Thursday, May 5, 2016

THE PLAIN MAN'S GUIDE TO WINE

1961. From the front matter—
TO HIS FRIENDS, AND, AS HE MAY NOW SAY,
    HIS COLLEAGUES OF THE JURADE OF ST.
     EMILION THIS BOOK IS RESPECTFULLY
                            DEDICATED
  BY THE AUTHOR, RAYMOND POSTGATE,
       CHANCELIER D'AMBASSADE POUR
                LA GRANDE BRETAGNE
That's the only illustration. Even so, I'm always fascinated by such period books that present fine dining and wining as topics of potential interest to anyone, not an elite. Though it's also depressing to see the degree of literacy exhibited, from the vantage point of a time when even basic literacy is not evident in most spheres.

Following his dedication, Postgate cites a poem in Latin, by Canon Walter Map. This translation follows—
It is my proposed aim to die in an inn; let wine be placed to the lips of the dying man, so that, when they come. The chorus of angels may say: 'God be kind to this drinker.'
The translation is presumably Postgate's own, though he adds this exegesis—
The translation does not do justice to the Latin of this agreeable poem. Propostium, for example, has an intentionally formal character: 'this is the proposition,' it says, as if the matter were put before a meeting and the Canon were looking round for a seconder.... Observe, too, how, being a Prebendary of St. Paul's as well as a Canon, the author writes chori, choruses; for you or me, perhaps, one brisk cherub will suffice, but as an escort to heaven he knows he is entitled to at least two ranks of angels. He was chaplain to Henry II and aware of his importance. He unwisely added other verses to these; they are of no importance.
Dated it may be, and getting to the punch lines takes a little reading on. Still, I can't help but enjoy an occasional serving of this style.

These are the contents of chapter 1—
THE ELEMENTS

Simplicity of wine-drinking — Falsehoods of the Wine Snob — 'Drink what you like' — Smoking — List of chief varieties of wine — Apéritifs, table wines, dessert wines — Temperature of wine, shaking of wine, wine with food — The vintages that matter — Glasses — How to taste wine — The minimum of knowledge on a postcard.
The "post card" is closest the book comes to having a second illustration.

Sunday, April 10, 2016

Water All Around

Withdrawn school library book, found on the public library sales reject-overflow cart—
1959 (first ed.)
Science explained simply and entertainingly, with charming illustrations by Bernice Myers.


Sometimes the water vapor itself, high up in the air, freezes instead of condensing into water droplets.
The frozen water vapor falls.
We have snow

...water sometimes flows up!
This was part of a series by the same authors and illustrator (Electricity/Friction/Gravity/Light/Sounds... All Around). Fishink has samples of other books in the series. Like "Water," the rest of the series used B&W and two-tone illustrations. The link also has some wonderful, more colorful illustrations from other books, and those apparently are more typical of Myers' work. Elsewhere, Eric Sturdevant has illustrations from some French titles.

Fishink proprietor Craig adds—
I did get in touch with Bernice who told me that she was flattered to be featured on my blog. How great is that !! She also mentioned that the work you see above [All Around series], helped her to pass a test for a Ford Foundation Scholarship, where she learnt enough to go for a specially created college degree. Some 60 books later and she's still working !

That was in 2012; it seems she's still at work, though she doesn't have a web presence herself. Just fans posting stuff; according to this, she turned 90 last April. I do find that I recognize her son from his jazz writing.

She often collaborated with her husband, Lou Myers. He died at 90 in 2005, continuing to work until nearly the end. The Times' obit is fascinating in its details of Lou's life and career, apart from childrens' books.

The couple lived for years in Paris, and their collaboration is an intriguing one. A jacket image from Studevant's blog—

Childrens' books, 1959, and roles that were (to say the least) gendered... Although, if Mother was stuck in the kitchen while Father had the fun...

... Ms. Myers managed to slip in a hint about Mother's physical and emotional state...

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Minutes-A-Day

New year; new library shop discards...

An old abandoned resolution?
1983

Sunday, August 16, 2015

Packing Up

And taking the show down the road.

Saturday, June 20, 2015

Parlez-vous?

Among the free books on the shelf this year, a 1949 textbook.
Authors:
Sadly, water damage has warped the book and its classic end papers. In front, La France
The map highlights each province's sights and production agricole
In back—
Illustrations include many photos, with captions often adding the author's deux centimes worth.

Fishermen along the Seine don't have much hope of catching fish, but they enjoy the rest and the scenery.

Louis XVI in full splendor. A little less splendor might have saved his neck.
Author-illustrator Huebener apparently took the photos and wrote the captions. Their humor is of a piece with the cartoons he clearly relished drawing to illustrate lessons.
In this textbook, a jolly time seems usually to have been had.

