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Poets in Nassau talk

I had a wonderful time at the Poets in Nassau talk on Feb. 22.   Thank you to everyone who came out.  It was a great group, which held an open reading after my talk. I’m ashamed to say I had no idea Long Island had such a lively poetry scene.  I discussed Hosmer’s relationship with Elizabeth Barrett and Robert Browning, who were early supporters of the artist.  (Virginia Woolf even mentions Hosmer in Flush, her biography of Elizabeth’s dog, a book I highly recommend.) I also discussed some poetry Hosmer herself wrote, including the The Doleful Ditty of the Roman Caffe Grecco.  Hosmer published this poem in New York Evening Post in 1864, while she was defending herself against accusations that her stonecutters were responsible for her work.  (They did do the actual carving, as was the case in the Roman studios of most of the American artists in Italy).  The Caffe Grecco, which still exists, was a popular gathering point for expatriates in Rome.  In this poem, Hosmer mocks male sculptors who claim women artists are stealing their thunder, depicting them as lazy gossips.  Early in the poem, one male artist proclaims, “‘Tis time my friend we cogitate/ And make some desperate stand/ or else our sister artists here/will drive us from this land.”  Eventually one man rises to defend the women, noting “Suppose you try another plan/ More worthy of art and you:/ Suppose you give them for their works/ The credit which is due/ And honest and kindly word/ If spoken now and then/ Would prove what seems a doubtful point/ You could at least be men.” That last line got a big laugh.

The photos below are by Lorraine Conlin, who also hosted the event, read a lovely poem herself, and gave me a ride to the train station afterwards.  The sculpture I am holding is a reproduction of Hosmer’s Hands of the Brownings, which can be purchased at the gift shop of the Metropolitan Museum of art.

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Irish Arts Center Book Day

This project sounds really cool and perhaps a better way to celebrate Irish culture than drinking green beer. I’m going to go through my bookshelves to see if I have any books by Irish or Irish American authors that I am willing to part with.

Donate your books to the inaugural Irish Arts Center Book Day in New York City

On St. Patrick’s Day, Irish Arts Center will set up teams of volunteers at subway locations across all five boroughs to hand out books to New Yorkers for free. Help us promote literacy by dropping off your books by Irish and Irish American authors at any of the following locations from now until March 15:

American Irish Historical Society
991 Fifth Avenue between 80th and 81st Streets
Hours: M-F, 10am to 5pm
212-288-2263

Glucksman Ireland House New York University

1 Washington Mews on 5th Avenue
Hours: M-Thur, 9:30 am to 6 pm, plus public events in the evenings
212-998-3950

Irish Arts Center
553 West 51st Street between 10th and 11th Avenues
Hours: M-F, 10am to 6pm, plus public events in the evenings and weekends
212-757-3318 x 209

New York Irish Center

10-40 Jackson Avenue, Long Island City
Hours: M-F, 10am to 5pm
718-482-0909

Books should be in good condition. Thank you for supporting Irish Arts Center Book Day! For further information on book deposit or to volunteer, contact volunteer@irishartscenter.org or 212-757-3318 ext 202.

Help the NYPL

I am the daughter of a librarian, and I love libraries.   As in, one of my favorite things in the world is to go to a new library.  When I worked at the Harriet Jacobs Family Papers and had to hire interns and staff members, I would always make sure to tell them they would need to do research at the 42nd Street research library.  (The one with the lions).  If their eyes lit up in excitement, they were hired.  I knew they were researchers at heart.

The New York Public Library, like so many institutions these days, is facing a budget crisis.  The budget for buying books has been cut by 26%.  For its Friends Spring Book Fund  Campaign, it has two angels, however; NYPL Trustee Tim Barakett, and his wife Michele, will match every dollar given with two of their own, up to $100,000.  So please consider contributing, even a small amount; your money will have triple the punch.

