The Peninsula Bookman

100 Years of Peninsula State Park

Peter D. Sloma @ 12:45 pm

Norm Aulabaugh, author of The Park stopped by around closing time last evening. Norm has always been good about paying a visit when he is in town to check on our stock of his book and his video. The projects were produced to celebrate the centennial anniversary of the crown jewel of Wisconsin’s state park system. Norm is one of the founders of the recently organized Friends of Peninsula State Park, and his book and video are both fundraising projects, with proceeds going back to the Friends group. A worthy cause to be sure, and surprising to consider that the Park had operated without an auxiliary for so long.

Aulabaugh’s book The Park is a sort of memoir-ish history of Peninsula State Park. It combines stories of the author’s recollections of years of visits with stories from other Park regulars and historical bits and pieces from the earliest days through to the present. Aulabaugh’s book outlines the history of the Park and interlaces the narrative with stories of his own experiences from camping in the Park as boy, to his honeymoon there, and annual trips since. The video is a four season tour depicting all of the Park’s most recognizable landmarks and features as well as panoramic aerial views.

Door County native and professor emeritus from the University of Wisconsin – Madison, Bill Tischler, released his book on the Park in 2006. Door County’s Emerald Treasure: A History of Peninsula State Park is a comprehensive history of the Park from the period preceding its founding to recent years. Tischler’s book not only provides a history of the Park itself, but also sets it within the context of the movement that created the state park system. An important addition to the history of our peninsula, Door County’s Emerald Treasure will be of interest to readers for years to come.

Our own Peninsula Partners Publishing also made a contribution to the anniversary celebration. Our second map reprint was from the 1914 plat book for Door County, and depicts the township of Gibraltar. This is the first land-ownership plat that shows the Park with its current boundaries. The map shows several parcels of land still in private ownership within the park boundaries and some early roadways, and Horseshoe island still owned by the Folda family.

With only a few months remaining in the Park’s centennial year, perhaps it would be of interest to do a bit of reading on the history of this important Door County institution. There is no better place to start than with these two recent books. Better still, visit www.peninsulafriends.org and join the newly formed auxiliary to show your support of the Park. I understand that these days the Friends are busy in their battles against invasive plants spreading through the forest. According to Norm, garlic mustard continues to be a huge problem, but they are making progress against honeysuckle. I am sure the Friends would appreciate a hand, however you could offer it.

Some thoughts on Kindle…

Peter D. Sloma @ 5:19 pm

The idea of an electronic book reader has been around for a while, but Kindle is the first model to gain any serious traction. Several of our customers here at Peninsula Bookman have them, and most of them express that they are generally happy with the performance of the device. I have not purchased one of the readers, but I could imagine that I might if I were traveling more often – the one application that makes a lot of sense to me is using the reader for daily newspapers. Anyway, the idea is that you can carry lots of reading without carrying a lot of weight. From the point of view of the publishers, it eliminates the expenses of raw materials, printing, warehousing, distribution, and print over-runs inherent in traditional books – essentially all the costs associated with the sale of books but the cost of the manuscript. There is also a compelling ecological argument in favor of the device.

I suppose obviously, I count myself among those who prefer to have a physical copy of a book. There is more to the experience of books than the text alone. You can learn a lot about this by sitting here in the store for an hour, watching people select books. There is a tactile comfort in a book that is difficult to describe, but easy to recognize when a book lover handles the object of their desire. There is even the olfactory element. I would be a wealthy man if a dollar were deposited in the till for every time someone remarked on the odor of the bookstore when they walked through the door. Being surrounded by a roomful of books is a sensation that cannot be simulated. Aside from all that, I believe that the book is a perfected technology. My book “works” even when there is no electricity. It generally remains whole when dropped. In twenty years, when yet a new technology is upon us, my book on the bookshelf will still be mine and it will still be functioning fine. Books have permanence.

