Against the Grain v34#3 June, 2022 Full Issue

Page 10

Bet You Missed It — Press Clippings — In the News Carefully Selected by Your Crack Staff of News Sleuths Column Editor: Bruce Strauch (The Citadel, Emeritus) <bruce.strauch@gmail.com>

Still Going Strong at 89

Let’s Read About Walking

Lady Antonia Fraser gave birth to six children and then sat down and wrote “Mary Queen of Scots.” She was 36, and her life changed overnight. She’s now finished her 30th novel.

Rebecca Solnit, Wanderlust (2000) (walking to stir up your mind); (2) Simon Armitage, Walking Home (2013) (walking 260 miles of the Pennine Way and giving pub poetry readings at night to make money); (3) W.G. Sebald, The Rings of Saturn (1995) (walking in SE England while ruminating on everything imaginable); (4) Robert Macfarlane, The Old Ways (2012) (subtle ways we’re shaped by landscape through which we move); (5) Matsuo Basho, Narrow Road to the Interior (1998) (prose travelogue meets haiku).

She grew up precocious. A history of England book she read as a child rocked her. “It was like suddenly discovering this huge pageant behind me, and I could go and wander about in it.” Her mother had written acclaimed historical biographies, and Antonia was gripped by the fever. In “The Case of the Married Woman,” she writes about Caroline Norton, a well-born woman and prolific writer. In 1836, her husband accused her of adultery and took away their children plus her copyright in her work. She was found innocent of adultery, but still lost everything. Nonetheless, her advocacy led to the Custody of Infants Act in 1839, the first feminist legislation in English history. See: Emily Borrow, “Antonia Fraser,” The Wall Street Journal, April 16-17, 2022, p.C6.

Read With Elon and Become a Billionaire J.E. Gordon, Structures: Or Why Things Don’t Fall Down; (2) Walter Isaacson, Benjamin Franklin: An American Life; (3) Walter Isaacson, Einstein: His Life and Universe; (4) Nick Bostrom, Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies; (5) Erik Conway and Naomi Oreskes, Merchants of Doubt; (6) William Golding, Lord of the Flies; (7) Peter Thiel, Zero to One: Notes on Startups or How to Build the Future; (8) Isaac Asimov, The Foundation. See: Marguerite Ward @FORWARDIST; “Billionaire Elon Musk credits his success to these 8 books,” Feb. 21, 2022; www. cnbc.com/2017/02/21.

Obit of Note Jack Higgins (1929-2022) sold his first novel in 1959 for $100. Then he wrote 30 more at about the same rate. Then he heard about a German plot to kidnap Churchill. This became a runaway 1975 success called The Eagle Has Landed. Higgins grew up in Belfast surrounded by sectarian violence, served in the army, taught school, and wrote on the side. After Eagle sold 50 million copies and had a hit film with Michael Caine and Donald Sutherland, Higgins went into tax exile on the island of Jersey. He churned out best-sellers on a diet of champagne and bacon sandwiches.

See: David Guterson, “Five Best,” The Wall Street Journal, March 12-13, 2022, p.C8. Guterson is the famous author of “Snow Falling on Cedars” and “The Final Case.”

Origins of High-Tech Crime As soon as there was telegraph, there were intruders tapping it. The telegraph stock ticker of 1867 really brought out the con artists. Wires to commercial houses were tapped and diverted to other businesses. Bogus messages of wild price fluctuations could start a panic. Private betting parlors would be tapped as seen in the Paul Newman movie “The Sting.” The wire-tappers would intercept race results and signal middlemen to place bets. See: Brian Hochman, “The Wiretappers Who Invented a High-Tech Crime,” The Wall Street Journal, April 2-3, 2022, p.C5. Hochman is the author of “The Listeners: A History of Wiretapping in the United States,” published by Harvard University Press.

Let’s Read Classics Derivatives Jane Smiley, A Thousand Acres (1991) (King Lear moved to Iowa); (2) Pat Barker, The Silence of the Girls (2018) (The Iliad from a female perspective); (3) Jean Rys, Wide Sargasso Sea (1966) (Jane Eyre prequel); (4) Anne Carson, Autobiography of Red (1998) (gay Herakles); (5) Michael Cunningham, The Hours (1998) (spin-off of Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway). See: Dinitia Smith, “Five Best,” The Wall Street Journal, May 7-8, 2002, p. C8. Dinitia is the author of “The Prince,” a retelling of Henry James’ “The Golden Bowl.”

See: “The British veteran who churned out best-selling thrillers,” The Week, April 29, 2022, p.35.

10 Against the Grain / June 2022

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Library Marketing- What Academic Libraries Can Learn from Winners of the John Cotton Dana Awards and Librarians Focused on Public Relations

8min
pages 12-13

Back Talk — Bridges Over Troubled Waters

4min
pages 58-60

Profiles Encouraged

5min
pages 56-57

ATG Interviews Joanna Ball – Managing Director, Directory of Open Access Journals

13min
pages 53-55

ATG Interviews Alicia Wise – Executive Director of CLOCKSS

6min
pages 51-52

Biz of Digital — An IR Workflow and its Ethics: Extending Services beyond the Privileged who can Afford to Pay APCs

5min
page 47

ATG Interviews Kerry Ward – Executive Director, Core: Leadership, Infrastructure, Futures

6min
pages 50-51

Supporting Mental Health on Campus

7min
pages 48-49

and Opportunities

13min
pages 44-46

through a Tennessee Board of Regents Grant

9min
pages 42-43

And They Were There — Reports of Meetings

11min
pages 36-39

and Writing Experience

4min
page 41

Phoenix Rising: The Council of Science Edtior’s 2022 Annual Meeting

2min
page 40

eBook Terms for Libraries

8min
pages 32-33

Questions and Answers — Copyright Column

9min
pages 34-35

Booklover — Pondering Poetry

5min
pages 30-31

Tips to Run a Successful John Cotton Dana Award Campaign from Anchorage Public Library

7min
pages 24-25

Rumors

5min
pages 1-5

How Spartanburg County Libraries Improved Census Participation

4min
pages 16-17, 20

John Cotton Dana Award Winner’s “Amplify 817” Campaign: Music to Fort Worth’s Ears

5min
pages 18-21

Reader’s Roundup: Monographic Musings & Reference Reviews

19min
pages 26-29

How Edmonton Public Library’s Revitalization Led to a John Cotton Dana Award

6min
pages 22-23

Q&A with 2018 John Cotton Dana Award Winner, DC Public Library

7min
pages 14-15, 20

Bet You Missed It

3min
pages 10-11
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