Printed Page Bookshop
January 2025

Their goal:  Gather all the knowledge in the world

Most everyone of a certain age knows of the "Encyclopedia Brittanica," but few know how it came about.  For its origin, we can thank a Scotsman, William Smellie (1740-1795), a printer, naturalist and antiquary.  Smellie was joined in his project by the 4" 6" Andrew Bell, who dealt with jokes about his enormous nose by bolting from the room and returning with an even larger papier-mache one.  The first edition of the Brittanica, which appeared in 100 weekly installments from 1768 to 1771, was notorious for gross errors and wild speculations.  It stated, for example, that excessive use of tobacco had the effect of "drying up the brain to a little black lump considting of mere membranes." It described California as "...a large country in the West Indies, possibly an island or a peninsula."  The entry for "woman" read simply, "The female of man.  See homo."
Future editions gradually ironed out inaccuracies but were still far from perfect (and full of curious nuance -- the 1956 edition of "Encyclopedia Brittanica" described rock 'n' roll as "insistent savagery."  By the late 1950s, the sheer quantity of unreliable entries evading correction so angered an American physicist named Dr. Harvey Einbinder (1926-2013) that he spent five years combing through the volumes to collect and publish the mistakes.  Einbinder"s "Myth of the Encyclopedia Brittanica" appeared in 1964, a furious 390-page litany of errors.  Science Magazine praised Einbinder as a "dedicated prince of iconoclasts" who "rips into his subject from all angles and with devastating effect."  Critics even suggested that the editorial board of the "Encyclopedia Britannica" hire Eindinder as a factual watchdog.  This was not an idea that appealed to either irritated party.
Source:  The Madman's Library: Thke Strangest Books, Manuscripts and Other Literary Curiosities from History by Edward Brooke-Hitching

This month's Puzzler 

On November 29, 1832, this woman was born in Germantown, Pennsylvania. She spent most of her life in Boston and nearby Concord, growing up in the company of such luminaries as Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau, both of whom were friends of her father, a pioneering-but-penniless educator.

From an early age, she was determined to become a writer, but she went to work early to help support her family. Her first book, Flower Fables, was published in 1854, but the sales were so dismal that she earned only about $35 in royalties. Many aspiring writers might have given up, but the failure only fueled her fierce determination. Four years later, in an 1858 entry in her journal, she wrote that she was “resolved to take Fate by the throat and shake a living out of her.”

After a brief attempt at teaching, she volunteered as a nurse in the Civil War, where she contracted typhoid fever (she never fully recovered). Her letters home were eventually published as Hospital Sketches in 1863, bringing her critical attention, but not much remuneration.

Her most famous work—a true literary classic—was an 1868 novel inspired by her own life experiences (the protagonist was largely autobiographical and the rest of the characters were based on her sisters and her mother). In an 1871 sequel to the work, she had a character say:  
"A holiday isn't a holiday without plenty of freedom and fun."
Who was this woman?  What was the title of her novel and its sequel?

Sewell Child Development Center is our newest beneficiary
for donated books  -- thanks to your generosity

Printed Page donates books to the St. Francis Center, Reading Partners, East Denver FISH, and our newest worthy organization -- the Sewell Child Development Center. It's tremendously gratifying to us to be able to put books in the hands of those who might not otherwise get them, and we thank our customers for helping us to do that.  

Puzzler answer

Louisa May Alcott. "Little Women" 1868 and "Little Men" 1871
Thanks to Dr. Mardy Grothe for the use of his puzzler.  Visit him at drmardy.com.

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