Les élèves quittent l'école.
Something seemed familiar about this author's credentials and tone. Sure, the silly jokes reminded me of favorite teachers who took a similar approach; decades later, I still remember material via corny jokes cracked by those clever teachers. There was something else I couldn't quite put my finger on, not until starting to re-read Kate Simon's memoir, A Wider World. In the 1920s Simon had defied her immigrant father to attend a New York high school. Writing sixty years later, Simon found that,  English and music aside, she had no memory of most classes and teachers. Two German teachers were exceptions, and one of them was
... Dr. Huebner, who became one of the heads of language studies in the city's schools later on... [He] was beautiful, as precisely featured as a Gothic carving, but unlike those dour saints and knights, he smiled a lot, teaching us a good deal of German by way of songs and simpleminded jokes. So we sang and laughed and earned high Regents' Exam scores for Dr. Huebner.
The French textbook gives a good idea of that pedagogical approach. Even so, at least one student remained unimpressed by the good doctor's efforts.

Saturday, May 16, 2015

Women's Works

The Working Wives' (Salaried Or Otherwise) Cook Book  
Theodora Zavin and Freda Stuart, 1963

No illustrations; just a jacket cover missing from this copy. (Image from a source I've lost)...

After a dedication listing names of both authors' husbands and children ("the world's most charming testing laboratory"), the text briskly gets to the point—
We have never known a man who waxed nostalgic over his mother's ability to mop floors or one who boasted that his wife could wash socks better than anyone on the block. But oh, the lovely pedestal that awaits the woman who cooks!
The authors acknowledge that there were already lots of shortcut cooking books available, but say they had found those books inadequate. Inadequate for a number of reasons; "Most important"—
... the really good "quick" cook books enable the cook to get dinner on the table within one to one-and-a-half hours after arrival home, provided that she dashes madly from the front door to the kitchen without removing her hat and juggles pots, chops onions, and generally goes frantic for an hour or so before dinner is ready. This procedure has a few obvious drawbacks.

While we are second to none in our admiration of the working wife, it must be admitted that she lacks some of the fine lasting qualities of an electronic computer. After a long day's work, no respectable IBM machine feels a desire to take off its shoes or have a drink. Woman, at 5:45 thy name is frailty.

This is a tough hour of the day in which to scramble. It is just at this time that children (and husbands, too!) want and deserve attention. It's hard to listen to the story of today's baseball game, prescribe for a wounded doll, and measure out ingredients simultaneously. What's the alternative—other than hiring a cook or spending precious weekend time cooking and freezing for the week ahead? The solution lies in preparing most of each day's diner the night before. And that's the essence of our system.

We know several things about the working wife. She is not an habitué of the Stork Club. She spends many, if not most, weekday evenings at home. She gets her second wind after the children are in bed, and that's the magic time to do the few things in the kitchen that will enable her to spend most of her post-homecoming hour with a chuild on her lap or a drink in her hand (both, if she's a talented type), with only an occasional foray into the kitchen to pop things into the oven or onto the dinner table.

While this book was planned primarily by and for working wives, we think it has great value for what are (laughingly, we hope!) known as "nonworking" wives—those "ladies of leisure" with three preschool children, a once-a-week maid, eighteen committees, and questions like "Honey, do you mind if I bring Bob Kirk of our Atlanta office home for dinner one night this week?" The cook-ahead dinner makes for lovely entertaining because Frazzled Hostess is not served as the first course.
The basic system: on Friday evening check the next week's calendar, choose dinner menus suitable for the time available each night, draw up a shopping list, and buy the ingredients Saturday.

That's from the Introduction, followed by—
THE WHEREWITHAL (OR, APPLIANCES YOU COULD LIVE WITHOUT, BUT WHY?)

To say that we are fans of the time-saving, labor-saving, woman-saving electric appliance would no more reflect the depth of our passion than to say that Rome had a "crush" on Juliet. We have been sisters-in-law for several years, and one of our great contributions to each other's welfare has been that the gadget not discovered by one of us has been unearthed by the other....

Top of the list is a dishwasher. After a couple of pages disposing of arguments against having one, the authors note of expecting husbands to wash dishes—
...the working wife must, of necessity, always be aware that the mere fact of her working may to some degree impinge on her husband's feeling of masculinity. She must be doubly cautious about not heaping "women's work" on him. We have the impression that most working wives are so sensitive to this that, whoever that beleaguered, emasculated, domesticated husband may be whom the magazines are always decrying, he is not the husband of the working wife.
Here, the authors cite research from a doctoral dissertation—
... In her study of 44 families with working mothers, Dr. Greenwald found that in only 17 of 44 households did the husband regularly take any part in doing the dinner dishes and in 14 of these 17 families, the wife was doing dishes right along with him.
The study found that amount of limited dish-washing was by far the highest rate of husbands' participation in household chores.

