out of the larger stack of books these are the ones jostling for attention. And at the moment I can't at all decide.

 

Platypus: The Extraordinary Story of How a Curious Creature Baffled the World

by Ann Moyal

I am always there for anything dealing with natural history and Australia. There's so much delightful weirdness there.

 

Emily Post: Daughter of the Gilded Age, Mistress of American Manners

by Laura Claridge

Wikipedia: Emily Post. One of the many books you'll see me gravitate to on my never-ending quest to read more women's history.

 

The Disastrous Life of Mrs. Georgina Weldon

by Brian Thompson

Oddly Booklikes has the book titled A Monkey Among Crocodiles: The Disasterous Life of Mrs. Georgina Weldon - which is not the edition I have. Hmm. Wikipedia: Georgina Weldon.

 

Gellhorn: A Twentieth-Century Life

by: Caroline Moorehead

Wikipedia: Martha Gellhorn. I've been saying "I need to read you" to this book for way too long.

 

The Big Picture: Money and Power in Hollywood

by: Edward Jay Epstein

How the profits are actually made in the film industry, and how that's changed over time. Which is really difficult stuff to research since not all of the data is ever available to the public. I've not read this one all the way through because it's been something I've used bits of for classes.

 

Tube: The Invention of Television
by: David E. Fisher and Marshall Jon Fisher
Another one I've not read all of. How tv was invented - and who ends up with credit for that - is one of those difficult stories. (Actually most invention stories are since these things rarely happen out of the blue, without prior inventions leading the way.) I can't remember if this one is more American-focused - most invention-of-tv books usually are. (Same with history of flight, radio, etc. At least when we're talking about books published in the US.) I eyeroll over this a lot, especially when you compare how long it took the US to adopt HD. Americans have a habit of writing history where our country has been the first to invent almost everything. (I obviously have an opinion on this!) Anyway, I need a reminder on how this one frames its history.
 
John Phoenix, Esq., The Veritable Squibob: A Life of Captain George H. Derby
by George R. Stewart
I was reading a book full of odd stories of random journalism in the 1800s (Mark Twain-ish era) and John Phoenix popped up. His other pen name - Squibob - stuck with me in one of those "I must know more!" moments. So I had to hunt down the only biography. Which, now that I've remembered it, I really want to read! Wikipedia: George Derby
 
This is the list for now. We'll see if things change by Friday!
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text 2015-01-31 22:34
Why I Still Buy Paper Books - And Two That Just Arrived in the Mail
Woman of No Character: An Autobiography of Mrs. Manley - Fidelis Morgan
Making the Mummies Dance: Inside the Metropolitan Museum of Art by Hoving, Thomas (1994) Paperback - Thomas Hoving

One of those things I think of as "not really arguments" are the essays/articles/ponderings people write about paper vs ebook - you know, the ones that seem to have the idea that ebooks are truly making all paper books disappear, or are threatening the entire future of paper books. This isn't going to happen ever, by the way. Why am I so sure? Because there will never be a time when all the paper books previously published will all be available in digital format. Unless of course there's suddenly a new process that will be as easy for digitizing as the speed of the Transporter compares to today's air travel. (Actually the Replicator is a better comparison isn't it? I'm too lazy to rewrite that. Let's pretend it was my first thought.) It could happen - and I would enjoy to see that in my lifetime. But I'm not going to count on it. Now, there may be fewer new paper books published in the future - but there will always be people who want paper copies of some of them. As a species, humans like to obtain certain objects just to touch and hold.

 

There are always going to be books that it won't be profitable to turn into digital books. For those books the only options/hopes for digitization are that a hobbyist/fan, an academic, or an academic institution (or something Google-ish) will work on formatting them, purely out of desire to have others read them, or continue scholarship on the author/subject. Which means there will still be those of us that will bump into mentions of obscure books which we will want to read and paper will be our only option. This isn't entirely sad - but it does mean that paper's going to be around a while. And since paper books do tend to last, we'll still be buying them. (Gadgetry however - well, do you still have your first cassette player? Record player? CD player? Mp3 player? All of those?)