In July something happened with Kindle that I found unnerving, and Amazon is still trying to correct the problem. It turned out that a company that was selling George Orwell’s 1984 for Kindle and through Amazon did not have rights to the manuscript. Amazon’s response was to delete all of the copies that had been sold from the customer devices. The unnerving thing about this is not that there was a pirated edition being sold. What is shocking is that Amazon can completely and instantly delete a book from all these devices without notice or consent from the owners. More incredible is that it happened to be 1984. If I allow my imagination wander to an Orwellian dystopia, I can imagine a day in the future when all books are electronic, and should one offend the wrong element, a book could disappear so completely it would be as if it never existed. In Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451, destroyed books are preserved in the minds of individuals, memorized entirely to prevent their total loss. Had Kindle existed when Bradbury was penning Fahrenheit, the eradication of books could have occurred in a keystroke, leaving no time to attempt to preserve a remnant of the texts.

Worse still in my dystopian imagination, there is a time when the book is surreptitiously altered. In the middle of the night, one edition is deleted and replaced with another. Strangely, a geology states authoritatively that the earth is but 6,000 years old. I was certain that I had read about a genocide in Rwanda, but it has vanished from all the histories. Iran-Contra … must have imagined it…. It does not require a paranoid mind to imagine the manipulations that might occur if they could be executed so completely and irretrievably.

Amazon is now offering to replace the deleted books with authorized editions, or offering a $30 refund. It seems to me they don’t entirely understand the problem. They have drawn attention to something that most of us would never have guessed at or imagined: that the content on the Kindle can be removed by the seller at a whim. Suddenly the book and one’s rights to a copy are less than ethereal or ephemeral. Suddenly this version of the book has no permanence. It seems that a bookseller should be guarding the gates against such an attack at the foundations of the book, not facilitating the assault.

The Land Remembers

Peter D. Sloma @ 12:08 pm

“Once you have lived on the land, been a partner with its moods, secrets, seasons, you cannot leave. The living land remembers, touching you in unguarded moments, saying, ‘I am here. You are part of me.’”

So begins Ben Logan’s The Land Remembers. This memoir of a boyhood on a southwestern Wisconsin farm will always be at the top of my list of favorite rural Wisconsin books.

Ben Logan was the youngest of four boys born to a Norwegian immigrant father and schoolteacher mother. The family farm sat atop a ridge in the un-glaciated corner of the state. There they raised dairy cows, pigs, and chickens, and crops including corn, oats, alfalfa, and tobacco. Logan’s book is divided appropriately into sections by season, each section containing chapters of the various chores and events that marked the rhythm of the year. The reminiscences are nostalgic to be sure, but there is a recurring theme that can be read as cautionary: that the land does not so much belong to us, as we belong to it.

This may be an increasingly difficult idea for people to comprehend, as food production becomes daily more distant to most of us. Logan reminds us of a time when seed was carefully chosen, livestock was carefully tended, and when crops were rotated and soils were rested and rejuvenated – and when the family’s livelihood depended on it. These were days when it was unusual enough to acquire commodities from off the farm that they would be preceded with the adjective “store-bought.” The farm and its land existed in a cycle; it provided nourishment and in turn needed to be nourished.

Still, The Land Remembers was not written as a commentary, but as a recollection of the author’s treasured boyhood memories of his family and their deep and abiding connection to place. As a memoir it is poignant, and it also presents a portrait of a way of life that has become a memory to some, and unknown altogether to others.

First published in 1975, The Land Remembers has now been printed in eight editions. After a brief period out-of-print, it was re-released in 2006 with a new afterword from the author. Our friends Caroline Beckett and Frank Sandner at Itchy Cat Press have done a great service in bringing this book back into print. This is one Wisconsin book that should always be in print, we hope that it is available on the shelves here for many years to come.

New True Crime from Titletown Publishing

Peter D. Sloma @ 4:12 pm

Earlier today Green Bay writer Mike Dauplaise stopped by to drop off copies of his new book Torture at the Back Forty. The book tells the story of the murder of Margaret Anderson, the investigation, and finally the capture and trial of her attackers. Torture was released by Titletown Publishing at the same time as Lynda Drews’ Run at Destruction, both books concerning murders in the Green Bay area in the early 1980s.

