The Scarlet Professor

arvin1.jpegOver the weekend I finally finished reading The Scarlet Professor by Barry Werth, a biography of the literary critic and Smith professor Newton Arvin. Arvin won a National Book Award and wrote several respected biographies -- but he's remembered as the target of a pornography bust in 1960, which targeted him because he was gay. And once he had been confronted, he immediately named a couple other smith instructors who also had some material then considered obscene (pretty tame by our standards, and it was later ruled not obscene but not before the lives of the three men had been ripped apart). It's a terrible sad story, especially since you know the whole time where it's going, but still interesting -- and a good reminder of how horribly many gay people suffered, within living memory for many. The book held special resonance for me since much of it takes place in Northampton, Mass., home of Smith College. I was born in the same hospital where Arvin died (four years afterwards) and grew up in the area. I rode horses and worked at the Smith College stables in high school (right below the state mental hospital where Arvin was admitted multiple times) and my first internship at a 'real" newspaper was at the Hampshire Gazette in Northampton and my cousin and her family live there today. So I know the place a bit, and it was interesting to read about its social and political climate in the earlier parts of the 20th century. (In a completely gratuitous aside, check out the city of Northampton's official website, above -- and compare it in ease of use and general user-friendliness to, say, the city of Key West site. Not to be all they-do-it-better-where-I-came-from, but ...)
Back to the book: It's in the collection of the Key West library -- as soon as I get around to returning it, you can check it out.

All for one

The apparently tireless Kris Neihouse from the Key West library has more book club news: "To keep things straight I am now referring to this Book club as the "All for One" book club in reference to the fact that participants all read the same book! So the All For One Book club will be meeting in just over a week on February 20 at 4:00 at the key West Library.

Up for discussion is A Primate's Memoir by Robert A. Sapolsky. Both the library copies are currently checked out but the book is available in hardcover and paperback on Amazon.

This is a fun interesting book--I'm about half way through and thoroughly enjoying it! Remember to come to the group whether you enjoyed the book or not, even if you did not finish the book. Those who come to the group get to decide what we read next! Come with questions and comments, and ideas! See you at the library.

Kris"

Weekend read

queen.jpgLooking at a publisher's catalogue of upcoming titles, I was interested in one by a writer named Kate Summerscale. Her new book, The Suspicions of Mr. Whicher, is about a Victorian detective who became a model for a lot of great literary detectives. But the catalogue also referred to her previous book, The Queen of Whale Cay. That sounded interesting, so I looked it up. The story was REALLY interesting, about a classic 20th century eccentric, Marion "Joe" Carstairs, an heiress to the Standard Oil Fortune who became a very successful motorboat racer -- and very out-of-the-closet lesbian -- in the 1920s, then retreated to an island in the Bahamas as public opinion turned against her. Even better, it turned out that the Key West library had the book on the shelf. So on Wednesday evening, I stopped by and got it. It's a small book (literally), and a quick read.

Turns out Summerscale used to work for the British paper the Daily Telegraph, which is famous for its hilarious and outrageously candid obituaries, which is how she learned about Carstairs. When I heard that, I decided to check out the Telegraph online just to see if they had these great obits every day. Of course there are a limited number of Carstairs types out there -- but the Telegraph does the best it can with its material, and the obit editor has a pretty entertaining blog.

What to read?

I never actually have this problem -- I have the opposite one -- but I hear people sometimes wonder what they should read. The wonderful Anne Rice at the Key West Library has compiled a list of various "Best of 2007" lists. I love these lists, even if I've compiled my own "to read" lists that are longer than several lifetimes. A good resource and worth bookmarking. One of my favorite online reads, Slate, also has a list of winter reading recommendations from various writers. And the National Book Critics Circle recently posted its Winter List of Good Reads.

(A note on library nomenclature: The library at the corner of Fleming and Elizabeth streets is, in all accuracy, the May Hill Russell branch of the Monroe County Library system. However everyone in town refers to it as the Key West library so I will, too. But if you live here you should know we're part of a countywide library system and the other branches are all worth checking out -- I'm especially fond of the Islamorada, aka Helen Wadley, branch on Upper Matecumbe.)

He might bite back

chuck palahniujKris Neihouse from the Key West library reports: next Wednesday February 13 Book Bites will meet at 5:30 to discuss the author Chuck Palahniuk. I know many will have equal but opposite reactions to this cult favorite. Personally I adore him! I have been doing a lot of reading by and about him.  He is a very interesting writer (and person.)

Please come to share your opinion--no matter what it is!
See you at the Library!!
Kris
P.S.  Stay tuned for Toni Morrison in March!