 

Short version: We're still in the early days of ebook tech. It's still in progress and the old tech has not been completely replaced. (Tech advances more quickly now, but adoption of tech never has been that rapid. Also see: vinyl records. It's really hard to call when something's definitely died out.)

 

Also remember that loads of people (the kind who love making predictions) decades ago were certain we'd all be using flying cars by now. (Words to google: flying car predictions.)

 

Now to the (vaguely) more interesting bit - why I had to buy these paper books!

Short answer, the obvious: They were only available in paper.

 

A Woman of No Character: An Autobiography of Mrs. Manley

by Fidelis Morgan

hardback: Faber and Faber, January 1, 1987

 

There are sooooo many biographies or academic writings on certain women in our history that are only available via used books online. (Am not going into a lengthy Not All Libraries bit here, for fear of being dull.) You're not going to easily find these in physical used book stores - not without some continuous looking, emails or phone calls. Unless you've got the motivation of a research paper there's a lot of history you're going to miss out on. Me, I hate missing out on these sorts of stories, and I have an insatiable curiosity problem. And I'm rarely happy with just a biographical line or two in random history books. (Note: Edited out a long burble on "I seem to have this problem with more women's histories than men, because I can't really quantify that. I could do an entire post just on "random guys in history I ran down books about because they didn't get much attention in histories." I'm a sucker for this kinda obscure history. But I do find that many of these "not well known" women in history have very few books devoted just to them. I suspect this has to do with how many women's history dissertations get published.) (And so much for editing that out, huh.)

 

I bumped into first heard about Delarivier Manley in reading Lucy Moore's Thieves' Opera, and posted about her in this Reading in Progress post. There you'll see I googled her, and wanted to know more. I added a book to my TBR list/wish list and it might have ended there. Except I had to buy some other things at Amazon, and I got into my "oh what the hell, I'm buying other stuff so I might as well..." moods. I have an Amazon wish list just for books that I can only buy in paper, and this was at the top - plus I was still thinking about her. Impulse buy!

 

Luckily this book was published in the 80s, so not a huge problem getting a copy. No idea what the writing's like yet - but I'll let you know.

 

Also if you want a unique name for a fictional character, do let me suggest Delarivier. I'm somewhat fond of it.

 

Making the Mummies Dance: Inside the Metropolitan Museum of Art

by Thomas Hoving

hardback: Touchstone, February 15, 1994

 

This one's been on my Amazon list for so long that I've completely forgotten where I discovered its existence - I know it was another book's bibliography. Which means I can't tell you any interesting story that caught my eye this time - that's usually how books get on my Need To Read This list. If you read his wikipedia page - Thomas Hoving - I think you'll quickly see why I felt he might have an interesting take on working in the museum.

 

Note: I will squee over anyone who's worked at The Cloisters - as Hoving did. I still have not been there (I have been to the Met). Someday I must. I've always been in love with the idea and descriptions and photos of the place. I think I can blame some of this on an art history class in Gothic cathedral architecture. Great stuff. With a really difficult final exam where you were shown interior photos and had to name the cathedral and its time period. (Studying for a visual part of an exam is not easy!)

 

Is there a fandom for those of us who love Museums? Because I know there are many of us. I see others like me whenever I'm in a museum. We're the ones that carefully read the text next to the objects, who pick up and read the paper brochures, who stand aside to let a group pass through so we can take our time looking. I always smile hugely when I see people do this, and then quickly pretend I'm not looking. Everyone needs their museum-alone-time.

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review 2009-07-22 00:00
Making the Mummies Dance: Inside the Metropolitan Museum of Art - Thomas Hoving,Eve Metz Mr Hoving turned the Metropolitan Museum of Art from a staid collection of paintings and sculpture into a vibrant collection of all that art can and should be, for anyone to come in and enjoy. That is opinion, but one generally held by most historians who studied the evolution of Manhattan’s jewel during the late 60’s until the late 70’s. I’m withholding any other opinion, save that it is a shame Mr. Hoving took the time to be a cheap greasy, sleazeball of a weasel to each and every person he felt slighted him in nearly any way during those years, and even worse, to print this book when so many of these people are dead and cannot defend themselves from his bitchy commentary. That is my OWN opinion, garnered after reading a book I honestly had looked forward to reading for years.
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