Anderson’s rape and murder happened in Green Bay in 1983. Her body was found on a manure pile on Lime Kiln Road, where she was dumped after she was assaulted in a local tavern known as The Back Forty. It was a particularly shocking incident for the small town for its brutality. Her attackers were part of the motorcycle gang culture, and the book delves into that aspect of the crime.

Dauplaise also dropped off a few copies of his earlier book Bodyguard to the Packers. Dauplaise authored the book with Jerry Parins who was the former Security Director for the Packers. His position provided unique insights into the operations of the team and the NFL.

As we were talking earlier today, Dauplaise explained to me that it was the book with Jerry Parins that ultimately led to Torture at the Back Forty. Parins had been on the force of the Green Bay Police Department before working with the Packer organization, and a chapter in his book deals with being called to investigate the murder of Margaret Anderson. Researching and writing that chapter with Parins eventually led to an entire book devoted to the subject of the Anderson murder.

1878 Map of Brown County Available Now

Peter D. Sloma @ 1:25 pm

Peninsula Partners Publishing today released its reproduction of the 1878 map of Brown County. The sheet shows the lower part of the bay of Green Bay, Fort Howard, the city of Green Bay, and the upper portion of the Fox River. The map also illustrates remnants of the French long lot system in and around Green Bay.

Paul Burton just dropped by to alert me to a delay in the printing of Door County’s Islands. While I initially wrote that we were expecting the book around the end of the month, it looks like it will be delayed a couple more weeks. Copies can still be pre-ordered on the website, and we still expect to have copies available for the presentation and signing on the evening of September 16.

Coming Soon!

Peter D. Sloma @ 4:39 pm

Trygvie Jensen, author of Wooden Boats and Iron Men: A History of Commercial Fishing In Nothern Lake Michigan & Door County 1850-2005, will have a second book on the shelves soon.

In the course of researching and writing Wooden Boats and Iron Men, Jensen compiled many hours of interviews with the fisherman of the northern part of Lake Michigan. He also accumulated hundreds of photographs. Much of this material did not fit into the history, but Jensen conceived of using the fishing stories and photos for another book devoted to more personal tales of the trade.

This much anticipated book is now set to release at some point in the next few weeks. Through Waves and Gales Come Fishermen’s Tales is nearly 500 pages and includes some 40 illustrations and maps as well as 182 photographs. Presented as an oral history, Through Waves and Gales contains the stories of the fishermen as they were told to the author.

If the success of the first book is an indication, Through Waves and Gales should be well received. We will be setting up a pre-order space on the website so that our customers can reserve copies. Alternately customers can call the store to place one on hold. All pre-ordered and reserve copies will be released immediately when the book is delivered to the store. Also, watch for an up-coming release party and book signing at some point in October.

Bees

Peter D. Sloma @ 4:41 pm

Around midday yesterday, I had a moment when the store was empty. As it was Sunday, and as I have been showing up for work every single day for the past few months, I did not feel any guilt to have a seat for a moment in the store’s one armchair. I scanned around the room, looking for shelves that needed attention. Then I noticed, just in front of me at the corner of a display table, sat the last copy of a book I formerly had a pile of. I had intended to go through this book months ago, but now with only the one remaining, I picked it up.

While I was expecting a book about bees and beekeeping, A Keeper of Bees: A Story of Hive and Home by Allison Wallace is really a memoir in which bees loom large in the background. Wallace is introduced to her first hive as a doctoral candidate living in rural North Carolina. Her neighbor had come into a hive, and eventually it becomes her hive to tend. Her interest turns into an infatuation. Throughout the rest of this memoir she uses bees and beekeeping both as metaphor and mile marker for the changes in her life.

