Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Google Play Books - Hawaii History

A  L  O  H  A !
King David Kalakaua
 of the Hawaiian Islands

  David Laamea Kamanakapuu Mahinulani Naloiaehuokalani Lumialani Kalakaua 

Ruled from February 12, 1874 until his death in 1891
His motto:
"Hooulu Lahui"
 "Let the Hawaiian Race Flourish"












 Hula  celebrating Kalakua
upon his 50th birthday jubilee
  Iolani Palace. 
November 1886 









 Contemporary Street Mural,
 Honolulu



\O-O/


 There are TOO Many books.

Even I wrote one.

Clicking around your blogs
makes the reading
of one book,
hour after hour,
seem hopelessly
old fashioned.

BUT when I was a kid
my town of Philadelphia
seemed full of
Old Books,
hundred-year-old books
that crumbled
in your hand!

I spent lots of time
at Legendary
Leary's Book Store

" Leary's Old Book Store in Philadelphia,
  9 South 9th Street
around 1910. 
 When it was sold out at auction
 in 1969 
it was the oldest used book store 
in the U.S.
 Getting ready for the sale,
 a copy of the Dunlap first printing 
of the Declaration of Independence 
was discovered forgotten and neglected. 
It fetched over $400,000.00.
 Leary's was a great place 
to root around for old books - 
and to overhear the conversations
 of old book men.  "
Books Rare

 " The building consisted of three floors 
and a basement full of books. 
 On the third floor, an opening in the floor
 allowed a view of the mezzanine down below.
Additional books were placed outside
 on shelves on the Leary’s side of the
 [cobblestone! cloudia)
alleyway
 separating it from Gimbels Dept store.
Some provision was made
 to shelter the books
 and the readers
 in the alley way,
 but, most of the time, 
the books and browsers,
 suffered the inclemency of the
 outdoor Philadelphia weather.
Throughout the building, 
numerous used books were everywhere: 
on wall shelves and piled high on tables
 for readers to browse through. 
The policy of the bookstore
 was not to interfere 
with readers and browsers,
 but simply to direct customers
 to their areas of interest if asked. "

" Leary’s heyday
 was during the “Golden Age of Books,”
 a period during the 19th century 
and the first half of the 20th century 
when books were the key source
 of entertainment and enlightenment. "




 How I loved
to find treasures,
 and to read away
 a Summer's afternoon;


Back then,
those afternoons seemed
endless,
 lasting for DAYS!

Old books were cheap,
cheap enough for me to buy,
though I'm ashamed to admit
(all these decades later)
that I also
"borrowed" a few
from Leary's!


Burying myself
in old books
was my 
Safe Place.

Nowadays,
books seem expensive,
and there are
SO MANY
coming out!




Lately, though
I have discovered
a wonderful place
to recall the joy
of old books,
many of them
FOR FREE!

Today's Leary's is
Google Play.
At the top of the 
GOOGLE Page
one of the choices is
"PLAY."

There you may purchase,
read and watch/listen
to films, TV shows,
and Books!

Lots of the historic books
there are FREE!

Lately I have been lost
in Hawaii's past
as written in the 19th
and early 20th Centuries.

 Here is a first-person
(rather Blog-like)
account of 
Kalakaua at the
 opening ceremonies
 of the
 Kingdom's Legislature.
Note the racism
common to that day
in the grudging admiration-

(Tip: hold the Ctrl key
while you tap the + key
to make reading easier.

Holding Ctrl while tapping
the zero '0' key
brings screen back to
your normal setting.
Or click on the photo-copies. )

Published 1888









{      }


From 1918
" One often hears"

Hawaii Past & Present
William Richards Castle



{    }  



Premature lament
for the passing
of "The Hawaiian"
Katherine Fullerton Gerould, 1916




{   }




Their Future Honolulu - My Today
Would Kalakaua
recognize 
his capitol?

Now I understand
how my paradisaical
Home Town
came to be
as it is- 


from 1917:


Thanks for visiting!

                            Warmly, cloudia

Hear the Kalakaua March HERE

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Marginalia

Aloha, You!
Thanks for stopping by today. . .





"Good children's literature appeals
not only to

the child in the adult,
but to the adult in the child."


~ Anonymous






"People die, but books never die."
~ Anonymous







"Show me the books he loves and I shall know the man
far better than through mortal friends."

~ Dawn Adams




"Books are the legacies that a great genius leaves to
mankind, which are delivered down from generation to
generation as presents to the posterity of those who are yet unborn."

~ Joseph Addison




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Marginalia is not of mere marginal interest.

It is the scrawled, or carefully lettered, note
in the margin of a book.

It is the dialogue between a thoughtful reader
and this book.

No author worth their salt would object,
I think,
to such a duet upon the page.

We all want engagement with our ideas,
our rhythm of words,
our vision...

We all, of course,
have been schooled to respect books,
to never mark their pages,
nor underline a beloved passage,
indeed to handle them much at all.
Better, it seems, to leave them on the shelf
where they can remain decorative
testimonial to our erudition.

Books-by-the-foot will sell your decorator
just the wall covering you require.
Spines are all, content interchangeable.

I never read without a highlighter or pen.

So It delighted me to learn that the most collectible
of vintage (REALLY vintage) books
are prized in part
for the marginalia of their historical owners
some famous,
but all immortal.


Some venerable volumes
have passed from learned hand to learned hand
down through centuries,
and embody a timeless conversation of mind
and spirit.


"The body of
B. Franklin, Printer
(Like the Cover of an Old Book
Its Contents torn Out
And Stript of its Lettering and Gilding)
Lies Here, Food for Worms.
But the Work shall not be Lost;
For it will (as he Believ'd) Appear once More
In a New and More Elegant Edition
Revised and Corrected
By the Author.
Benjamin and Deborah Franklin: 1790"

Benjamin Franklin's Final Epitaph


In a recent New Yorker (June 28 2010), Ian Frazier
reports on an excursion to the New York Public Library
where he had the privilege of seeing some
marginalia in the Berg Collection of rare books:

"A few of the marginalia in the books were wordless-
for example, in Jack Kerouac's copy of
'A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers ,' by
Henry David Thoreau.
Kerouac possessed this book but did not own it,
having borrowed it from a local library in 1949
and never brought it back.
On page 227, this sentence-
'The traveler must be born again on the road'-
was underlined in pencil,with a small, neat check mark beside it."


Wow!

Kerouac's famous title,
of a book that informed my life powerfully,
is an homage to another of my formative writers!


Isn't it fun knowing things
and finding things out?


What writer, book, film, or title
shaped YOU as a creative?

For remember, blogger:

"Learn as much by writing as by reading."
~ Lord Acton


Fondly, cloudia