This cook book was published in 1963, the same year as this. Something was in the air...

Zavin and Stuart took a practical view of Woman's Work. They had found a system that gave them control, and they felt they could benefit other women by encouraging them to adopt it.

The recipes tend toward variations on a theme of meat cooked in a base of canned tomato (stewed and/or sauce). There are a few simplified items based on ethnic cooking ("Kusa Mihshi: Stuffed Squash in the Lebanese Manner"; "East Meets East: Syrian Meat Balls with Indian Curry Sauce"), and some recipes in the period style of women's magazine food writing ("Tropikabobs": cooked ham with canned mandarin oranges and pineapple chunks).

As in the introductory sections of the book, the text preceding some of the recipes is entertaining.

Instructions for making "Mrs. Albini's Baked Lasagna" opens—
Every time our friends, Emilia and Thayer Taylor, have a baby, Emilia's mother... comes down from Gloversville for a couple of weeks to help out. At some time before she goes home she cooks what she deprecatingly calls "just an old-fashioned Italian dinner" for a few of the Taylors' lucky friends. As a result, these may be the only babies in the world whose birth announcements make the recipients lick their chops in happy anticipation.
And introducing a group of molded salad recipes—
...if the traditional method of unmolding a gelatin salad (dipping the mold in warm water and then running a knife around the edge) doesn't leave you too happy, here's a very safe method you can try. It was suggested by our friend Marion Brown, whose cooking terminology seems to have taken on a slightly medical air, transmitted, no doubt, from her doctor-husband's office. (Marion is the only woman we know who makes a bouquet garni using medical gauze).
Followed by steps for Marion's method of loosening a gelatin mold with a hot towel ("She describes this as 'putting hot compresses on the mold.'")

The sister-in-law authors were a highly simpatico pair. With perhaps one exception: the ingredient list for Chicken Soup with Matzo Balls calls for
1 to 2 teaspoons of salt (sorry, the two of us don't agree on the amount; you'll have to make up your own mind.)
I've also lost the source of this image, but here's the back cover—

According to the author bios—
FREDA STUART is that rarity, a New Yorker who has always lived in the city where she was born. She graduated from the City College of New York. Later she was associate editor of a trade magazine. At present, Mrs. Stuart is an (unsalaried) Working Wife and cooks for her husband, one daughter and friends.
She may have remained a non-salaried wife, as I don't find reference to a further career or published work.

Theodora Zavin, on the other hand, had a very public career at the time she collaborated on this book. A lawyer who had co-written legal books aimed at laypeople, she was in 1963 vice president of Broadcast Music, Inc.

From a 2004 BMI obituary, after Zavin's death at 82—
BMI and the BMI Foundation mourn the passing of Theodora Zavin, one of the music industry's most respected copyright attorneys, who served as a senior executive at BMI....

Zavin served at BMI for 49 years, joining the company in 1952 as head of its legal department, rising to Senior Vice President and Special Counsel at her retirement in 2001. She founded the BMI Foundation, Inc. in 1985, serving as its President until her retirement and President Emeritus until her death.

Zavin was legendary in the music copyright community for her fierce defense of the rights of musical composers both here and abroad. Over her long career she also developed close personal relationships with many seminal composers including John Williams, Lionel Newman, John Lennon and Yoko Ono, John Kander and Fred Ebb, Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harnick, Alan Menken and Maury Yeston.

A graduate of Hunter College, where she was a member of Phi Beta Kappa, and The Columbia School of Law, where she was Notes and Comments Editor of the Law Review, she served as President of the Copyright Society of the U.S.A., was a member of the United States Copyright Office Advisory Committee, and the Copyright Committee of the Bar Association of the City of New York. Internationally, she represented American interests as a leader of the Legal and Legislative Committee of the International Confederation of Societies of Authors and Composers (CISAC).

Zavin combined her legal talents with a deft personal touch with songwriters, composers and music publishers at BMI. In 1965, she was appointed Vice President, Performing Rights, leading the company for more than 20 years during one of its most dramatic periods of growth, personally signing representation agreements with such songwriter/artists as Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel, Billy Joel, Carole King, Mort Shuman and Doc Pomus, and Neil Sedaka, such legendary Brill Building music publishers as Don Kirschner and Al Nevins, and international figures such as Beatles' publisher Dick James.

Zavin wrote prolifically for leading law journals on copyright and was co-author of several books aimed at demystifying and making the law accessible to the layman, including Rights and Writers and Your Marriage and the Law. One of the music industry's best-known hostesses, Zavin also authored two well-received cookbooks, The Working Wives Cookbook with Fredda [sic] Stuart, and The Everybody Bring a Dish Cookbook.