I am always curious about books about beekeeping because my grandfather, Charlie Kopecky, was a beekeeper. I will always remember the uniquely sweet smell inside the old Ford Econoline that was his bee van. This van was also the one we rode in when going fishing. Most months of the year you could find the dried up bodies of dead bees in the crevices and corners of the van. That scent of the honeycomb persisted into the wintertime when we would sit in that van on frozen lakes fishing for bluegills and walleyes and drinking thermoses of sweetened coffee with cream packed by my grandmother.

As a boy, I was equally fascinated with and terrified by those bees. I was intrigued by my grandfather’s ability to use a box of insects to produce beautiful blond clover honey. It seemed to be a magical production of something from nothing. In my mind at the time, the bees were malicious insects, purposefully causing harm to anyone they would come into contact with. I now know that bees are not so intent on stinging, but at the time, that thought made my grandfather seem heroically brave, being willing to move boxes and steal honey in his bee yard sometimes only wearing his netted helmet and coveralls. I would have liked to work beside him, but would have been too frightened to actually be of any use.

My uncle John now maintains the tradition, keeping bees in his own yards, only a few miles from were his father’s hives resided. Anytime I see my uncle our conversation invariably turns to the bees. I suppose like any other type of livestock, there are always problems. Mites, harsh winters, swarming, and now this phenomona known as “hive collapse” give beekeepers plenty of headaches. At times one is forced to wonder how it could be worth the trouble.

Still, since all those years ago riding in my grandfather’s van, I am also attracted to the idea of keeping bees. After the dedication page in her book Wallace begins with two quotations. One is from Sue Hubbel’s A Book of Bees. It reads “Beekeeping is farming for intellectuals.” This is yet another enticement, though perhaps I have the causation confused; could the practice impart wisdom to the beekeeper? Could it impart some wisdom to me? From my grandfather and uncle I know that the bees make you a student of the weather, of crops and blooms, of seasons, and a student of their own pests and problems. Wallace also must learn this discipline. Would I?

Yesterday, after an hour with the book, I found myself on the internet searching for bee packages, boxes, helmets and smokers. It is a foolish thought, and not one for next spring, but perhaps someday.

Peninsula Partners Publishing’s next project underway

Peter D. Sloma @ 11:38 am

Charlie Calkins and I founded Peninsula Partners Publishing little more than one year ago. We were able to complete two map reprints our first year. In 2008 we released the 1878 Door County sheet, and the 1914 plat for the Town of Gibraltar.
Thus far in 2009, we have released an 1881 plan of the City of Milwaukee, and a map of Chamber’s Island that was originally published as part of a sales prospectus for lots in a proposed development of the entire island that failed. We have just received the proofs for our fifth project, an 1878 Brown County sheet. The 1878 Brown County map shows the lower portion of the bay of Green Bay, the upper Fox River, the city of Green Bay and numerous other towns and post offices.
The printer we have been working with most recently has been doing a great job of keeping our projects moving along, so we expect to release this next sheet very soon.
All of our map reproductions are lithographically printed on an 80lb. semi-matte stock, the same sort of stock that is used for fine art prints.

Ruess redux and correction…

Peter D. Sloma @ 3:37 pm

In my previous post about Everett Ruess, I wrote that his remains have never been found. As it turns out that is now incorrect. Very recently his remains have been conclusively identified. The following link leads to a fascinating story from National Geographic Adventure:

National Geographic Adventure

Old Paper: New Works in Collage by William Budelman

Peter D. Sloma @ 1:24 pm

Preparations are underway for the first ever fine art exhibit here at The Peninsula Bookman. The exhibit opens this Friday, August 21 at 7pm with a reception, the work will remain on display for two weeks.

Budelman is a collage artist who works a lot with found objects, he seems to have a particular attraction to old letters, used tickets, postage, and other sorts of daily debris. I have been saving interesting paper for him for a few years. Lots of books come into the store that are at the end of their useful lives. Some of them go to the recycle bin, but the interesting ones go into a pile for Bill. He has ended up with lots of otherwise destroyed illustrated childrens books, tattered atlases, water damaged cartoon books, and so on.

