So, a little more judicious poking showed a listing of retro-style posters. Here's the listing:
Of this fuller list, I've read thirty-six of forty.
--John R.
So, a little more judicious poking showed a listing of retro-style posters. Here's the listing:
Of this fuller list, I've read thirty-six of forty.
--John R.
So, thanks to Paul W. for pointing this out: there was indeed a link that got left out to my recent post re. the odd assortment of folks who identify with Tolkien.
The Boston Globe website proved surprisingly difficult to navigate, but let's try that again.
--John R.
So, my office calendar this year (in a break with tradition, replacing the Mayan) is an oversized wall calendar called 'Literary Classics', with Art by 'Anderson Design Group', whom I've never heard of. But I like the art, which seems deliberately evocative of the WPA poster art of the 1920s and 30s.
Just as interesting as the style are the choices of the Literary Classics chosen.
January: 20,000 Leagues
February: Peter Rabbit
March: The Call of Cthulhu
April: The Count of Monte Cristo
May: The Secret Garden
June: Treasure Island
July: Hamlet
August: The Island of Dr. Moreau
September: Moby Dick
October: Sleepy Hollow
November: The Little Mermaid
December: The Time Machine
An eclectic group. Some quite short (the Potter, Irving, Andersen, Wells), others quite lengthy (Dumas, Melville). I suspect I'm not the only one who, when confronted by such a grouping of display, such as frequently appear in the local Barnes & Noble, pauses a minute to work out how many of them I've read. So I'll go ahead and confess I've never read The Secret Garden or Count of Monte Christo. And while I'm at it, I'll share that my favorite among the art pieces here are the dramatic view of the last moments of the Pequod and crew; the Verne; and The Time Machine.
The most interesting thing about this selection is that it includes Lovecraft, who continues his ascent out of the pulp dungeon towards canonization --which wd I think have astonished Lovecraft and his pulp peers.
No Tolkien, but then he's in copyright.
For those who want to see more of these posters, see
or
https://www.andersondesigngroupstore.com/a/collections/search?
or just ADG.com
--John R.
So, I like calendars.
For years now I've gotten several every year:
--each year's new Tolkien calendar (sometimes multiple different Tolkien calendars in the same year), which I hang up in my office
--a Mayan calendar (beautiful artwork and archeology), which I hang just under the Tolkien one
--the Moon calendar (combining in a postersized grid a calendar, the entire phases of the moon for one year, and a little image of the moon as it appears on that day); this hangs in the stairwell in the hallway next to the cat-stand
-- a half-sized calendar, about the size of a trade paperback book, for carrying in my satchel. The topic for this one can vary widely. This wide range of topics applies also to the downstairs calendar hanging by the phone; these two are the ones we write on to keep track of the schedule. The current ones are whimsical Lear birds and drawings of fruits and berries, respectively
--and a miniature calendar the size of a credit card (good in previous years for scheduling; nowadays the print size is too small for aging eyes).
As for this year's calendar, 'Literary Classics', see next post.
--John R.
current reading: THE SHADOWS AT THE BOTTOM OF THE WORLD by Th. Ligotti
So, here's a picture of me sharing a bench with one of my favorite writers, taken during our recent visit to Fairhaven.*