Friday, April 10, 2015

The Motion Picture Edition

The title had worn off the spine, and the book was in poor condition when I spotted it on the free cart.

"Motion Picture Edition" of this—

"Illustrated with photographs from the RKO Radio film," 1946 (2nd printing). The movie title was familiar, but this was my first encounter with Ethel Lena White, a popular and prolific British crime fiction writer of the 1930s and '40s.

The title citation—
"For some must watch, while some must sleep:
So runs the world away."
HAMLET
The story was contemporary when published (1933), but its setting is a Victorian mansion looming over a lonely, forbidding bit of Welsh countryside. The spooky old house is inhabited by members of the wealthy Warren family; the action takes place during a storm of epic proportions, with a serial murderer loose somewhere in the vicinity.

The Warrens and their staff lend the story varied personalities and British class distinctions. Among the employees is Helen, a young woman whose deceased parents were poor, but of good breeding. Details are left vague, but because of Helen's background, the Warrens grant her special considerations (her bedroom is upstairs, and she's allowed to dine with the family). Pure of heart and eager to earn her living, Helen finds herself surrounded by unpleasant characters, all of them waiting for the family's frightening matriarch to die. Helen's place at the dinner table and freedom to move about the house give her plenty of opportunities to observe the Warrens. Her optimism and Christianity are pitted against what the author portrays as a fashionable 1930s nihilism that's held by such over-educated types as the Warrens.

Not to fear: the fast-paced Hollywood movie version offers no introspection or ideology—or, no ideology beyond the usual "endangered helpless woman in need of rescue" theme.

The movie's setting is New England at the beginning of the 20th century—the better to make use of spooky old house, gaslight, and candle effects.

Here, Helen is often cheery, though not chatty as in the novel—the movie Helen is mute. Which makes her particularly vulnerable: in this version, the murderer kills young women who have some kind of "affliction."

Another Hollywood change was to turn the novel's scary matriarch into a role for the beloved Ethel Barrymore.
Mrs. Warren becomes an invalid of the crusty, but kind, type. She's affectionate toward Helen, who in this version works as her companion.

There's more Americanization of characters—

Another interesting discrepancy: photos are publicity stills, some quite different from scenes in the movie. Illustrations are full page stills, with this montage on the endpapers—

I had never seen the movie, so finding this volume motivated me to watch a library DVD. The film has its moments, with a good cast and Dorothy McGuire impressive in a silent role. I also found the novel an interesting period piece. After sampling both, the "Motion Picture Edition" seems a little jarring, as the RKO stills supposedly illustrate a novel set decades later and populated by specifically British characters. But reprinting a novel and linking it with a successful film was a sales gimmick.

Some history of movie tie-in books.

According to Photoplay Edition (1975), by Emil Petaja, the first movie serial, "What Happened to Mary?" was released by Edison in 1912. After Selig's "Adventures of Kathlyn" appeared the next year, it was followed by a photoplay edition. Once established, the format caught on. Petaja notes that a photoplay edition could offer the public a more connected version of weekly filmed episodes produced from hastily written scripts. The book format also appears to have been part of heavy publicity given to serials.

By 1914, photoplay editions of feature films appeared. Since features were likely to have narratives more coherent than those of serials, writers could turn them into early "novelizations" (a term which came into use at this time). If a successful feature was based on a novel that was already popular, then illustrations could be added for the novel's reprint as a movie tie-in.

Some photoplay editions of early features were lavishly illustrated, with as many as thirty to fifty photos. Often, says Petaja, early books "boasted better photographic reproduction than did later ones; some remind you of the great Civil War pictures made from glass negatives."

By the mid-1930s the publications had nearly disappeared. Petaja quotes a silent era marketing slogan, "Read the book, then see the movie." He suggests that sound made these books superfluous, once "the movies spoke for themselves." Radio, too, had its impact, quickly becoming the cheapest, most available source of popular entertainment. Although photoplay publishers issued deluxe editions of such titles as "Gone With the Wind" and "Rebecca," those already had been blockbusters, in both novel and movie form.

Then, says Petaja—
... it was World Publishing Company's Forum Motion Picture Editions that revived the concept of the photoplay edition during the 1940s, for a time at least. They were nicely set-up, with attractive dust jackets, with montages on the end pages, and several glossy bled-off stills inside, printed back to back.
Twenty or more titles appeared, the largest number since the heyday of the 'teens and 'twenties. They were printed, however, on wartime paper of poor quality. Judging from the deterioration of my copy, paper quality doesn't seem to have changed by '46.

The remaining stills, in order of the movie's action—

(This, I think, is the only one that looks identical to a final scene. I especially like how visible the painted background is here)—