Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Author: admin (Page 111 of 220)

Friends, Family, and THINE ENEMY!

You know what they say about Beauty and the Eye of the Beholder. Right. It’s better than a poke with a sharp stick, as Granny O’Herne used to say.

The other thing was, One Man’s Trash is Another Man’s Windstorm Cleanup. She was chock-full of sayings.

They both hold true in the case of an odd book that came in today. On one hand, it is a nondescript little hardback with a simple cloth binding. Old, but not in book-years. As you know, books are the reverse of dogs. That ol’ hound of 10 human-years is said to be 65 or 70 in dog-years. So this book – published some 62 years ago in human years – is really only nine-or-so years of age in book-years. Big Wup.

Here’s the thing, though. As the image of the back of the dustjacket shows, this is a Book Club Edition from London, from a company that claimed in black and white to have nearly a quarter-of-a-million members in its day. But for all those book-club buyers, all these years later, how many do you suppose are still surviving?

Anyone? Anyone?

Nah, you’re wrong. This isn’t the only copy left. Was I implying that?

But it turns out, of all the libraries worldwide, just two copies remain among the holdings – both of them located in Germany (the book is a novel set in Germany, although written in English). Those are First Edition Copies. Of this particular edition – with the dustjacket intact – there are maybe seven copies in the entire world.

Valuable?

Not really. (More than Sarah Palin’s second effort, though. I’ve still got new copies of that one available, if you’re in the market…) It’s that whole Beauty and the Eye thing. Philip Gibbs was a fairly prolific author and this story won no Pulitzers. This copy isn’t as collectible, as a Book Club Edition, even if it came from one of the first book clubs – ever.

You can see in the image (at least, if you click to make it larger) that the address is listed as 121 Charing Cross Road, London. That’s the site of Foyle’s Bookstore, once noted by Guinness World Records as the Biggest Bookstore in the World. (True or not, Foyle’s managed to get certified as such.)

In the UK, teenagers may take a civil service exam to get hired, but brothers William and Gilbert Foyle both failed to score high enough in 1903. To get rid of their textbooks, they took out an ad. They got so many replies that they wound up buying more textbooks to sell, and Foyle’s Bookstore got its start.

They quickly grew to the point they needed larger quarters, and – you guessed it (at least, I’m assuming you did!) – they moved into quarters at 121 Charing Cross Road. They’re still there. Later, in addition to branch locations in London, they had shops in Dublin, Belfast, Cape Town and Johannesburg. In addition to books, they diversified, with a Lecture Agency, an entertainment company, a craft shop, a travel bureau, and publishing house.

That’s where this little copy of THINE ENEMY comes in. It was published by their book club department and shipped out by post to buyers – sometime around 1951. So although it’s only 62 years old (10 in book-years, 403 in dog-years), there just aren’t many remaining.

If I was the grandson or granddaughter of Philip Gibbs, Heck! I’d love to have this little one-owner sitting on my bookshelf. (Disclaimer: Not exactly documented as one-owner, but what the hay?) My Gramps, I’d say proudly, showing it off to my guest.

Guest: Really? He wrote this?

Me: No, but he kept a diary.

Guest: So he mentions buying the book?

Me: Don’t know. The diary has a little lock on it. But that fellow on the dustjacket sort of looks like Gramps.

So you see, a book can be a valuable tie to our ancestry – in this case – if your ancestor happens to be named Gibbs. Philip, specifically. If that’s the case, I’ve got something here you will certainly want to own.

The rest of you can find another treasure to suit – come visit!

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 South Main, BA OK!

Photograph: Chris Ware/Getty Images

Storm Shelter and Naiveté.

I’ve chased tornadoes. I’ve just never caught one. Maybe – since I’ve been close enough – it might be more accurate to say that the tornado never caught me. At that close range, the twister is the boss of me.

