THINKING, THINKING

I am so ready to be in Maine. The PGA Tour has been to Pebble Beach (the best wild water site) and Hilton Head (pretty good big water with piers), and today I found myself reading as much as I could find about Norway and Russia dividing the Barents Sea and Cape Codders quibbling over Cape Wind. Clearly I need to be in and of Tenants Harbor.

Until then, I will enjoy thinking about coming good books and good times with Roseledge Books Regulars.

Fig. #80.  Sometimes wild big water with pier.

Fig. #80. Sometimes wild big water with pier.

(1) T. J. Stiles says that he tries to write books that “tell good stories and ask big questions.” Is there a better description of a perfect book for Roseledge Books?  Or of conversation with an Irish person, maybe?

T.J. Stiles’ The First Tycoon: The Epic Story of Cornelius Vanderbilt just won a Pulitzer Prize which suggests he succeeded. Oh boy, Roseledge Books alert! The paperback is out and looks fat, just in time for the big summer order. AND the book could have special ties to TH.

In the early ‘70‘s I walked in front of the pre-income tax “cottages” of Bar Harbor. Someone said that one of them, a 22 bedroom lovely, belonged to, I think, Joseph Pulitzer. If this was the Pulitzer who started the Pulitzer Prize which TJ Stiles just won, then clearly the book has a tie to Maine. If any Pulitzer cottage dweller was also a sailor, he or she might have sailed into excellent Tenants Harbor. Of course Cornelius Vanderbilt (Commodore Vanderbilt?) may have sailed into excellent TH, too, even if his home base was Newport. So maybe the book is a TH Special! This would make a perfect book even better.So many puzzles, so much fun.

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(2) In Voodoo Histories, David Aaronovitch writes that the Internet has enabled the “release of a mass of undifferentiated information, some of it authoritative, some speculative, some absurd,…”

Is authoritative — speculative — absurd a better range of options than the  ratio of documentation to speculation I use when deciding if a book is fiction or non-fiction or something in-between?  I’m mostly a reasonable speculator.  Deciding what information is worthwhile and why is no small task these days.  Robb Graham’s new book Parisians (hardily researched with “14,000 miles in the [bicycle] saddle and four years in the library“), could be a wonderful example of in-between.  Both books will be on the shelves of RB when they are out in paperback.

(1) Interview with T. J. Stiles. [Minneapolis] Star Tribune, April, 2010.

(2) Michiko Katani reviews David Aaronovitch’s Voodoo Histories: The Role of Consprac Theory in Shaping Modern History, NYT, 2/15/10;    Dwight Garner reviews Robb Graham’s Parisians: An Adventure History of Paris, NYT, 4/28/10.

Fig. #81.  Big water life in Tenants Harbor.  My favorite. No PGA Tour here.

Fig. #81. Big water life in Tenants Harbor. My favorite. No PGA Tour here.

I know my messages have been few and far between. Please blame it on six months of giant legs, pee pills and potassium, and (latest theory) a recurring infection, through all of which I have thought of you often and been mostly wiped out. But things are looking up. Antibiotics are within and Charlie assures me the airline tickets and rented car will have us walking into Roseledge before dark on Thursday before Memorial Day.  This means that after Friday morning breakfast at Farmer’s, Roseledge Books will be open. I will be waiting for you and ready to consider the harbor for as long as it takes. I can hardly wait.

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