As I have an appreciation for his work, it gives me some satisfaction to know that I may be supplying something useful to the creative process. Much better for these otherwise doomed books to find new life as donors to a new composition altogether. I don’t know how much (if any at all) of the paper delivered out of the store will return on Friday night. Still, I do know that it must have served to expand colors on the palette at least a little bit.

I am quite interested in the book and paper art. When I write this, I must be careful to qualify that I am not talking about fine binding and handmade papers (though I have an interest in these things as well). What I am referring to here is art that employs paper and books themselves as the medium. There are artists that carve books, artists that cut pages and covers of books into figures like pop-up books, others that render them entirely into three dimensional sculpture, some do large installation sculptures built out of hundreds, sometimes thousands of whole books. Truly new life for old books. I am hoping that the Budelman exhibit will be the first of a series of shows featuring book and paper art.

Please join us on Friday evening if you are able. If you are not, you will still have the opportunity to view the work until Labor Day weekend.

Unknown unknowns

Peter D. Sloma @ 2:32 pm

I do not intend to devote this post to the poetry of Donald Rumsfeld, but in that famously incoherent rambling he was right about one thing: there are many things you don’t know that you don’t know. That is one of the central joys of bookselling. Sometimes the gaps in one’s knowledge are embarrassing, other times you must simply concede that one cannot know everything. Most times it is a pleasure to find out about something that you were utterly unaware of previously. To fill a gap.

Like most days, I had one of those experiences today. In fact, just moments ago.

An older gentlemen approached me at the counter, saying he had a difficult question. I responded by saying I would try to help. “Well,” he said, “I don’t have a lot of information.” “Well,” I said, “I will still try to help.”

This sort of exchange is pretty typical for this business. Sometime it leads to an answer, often not, but we try.

He began with his story. There was, he explained, a German sub that was  somehow able to navigate around heavy British defenses at Scapa Flow in Scotland, defenses that included a net to specifically keep the u-boats out. Once inside the defenses, the u-boat was able to sink a British battleship and then remarkably, it was able to escape. Eventually back in Germany, the captain of the u-boat wrote a book about his experiences, especially the sinking of this boat at Scapa Flow. Unfortunately, the gentleman could not remember the commander’s name, or the name of his book, but it was this book he wanted.

I read a lot of history, including a fair amount on the Second World War, but this story had escaped me. I had not even a hazy recollection of any bit of it. I asked him if he could remember any other details of the story, such as the name of the battleship or the number of the sub.

The sub, he said, was U-236. Easy enough, I thought. I keyed U-236 into the Google search field. Up popped uboat.net with every detail about the career of this boat, including order date, launch date, captains, etc. (What a site!). As we read through the career, looking for bits about the captain, it became clear that U-236 was not the boat we were looking for. It was launched late in the war, and was used only as a training vessel. Wrong boat.

What about the name of the battleship that was sunk? The gentleman gave me a name that I can no longer recall, but as he did, another customer from the far corner of the store piped in: Nope, that boat was sunk at (and he named a location I cannot now remember, either). The gentleman conceded that the other customer was, in fact, right. Wrong boat.

Two strikes.

The next step was to cast a broader net. I simply keyed the search string “british” “boat” “sunk” “scapa” “flow” into the Google search field. Turns out, as many of you will know, this is indeed a rather famous story. Among the numerous results it was revealed that the British battleship HMS Royal Oak was sunk at Scapa flow in 1939 by the German U-47 under the command of Gunther Prien.

Gunther Prien later wrote a book about his career titled U-Boat Commander. The book is out-of-print. It also turns out that it is not in stock at The Peninsula Bookman. Some further searching revealed that there are copies available in the secondary market, but a nice one will cost a bit more than your average book. I recommended that the customer have his library track a copy down, and then decide whether he wanted to order a copy.

