Printed Page Bookshop
November 2025

Dr. Seuss and the letter from Cleopatra

Earlier this year, one of our booksellers acquired a Dr. Seuss book that appeared to be signed by Dr. Seuss (pictured above).  But our bookseller wasn't sure the signature was authentic, so he noted that in the book and priced it accordingly.  A customer who bought the book knew a Seuss expert at a midwestern university who subsequently examined the book and concluded it was a forgery.  Our bookseller's caution was well-founded.
Forgery is as old as literature itself.  "For 2,500 years and more, forgery has amused its uninvolved observers, enraged its humiliated victims, and flourished as a literary genre," Anthony Grafton wrote in Forgers and Critics:  Creativity and Duplicity in Western Scholarship.  In our own time, we've seen such spectacular forgeries as the Hitler Diaries and letters purpoting to be about the origins of the Later Day Saints. 
But today's forgers, though gifted with technologies that make their criminal craft easier, can't compare to the likes of Vrain-Denis Lucas, a self-educated peasant who shook the foundations of the French Academy of Sciences in the 19th century.  As a patriot and lover of history, Lucas created more than 27,000 forgeries and tried to alter history in a way that added to the glory of France.  As much a con man as a forger, Lucas managed to peddle autographed letters by Mary Magdeline, Cleopatra, Pontius Pilate, Judas Iscariot, and Alexander the Great written in modern French. He forged letters by Galileo from 1641, and when someone pointed out that Galileo was blind by 1641, Lucas produced even more letters from Galileo claiming the scientist was merely faking blindness to receive gentler treatment from the Inquisiton.  
Anachronisms like that one eventually caught up to Lucas, and in 1869, he was arrested, convicted, and sentenced to two years in prison.  No more was heard from him.  
Source:  Prince of Forgers, by Joseph Rosenblum

This month's Puzzler 

On August 24, 1947, this man was born in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.  Growing up, he was a rebellious teenager who so troubled his parents that they had him committed to a psychiatric hospital that specialized in shock treatments. Later in life, he forgave his parents, saying, “They did not do that to destroy me, they did that to save me.”

At age 20, he attended law school for a year before dropping out and living a hippie lifestyle that took him all around the world.  Returning to Brazil in the early 1970s, he embarked on a career as a songwriter, blending rock music with elements of traditional Brazilian culture. Many of his songs were considered subversive by the country’s right-wing military regime, and he was briefly imprisoned several times.

After publishing two forgettable books in the early 1980s, he had what he described as a “spiritual awakening” while on a pilgrimage to the shrine at Santiago de Composele in northern Spain. He eventually described the experience in O Diário de Um Mago (“Diary of a Magus”), a 1987 novel that went on to become an international bestseller under the title "The Pilgrimage."

It was his next book, though, that would ensure his place in literary history, selling more than 150 million copies worldwide, and making him one of the most successful authors of all time. "The Alchemist" (1988) was the story of an Andalusian shepherd boy who embarked on a journey to Egypt in pursuit of a recurring dream about discovering treasure near the pyramids.

He went on publish nearly thirty more books, and is still going strong at age 77.
Who is this man?  Answer below.


A bookseller's diary (continued)

September 20, 2025

Things started out slowly at Printed Page today. I had the first hour or so to myself, which never portends a successful Saturday. Then, when customers finally started drifting in, I failed to satisfy any of the following requests for...

...books about the Kennedy assassination's links to Indonesia

...pre-1900 books on herbal remedies

..."old new age books on spells and incantations."

...First editions of books by P.G. Wodehouse

Toward lunchtime, things got busy, but not so busy that I wasn't able to have some interesting conversations. One guy told me that he had mountaineering books to sell. He said he'd climbed all the Fourteeners in Colorado and had once worked as a guide on Mt. Everest. (He hated the work, but it was the only way he could get to the summit.) He knew that guy who climbed El Capitan freestyle, and how lucky he was it didn't rain -- or he didn't get a bee sting. He was a fascinating guy, friendly and voluble.

I shared my adventures climbing a step ladder to replace a track light bulb.

Anyway, he came to sell books, so I told him to go ahead and bring them in. He started up the stairs with a box, this accomplished mountain climber, and stumbled on a step. Involuntarily, I chortled.

I need to work on being a better person.

-Dan  
 Save the evening of December 11 for our holiday open house!
 We'll have food, drinks, prizes, and discounts on all books.  Watch this space for more details in our December newsletter.

Follow us on Instagram, and visit us on Thursdays
for three free protective dust jacket covers

Chris keeps busy adding new arrivals on our Instagram account, so keep up with those on @printedpagebookshop.  And remember that on Thursdays, our alert and skilled staff will happily put three acetate dust jacket protectors on three of your books, free of charge.  

   


Puzzler answer

Paulo Coelho
Thanks to Dr. Mardy Grothe for the use of his puzzler.  Visit him at drmardy.com.

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