NIGEL BEALE NOTA BENE BOOKS

Musings on the Book, Literature, Poetry, Literary Criticism, Collecting, Media, Life and the Arts, and Audio Interviews from The Biblio File radio program pertaining to same by a writer, broadcaster, bibliophile.
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Archive for November, 2009

November 4th, 2009 • Posted in On Poetry

Rexroth on Homer and the Great Chinese Poets

As you read the Iliad and Odyssey, says Kenneth Rexroth,  the sublimity of the conception rises slowly through the sublimity of the language.

"An old man, blind now, who has known all the courts and ships and men and women of the Eastern Mediterranean, tells you, with all the conviction of total personal involvement in his speech – “The universe and its parts, the great forces of Nature, fire, sun, sky and storm, earth and procreation, viewed as persons are frivolous and dangerous, from the point of view of men often malicious, and always unpredictable. The thing that endures, that gives value to life, is comradeship, loyalty, bravery, magnanimity, love, the relations of men in direct communication with each other, personally, as persons, committed to each other. From this comes the beauty of life, its tragedy and its meaning, and from nowhere else.”

"The great Chinese poets say the same thing, except that they make no moral judgment of the universe. They have no gods to fight against. Man and his virtues are a part of the universe, like falling water and standing stone and drifting mist."

 

 

November 3rd, 2009 • Posted in Wicked Quotes

Hazlitt on Poetry

self portrait, 1802 ish
" Many people suppose that poetry is something to be found only in books, contained in lines of ten syllables with like endings: but wherever there is a sense of beauty, or power, or harmony, as in the motion of a wave of the sea, in the growth of a flower that " spreads its sweet leaves to the air, and dedicates its beauty to the sun," – there is poetry, in its birth…

It is not a branch of authorship: it is "the stuff of which our life is made." The rest is "mere oblivion," a dead letter: for all that is worth remembering in life is the poetry of it. Fear is poetry, hope is poetry; love is poetry; hatred is poetry; contempt, jealousy, remorse, admiration, wonder, pity, despair, or madness, are all poetry. Poetry is that fine particle within us, that expands, rarefies, refines, raises our whole being: without it "man’s life is poor as beast’s."

 
November 3rd, 2009 • Posted in Photographs

Who said Ottawa was Ugly?

Copyright: Brian Lynn.

Wish I’d taken this photo. Evening shot…only at certain times of the year does the sunset hit so many windows just so…love the way the gold shimmers and streaks across the water…makes it look so…wet. And the way those wires follow that pink cloud across the sky…(incidentally, this picture wasn’t taken today…or any time recently…probably last March I’m guessing).

 

 

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November 3rd, 2009 • Posted in AUDIO Science Fiction

Audio Interview with David Hartwell and Kathryn Cramer conducted by Nigel Beale: On the differences between SF Editors and others…

David Hartwell has worked as a Science Fiction and Fantasy editor for Signet, Berkley Putnam, Pocket (where he founded the Timescape imprint and created the Pocket Books Star Trek publishing line), and Tor (where he headed Tor’s Canadian publishing initiative, and introduced many Australian writers to the US market). Since 1995, his title at Tor/Forge Books has been "Senior Editor." He chairs the board of directors of the World Fantasy Convention and is an administrator of the Philip K. Dick Award. He holds a Ph.D. in comparative medieval literature and lives in Pleasantville, New York with his wife Kathryn Cramer and their two children

Each year, with Cramer, he edits two anthologies, Year’s Best SF and Year’s Best Fantasy. Both anthologies have consistently placed in the top 10 of the Locus annual reader poll. In 1988, Hartwell won the World Fantasy Award in the category Best Anthology for The Dark Descent. He has been nominated for Hugo Awards on numerous occasions, and won in 2006, 2008 and 2009.  Hartwell has also edited four best-novel Nebula Award-winners. 

I interviewed Hartwell and Cramer recently at their home/bookstore in upstate New York. We talk about the differences between SF editors and their more general literary kin.

 

Subscribe to Nigel Beale’s Biblio File Podcast here.

 

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November 2nd, 2009 • Posted in On Book Collecting

From War Hero to MP to Common Criminal via a little Book

I own a (better) copy of this book. Not sure where or when I bought it, but there the thing was, sitting on the shelf, quietly awaiting attention, which it received, just prior to being packed into one of many boxes filled in advance of last week’s move. A sweet volume it is. Printed in Holland on soft, tightly laid paper, the Falcon Press’s Sonnets of William Shakespeare, to my mind at least, has it all. It’s well constructed, contains a pleasing cover design, a classic legible typeface, nice looking page layout -  plenty of white space, wide margins; even has stylish touches of red ink here and there, plus gilt lettering on the spine, and ragged fore-edges – the presentation does justice to the content. (You can buy a copy of your own here).
 
So, I Googled The Falcon Press. Not a great deal of info came up, but what did was quite fascinating. Active during the late 1940s and early 1950s the press was owned by one Peter Baker (20 April 1921 – 14 November 1966). According to Wikipedia he served in the RAF during World War ll in Europe and Africa, won the Military Cross, and was twice captured and caught by the enemy whilst working with the Dutch resistance in Holland. Baker set up the Falcon Press after the war, ran for parliament in 1950 and won a seat. At 28 he was named "The baby of the House" 

Evidently he didn’t pay enough attention to his businesses. The Falcon Press fell into the financial soup in the early 50s. Baker forged signatures on letters purporting to guarantee debts. This crime was discovered, he was convicted of ‘uttering, forgery and fraud’ and sentenced to seven years in prison. On December 16, 1954 he was expelled from parliament, the last MP in the twentieth century to be so dishonoured…or dishonoured so…

All this from simply picking up a little book on the shelf…without even having read the thing.

 

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