As a result of this exchange, I was not able to make a sale. However, that does not exactly make it pro bono work. I now have a cursory familiarity with another incident of the war; an incident I was utterly unaware of before. Also found a website that could be quite helpful in the future. And who knows, maybe he will decide he needs a copy and give me a phone call. Regardless, I am pretty sure that he will stop back in next time he is in Door County.

The desert southwest and Everett Ruess

Peter D. Sloma @ 4:11 pm

Last winter I spent a month traveling on the road buying inventory for the store. My intention was to first head south to Texas and then to head west, ultimately making my way up the California coast before turning east for home. As it happened, I never made California and ended up spending most of the trip driving in west Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona. Perhaps the revised route was the will of my subconscious, or perhaps it was the result of my reading as I traveled. Perhaps they were intertwined.

As I was traveling alone, and through lonely country, my chosen companions were those who had documented the same experience. Edward Abbey’s Desert Solitaire was an easy and obvious choice for weeks in the desert. William Least-Heat Moon’s Blue Highways was by my side as well. Abbey made me feel a bit guilty for whistling past so much of the landscape viewing it only through the windshield. He would have preferred me to have a slower and more deliberate experience of the land. Least-Heat Moon admonished me for using the interstate highways, rather than his approach of exploring the backest of backroads searching for diners with lots of wall calendars and surly waitresses. In the end, my excuse for both of them was that I was on a business trip. Neither seemed very satisfied with my excuse – I could tell by their steely silence.

Before I left for the trip I began reading Everett Ruess’ A Vagabond for Beauty. I have always had an interest in adventure and exploration lit, but I have a particular fondness for solitary adventurers and travelers. I was unaware of Ruess until I was introduced to him by Jon Krakauer in his book Into the Wild, about another solitary traveler, Christopher McCandless.

Everett Ruess was from an artistic middle class family in California. In the 1930s, his later teenage years, he began wandering California and the desert southwest. He traveled with little money, paying part of his way selling block prints he made of the landscapes he was so enchanted by.

On his very first solo trip, armed with either a simple charm and self-confidence or disarming naivete (or both), he arrived unannounced at the home of the already famous photographer Edward Weston to introduce himself. Apparently he instantly ingratiated himself with Weston, and this easy way with people was apparently a pattern for Ruess, whether he was meeting artists and musicians in the cities or Indians and desert rats out in the great expanses of the southwest. Eventually he met and befriended Ansel Adams, Maynard Dixon and Dorothea Lange.

Vagabond for Beauty is an edited collection of Ruess’ letters sent to his friends and family while on his travels. He was consistently awestruck by the natural beauty of the desert landscape, and he managed to skillfully render into words his own wonder at the scenes he was viewing. In the end, that is the beauty of these letters: In his aesthetic quest, Ruess never seems to find a limit in his capacity for fascination and amazement, and somehow he is able to communicate this sense of awe to his reader.

Everett Ruess wandered the the desert, largely in Arizona, Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico for four years.  In 1934, he disappeared at the age of 20, virtually without a trace. His last known camp was in southern Utah, near the Escalante River.  There has been some mystery and much speculation about his disappearance, but he has never been found. What remains are his letters, journals, poetry, wood-cuts, and a few photographs. Together they are the legacy of his adoration of wild places.

With Vagabond for Beauty fresh in my mind and on the top of my stack of reading, I too was drawn into the desert. One of my only sidetrips was to Canyon de Chelly in the remote northeastern corner of Arizona, and deep in the heart of the Navajo Nation.  Ruess was there in 1932. It took under two hours of driving to reach the park office once I left the interstate highway (Canyon de Chelly is now part of the National Park system). It would have taken Ruess days of trekking to reach the Canyon from Kayenta, which is something like 40 miles away. Walking the canyon and standing before the Anasazi ruins, I was filled with wonder like Ruess. Still, I would imagine the experience would have been different had I spent weeks hiking into the desert with a burro.

 © 2009 Peter D. Sloma

White House Ruin at Canyon de Chelly National Park © 2009 Peter D. Sloma

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »

Powered by WordPress