Printed Page Bookshop
August 2024


Can you say "quirky"?  These authors demonstrated it
Great authors tend to possess a wild imagination and a unique perspective of the world.  As a result, they're usually kind of quirky.  Whether it's a strange habit, a bizarre writing ritual, or an unconventional mannerism, there are many ways to define an author's eccentricities.  Here are just a few:
Mark Twain.  Twain was an avid cat lover -- he had 19 at one point -- and said he preferred cats to humans.
Virginia Woolf.  (Pictured above) Invented the standing desk.  But that's not the quirky part.  She also owned a pet monkey named Mitz.  And at an early age, she told a music teacher that the meaning of Christmas was to celebrate the Crucifiction.
Theodore Geisel, a.k.a. Dr. Seuss.  Had a crippling fear of crowds, perhaps due to an embarrassing interaction on stage with President Theodore Roosevelt during a Boy Scouts award ceremony.  The ordeal made him reluctant to give interviews or make appearances in front of an audience.
Lord Byron.  When he was told he couldn't keep a dog in his dorm room at Cambridge, he brought a bear instead.  Byron even tried to enroll the bear in classes.  He later had a menagerie at his estate, where he decorated rooms with coffins and used human skulls as goblets.
Demosthenes.  Tried to correct a speech impediment by speaking with pebbles in his mouth, shouting into storms, and speaking while running.  He also perfected his posture by hanging a sword near his shoulder. When he unconsciously rose his shoulder, the sword would jab him, prompting him to lower it again.
James Joyce. Eye problems caused him to wear a patch and write on large sheets of paper or cardboard with crayons.  
Charles Dickens.  Dickens is thought to have had obsessive compulsive disorder.  His writing space had to be just right, he combed his hair hundreds of times a day, and he was a neat freak, keeping his home spotless and the furniture in very specific locations.  He also touched certain objects three times for luck. 
Victor Hugo.  His solution for writer's block was to take off his clothes, have his servants lock them away, and sit naked in a room to write, not coming out until he was finished.  It is said he wrote "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" in a few months, wearing only a long, gray shawl.
Truman Capote.  Capote was superstitious, never beginning or ending a piece on a Friday, never staying in a hotel room that included the number 13, and never leaving more than three cigarette butts in an ash tray.
Source:  Laura's Books and Blogs  (HTTPS://LAURABOOKSANDBLOGS.COM/AUTHOR/ADMIN/)



A few spots remain for our next book-collecting class August 10
Spend Saturday morning August 10 with some fellow bibliophiles learning all kinds of stuff about books and book collecting.  You'll learn about the physical nature of books, how to identify first editons (and why that matters), how to build and care for your collection and much more.  Drop us an email to reserve your space.  If we don't have room this time, you'll go to the front of the class for our next session.  (theshop@printedpagebookshop.com) 
This month's Puzzler  
On July 29, 1805, this man was born in Paris. Growing up, he was raised in an aristocratic French family that had long supported the French Crown. As supporters of Louis XVI, however, they ended up on the losing side during the French Revolution. After the hostilities ended, he spent a brief period of exile in England before returning to France during what is known as The Bourbon Restoration. Like his father before him, he planned a political career, but went about it in an unusual way. 

In 1831, he sought and received official permission to travel to the United States, ostensibly to examine American prisons and penitentiaries. In reality, though, he believed that political and cultural developments in America held great promise for France’s future as well as his own. For both reasons, he wanted to learn as much as he could about the newly-formed country. 

After a nine-month visit that took him as far west as Wisconsin and as far south as Louisiana, he returned to France and produced a small pamphlet on American prison reform. Three years later, in 1835, he published the first volume of his magnum opus: Democracy in America. That book, along with a second volume in 1840, made him famous in France and America—and forever established his reputation in history.

Who is this person? (Answer below)

We still have some free passes to this month's book fair!
Printed Page will be at the Rocky Mountain Book and Paper Fair Saturday and Sunday, August 17 and 18 at the easy-to-get-to Douglas County Fairgrounds.  Stop by the store (or drop us a note) and we'll get you a free pass, good for two people for both days.  We hope you'll come by.




Puzzler answer

Alexis de Tocqueville, 1805-1859.  If you like our Puzzler, find more on our Facebook page.  
Thanks to Dr. Mardy Grothe for the use of his puzzler.  Visit him at drmardy.com.

© 2024 Printed Page Bookshop  

Check out Printed Page Bookshop on Yelp! Review Printed Page Bookshop on Google Follow Printed Page Bookshop on Facebook
powered by emma