They should have an EF-scale for stupidity. A couple of my encounters would have rated pretty high on that one. Early on, I was at the age when bad things always happened to other people. The Extreme-Superman-Complex of youth, some would say. I’d say, I was young and extremely lucky.

All the pictures from the latest Moore disaster have brought those long-ago memories rushing back, all the destruction, confusion, and tales of survival. I don’t believe twisters have grown milder these days. Looking at the pictures, I’m inclined to agree with those who are calling anyone’s survival in the Moore twister’s path, a – miracle.

Would you expect to live if someone asked you to hide in your house while a crane and wrecking ball smashed it to the ground? Maybe you’re an optimist. Most people wouldn’t expect a positive outcome, but that’s what happened in Moore.

That twister of coffee beans called Starbucks first called their coffee sizes Short, Tall, and Grande. The National Weather Service first described storm-sizes on an F-scale: F-0 to F-5, which is pretty much the same as today’s EF-scale. The difference? Wind speed, for one thing. Under the earlier scale, the biggest storm had to have winds over 260 MPH. Now, 200+ is enough for an EF-5 designation.

Under the new rules, it would have been the biggest of all classified storms that passed just to our south on that day, and then steadily moved closer before graciously moving away. A photographer and I drove over at first light.

That evening – in 1979 – while my wife and newborn son were hunkered down in the hallway closet, the twister touched down far enough to the east that our home was spared. I was on the other side of the path. People died in between us, some having taken shelter behind what had been solid brick and mortar walls.

It turns out, we were probably a lot safer that evening than the lunchtime I sat in my car, innocently parked beside the bank’s pneumatic drive-through. It was midday and weirdly stormy. I was making the morning deposit. There were scary-clouds above with a little bit o’ rain that suddenly began coming down in strong sheets. I was waiting for the deposit slip to return in that little canister when my car began humping the parking lot. I don’t remember any side-to-side movement, just the car jumping up and down on the shocks trying to leave the ground like it was some kind of California low-rider on steroids. Suddenly, the air-violence was over.

Driving back to the store, I had to dodge debris along South Peoria. Along the short route, there were people outside their businesses – located just down the street from mine – looking over roofing on the ground, downed store-signs, and wind-blown debris that had settled everywhere.

At some point, years later, when I unwrapped that media-provided, reporter’s-super-protection-cloak that I had used for such a long time – at the point that I became a regular citizen – the sound of the tornado siren was completely different.

One evening, it was shortly after the main rush hour. There was still enough reporter in me that I recognized the sky. Tornado. It was summertime and the air conditioner was on, but I rolled down the window to sniff the air. It was the aroma of disaster.

Before I reached my turn at 31st Street, with the window still down I heard the beginning wails of the tornado sirens. I had no photographer with me. No assignment. No reason to be on the road except to head home. Something new was welling up inside me, looking up, smelling the air, hearing the sirens. I would never admit it, but it might have been – fear.

What can you do when you find yourself at risk? When the attack comes from above the trees or over the rise, where do you find safety? After a lifetime of telling others how to survive the onslaught, I don’t think I remembered any of it. I just wanted to be in the house, where Extreme-Superman could sit down in front of the television and watch the coverage, and the radars, and the storm-track.

Another blog that has run too long. Apologies.

The same sort of place that belied shelter for residents of Moore. Still, they survived, but for those few. Those in the path of that monster were a lot less naïve than I am. I have not shaken my foolish early ways. That reporter’s protection. The lie.

They took precautions based on training. The sort of thing I used to sell, when I was in the media. Find the bathtubs. A closet. Yank a mattress from the beds and use it for protection. Find inner rooms, storm shelters. Above all – storm shelters.

Watching all the storm coverage on television, and recalling how closely it parallels what I saw in Wichita Falls, Texas that morning after, I’m remembering foolish and hoping for wiser. I’m thinking of my grandchildren and family, and the wisdom of their father and mother to incorporate a safe-room in their newly-built home.

