Date: Fri 26-Dec-1997
Date: Fri 26-Dec-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: DOTTIE
Quick Words:
Booth-Library-authors-local
Full Text:
Calling All Resident Authors, Editors And Illustrators
BY DOROTHY EVANS
Cyrenius H. Booth Library curator Caroline Stokes is putting out an "All Call"
alert to Newtowners who are published writers, editors and/or book
illustrators.
She is seeking signed copies, or at least an up-to-date listing, of their
works to be included in the library's Newtown Authors Collection.
"We've already got more than 100 authors and samples of their books dating
back several decades," she said, "but many of these authors are dead now. We
need to update the collection with contemporary authors."
Mrs Stokes has been "collecting" Newtown authors "gradually and informally,"
she said, for the past 15 years. There was a special display of Newtown
authors' books during the library's 60th anniversary celebration in 1992, "but
unfortunately, we didn't ask them to donate their loaned copies. We should
have."
Another problem has been space -- or the lack of it -- to display the
collection.
"These works haven't always been out in plain sight where the reading public
could enjoy them," she said, because in the old library they were stored in a
locked desk or secretary at the second floor back.
"It was so crowded in there, you couldn't really look at them," Mrs Stokes
said.
Yet these Newtown authors, editors and illustrators were, in many cases, not
only longtime residents of the town but well-known in their respective fields.
As such, they were worthy of recognition.
From Baseball
To Slipped Discs
Mrs Stokes mentioned several examples: renowned New Yorker Magazine writer and
cartoonist, James Thurber; novelist Robert Crichton; baseball columnist and
New Yorker Christmas poem writer, Roger Angell.
"I reread [Crichton's] The Secret of Santa Vittoria every so often and still
find it delightful," Mrs Stokes said.
The children's book writer and illustrator Dana Fradon, who still lives in
Newtown, has donated several of his books to the collection, Mrs Stokes said.
In contrast to this well-known writer and New Yorker cartoonist, many other
Newtown authors in the collection have faded into relative obscurity yet their
titles show a wide range of expertise.
Mrs Stokes cited the example of Raymond Fosdick, who wrote about giving
financial advice to John D. Rockefeller I and II.
Then there was an orthopedic doctor named Manlapaz who wrote about You and
Your Slipped Disc.
One of Mrs Stokes' favorite hometown authors was Barbara Mitchell Howard, the
daughter of longtime Cyrenius H. Booth Library Director Sarah Mitchell.
"She wrote charming books about Cape Cod," Mrs Stokes said.
"When Sarah [Mitchell] was head librarian, I was a newcomer trying to learn
about the town. She would say, `Read so-and-so's book,' and point me to it."
"That was 50 years ago when the town was much smaller," she said.
Another category in the collection includes women who wrote up their family
histories and were self-published.
"That was not an uncommon practice a generation ago. From my point of view, if
you wrote a book and it was printed, you were an author even if you didn't
become an Emily Dickinson," Mrs Stokes said.
Louis Untermeyer At Center Of Collection
Perhaps the best known and widely read literary figure who once lived here was
author, editor, lecturer and poet Louis Untermeyer, fondly known by his
fellow-residents as the "Poet Laureate" of Newtown.
Mr Untermeyer was a great longtime friend of poet Robert Frost with whom he
carried on a lengthy correspondence from 1915 to 1958. The letters were later
donated to the manuscript division of the Library of Congress.
In addition, Mr Untermeyer's anthologies of English and American poetry have
been widely used by high school and college students from the 1950s and over
the next two decades.
For many years, Mr Untermeyer and his second wife, magazine editor and writer
Bryna Ivens, lived in a lovely old home off Great Hill Road, which was the
scene of many festive gatherings of family and friends especially upon the
occasion of his birthdays.
Louis Untermeyer continued to be a productive, prolific writer up to the age
of 92, when he died on December 19, 1977, at his Great Hill Road residence.
An oil painting by well-known Newtown artist Robert Sneckenburg of Taunton
Lane hangs today over the fireplace in the new Cyrenius H. Booth Library's
second floor Reading Room.
The painting is directly across the hall from the Special Collections Room
where many of Untermeyer's books have found a home alongside so many other
past and present Newtown authors.
Contemporary Authors Sought
Collecting all these works over many years and finally being able to display
them prominently has given Booth Library Curator Caroline Stokes a "wonderful
sense of satisfaction."
But the "gathering in" process has been neither systematic nor automatic, Mrs
Stokes hastened to add.
"We scoured the annual Booth Library Book Sale," she said, describing the
staff's somewhat random mode of recovery.
Most of the titles they have been able to find were published at least two
decades ago, she added.
Now she is hoping to hear from current town residents who are recently
published and whose books haven't yet had time to be recycled in the above
manner.
"There are three at least contemporary authors whose books we do have in the
collection... and I'm looking for more," Mrs Stokes said.
She mentioned, in particular, novelist Justin Scott, who frequently uses
Newtown's Main Street as his model; 1970s war correspondent John M. Del
Vecchio, who has written of his combat experiences in Viet Nam ( The 13th
Valley and For the Sake of All Living Things ); and children's book author
Joanna Cole, of the Magic School Bus series.
The Newtown Authors will be shelved in the Special Collections room on the
second floor of the new library where they can be seen and enjoyed by
everyone, Mrs Stokes added.
"We would really like to recognize them. There are some great writers here,"
she said.
Mrs Stokes is hoping to have the Newtown Authors Collection ready for display
during the library's Grand Opening celebration, which is tentatively set for
the second week in January.
Anyone who wishes to donate a copy of a recently published book, or who knows
of a recently published Newtown author, should call the Cyrenius H. Booth
Library at 426-4533, or call Caroline Stokes at 426-426-2409.
