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Showing posts from June, 2025

AMISTAD BOOKPLACE, HOUSTON – J. CALIFORNIA COOPER BOOK SIGNING, 1991

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  This oversized postcard announcement for a book shop appearance by African American author J. California Cooper was mailed on January 5 th , 1991 and got to me via Madison, Wisconsin, and who knows where else, in 2025. On Juneteenth appropriately enough—the holiday that commemorates the ending of slavery in the United States. Also appropriately enough, the book that the author was reading passages from and signing for customers was set during times of slavery and the Civil War. From the ad on the postcard: “J. California Cooper’s novel, FAMILY, tells the story of four generations of an African-American family whose emotional and spiritual center is Always, a young woman born into slavery. Her mother Clora narrates a tale set in the years just before and after the Civil War. It is a tale in which racism is replaces slavery and humankind continues to suffer from its mental chains. But Always sets into motion two ironic plans to ensure the deliverance of her children. And with h...

Books with a Future at the Walden Book Shop in Chicago

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This slim catalogue of books from a private collection was published by the Walden Book Shop in Chicago sometime during the Great Depression if I'm reading the references correctly in the introduction to the catalogue, signed A Busted Bibliophile (with apologies to A.E.N). A.E.N. is Alfred Edward Newton (1864-1940), prolific bibliophile from Philadelphia and author of books about books and book collecting. "A Busted Bibliophile" refers to George H. Sargent's "A Busted Bibliophile and His Books: Being a most Delectable History of the Diverting Adventures of that Renowned Book Collector A. Edward Newton of Doylesford in Pennsylvania, Esquire." The Walden Book Shop was owned by a co-operative started by novelist and short story writer Sherwood Anderson as the Chicago Co-Operative Bookstores Company. The Waldenbooks chain in later decades had no relationship to the Chicago co-op. By 1932, in the throes of the Great Depression, the book shop in the Michigan Squar...

Holliston Mills Library Buckram Sample Book

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This small sample book, 2.5 X 3.5 inches, has seven examples of the buckram cloth produced at the Norwood, Massachusetts mill, which became popular for library binding and rebinding. The Democrat Printing Co. in Madison, Wisconsin is named on the front cover as a vendor of the product, circa early decades of the 20th century. The Holliston Mills story, dating back to the 1890s, is found here at the Norwood Historical Society: https://norwoodhistoricalsociety.org/holliston-mills.../

1910 Ad Cover for Publisher, Charles K. Reed of Worcester, Massachusetts

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  Charles Keller Reed (1851-1921) immersed himself in nature from an early age. This led to work in taxidermy, which encouraged his interest in ornithology, natural history, and art. He later wrote, edited, and published books about birds, many of which were illustrated by his son, Chester Albert Reed. I wonder if Chester illustrated the stationery for his father's business correspondence. A site devoted Chester A. Reed, offers a well-researched article by Michel Chevalier on Chester K. Reed's fascinating life and work with ornithology and books. https://chester-reed.org/.../charles-k-reed-businessmant.../ Boost post Like Comment Send Share