I probably would have bought a new car with the money it cost them. Then I would have trusted to circumstances. Circumstances as they intersected with violent storms. And me, being a Superman and all that.

Those after-storm clouds? I saw them pass over the bookstore later that evening. The same type I saw back in 1979. My reaction was strong enough the other night that I wanted to point a camera to the sky and take a picture of them. I did. It just wasn’t the same. Without the violence, the clouds were little more than interesting. Pointing my camera upward, I wanted to be a reporter again, and being confident in my profession also secure my safety. Maybe continue the Superman-myth for a little while longer.

Too late for that, I think. I’ve been watching the television and hearing those same interviews that I conducted so many years ago. Survival stories. The news-anchor may have put it best: There are incredible stories everywhere we turn. Folks are smarter, these days.

Newborn birds know instinctively how to jump into flight from the nest. Oklahomans know instinctively how to fly into one.

I’m learning. But – at my (advancing) age – I’ve still never ridden out a storm in a safe location. I hope to learn from the valiant lessons demonstrated by my fellow state’s residents, enough to make some sensible decisions at my next opportunity.

Keep safe, then come visit!

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 South Main St., Broken Arrow OK

Jimmy? No, he was James. St. James.

The St. James Hotel.

The name just sounds classy, doesn’t it? In its day, the St. James was THE classy spot to stay in Sapulpa, Oklahoma. Even in the 1940’s, when it had seen better days, it was spruced up to host the governor of the state of New York, Thomas E. Dewey.

In 1944, Dewey was the Republican candidate for the presidency and gathered 46% of the vote, but lost to Franklin Roosevelt. When the NY governor visited Sapulpa and its St. James Hotel, he was gearing up for the ’48 election.

The July 21, 1947 issue of Time Magazine carried a story of Dewey’s small-town visit and his local connection:

Nothing could be done about the sweltering, 90° heat. But the little town of Sapulpa, Okla. (pop. 12,000) had done everything else it could to prepare for the arrival of a home-town girl—Frances Hutt Dewey. The rickety old St. James Hotel was freshly scrubbed. Waitresses and porters sweated in new uniforms; the best suite had been completely done over by a local furniture store. At the Frisco station a crowd gathered to cheer Frances and her husband. New York’s Governor Thomas E. Dewey.

There is still a Dewey Street in Sapulpa. Whether it got its name from that visit is probably known by the historical society. In the case of the hotel, both the name and the building are long-gone as far as I can tell.

It was hopping in 1914 though.

It’s never money, but I’ve mentioned the odd things that come in with books. One of the images is a Christmas menu from the St James Hotel, which may be more easily read by clicking on the picture. The text is clipped in the image for some reason. Underneath the hotel’s name at the bottom it reads: Sapulpa, Oklahoma – in the same Old English text style.

Guests could expect a wide variety of entrees that Christmas evening, from appetizers to desserts. Some exotic, some not so. Celery hearts and Radishes? Zowie. That’s some fine dining.

The Virginia Ham, though, was barbecued and prepared Century Style, which may be a method forever lost to history. (Or maybe it is still common on Sapulpa dinner tables. Anyone? Anyone?) There was Roast Young Turkey and Crab Flake a la Newburg. Broiled Lake Superior White Fish. Blue Point Oyster Cocktail. The candied sweet potatoes must have been tasty and I’m always a sucker for mashed potatoes.

Then there was English plum pudding, Hot Mince Pie, Vanilla Ice Cream, and Hard or Brandy Sauce.

If this little piece of paper could only talk, I’d ask it whether the Christmas Dinner was a special event or an annual tradition, and whether everyone who was anyone in Sapulpa was there – by invitation. Or was it open to the public?

Lots of history, right there in that menu, without too many answers. It is certain that Sapulpa had some time in the sun, and – at least during the week of the Time Magazine article – the attention of the entire nation.

The things found in books aren’t always stories, but many have a story to tell.

Come visit!

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 South Main St, Broken Arrow OK!

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