Speaking of the NYPL, I was thrilled to learn that the Jefferson Market Branch has added Harriet Hosmer: A Cultural Biography to its collection.   My mother worked at this branch when I was a baby, and it is now my local library, so it means a lot for it to be there.  (I’m especially honored after learning of the budget cuts.)
If you haven’t visited, stop by the next time you are in Greenwich Village–it is a beautiful building, originally a courthouse, designed by Frederick Clark Withers and Calvert Vaux in the 1870s.  Don’t miss the spiral staircase.  And Sex and the City fans should make sure to also visit the garden next door–it is where Steve and Miranda got married.

Last week, the NY Times had an article about an app that lets you locate NYC landmarks.  And of course I was thrilled the piece highlighted the Hall of Fame for Great Americans, which is on the Bronx Community Campus, where I work.  It was actually the first Hall of Fame in the United States and was designed by Stanford White.  Someone at the NY Times seems to have quite an interest in the campus (which was originally built as the NYU uptown location).  There was had a less-than-flattering article about the Hall and its present condition in Dec. 2009, as well as a more positive one about the entire campus in 2006.

I will be speaking about Harriet Hosmer’s relationship with Elizabeth Barrett and Robert Browning at the Poets of Nassau gathering on February 22 at 7 PM. This event was arranged by Christina Rau, a writer I met this summer at the terrific NEH workshop Along the Shore, which explored the history and future of the Brooklyn waterfront. She recently published two poems inspired by her experience in Brooklyn: Down the Promenade (scroll down) and How to Begin a Brooklyn Romance.

The talk will talk place at Bellmore Memorial Library, at 2288 Bedford Avenue in Bellmore.   You can learn about the group on its blog.

As many book lovers, especially those who live in the western United States, know, the Tattered Cover is an incredible independent book store in Denver–or now 3 stores, actually.  I have gone there my entire life. I remember sitting on the floor reading Gnomes in its first tiny location in Cherry Creek, after taking ballet at the Red Shoes up the street.  And my shelves groan under the weight of books I have either purchased there or that other people have purchased for me as gifts.  When my family is in Denver for Christmas, the Tattered Cover is always the last stop on my father’s and my marathon Christmas Eve shopping trip.   (Below is picture of Neilson, my father, and I last Christmas in the store.) For all these reasons, I am especially excited that I will speaking about Harriet Hosmer: A Cultural Biography on March 22 at 7:30 at the LoDo branch of the store.

Tattered Cover, Dec. 24, 2009

This fall, the University of Massachusetts Press not only  published my book, but also Jonathan Silverman’s Nine Choices:  Johnny Cash and American Culture.  Jonathan and I both worked in the English Department at Pace University (he as a professor, me as an editor at the Harriet Jacobs Family Papers) at early stages of these projects, so it is is nice to seem them featured next to each other on the homepage for the press.  I love Johnny Cash, so I can’t wait to read this one.  You can find about events for the book on its Facebook page.

On Friday, I popped into the Harvard Book Store, a terrific independent book shop in Harvard Square (obviously) to see if it carried Harriet Hosmer: A Cultural Biography.  I didn’t see the book in the American history section, so I dropped off a press release at the information desk.  (A friend of mine who works in marketing for a big publisher had suggested I approach independent bookstores personally about carrying the book.  It is not something I would have ever thought of–like many authors, I think, I just assumed bookstores would just magically know about it.  But it was great advice.)  Yesterday, I received a very nice e-mail from the head buyer for the store explaining that, in fact, the store did carry the book–in the art section!  Which of course makes perfect sense.  So if you are in the Cambridge area and want to buy a copy while supporting a local merchant, stop in.  You can also order online from the shop.

On Friday, on a research break, I happened upon the home where Harriet Jacobs’ ran a boarding house in the 1870s in Cambridge, Mass.  As I was an associate editor of the Harriet Jacobs Family Papers, and had done quite a bit of research on the people who lived in the house while Jacobs’ ran it, this is quite exciting.  There is a marker in front of the house which goes into great detail about her life.  (For those who don’t know, Jacobs was born a slave in Edenton, NC, escaped to NYC, and eventually wrote the slave narrative Incidents in the Life of Slave Girl.) I had always meant to seek out the house, but my research trips are usually harried, and I had never made the time.  It was great to stumble across it on my way to lunch.  The house is located on Story at Mt. Auburn, in case you want to seek it out yourself.

Thanks to everyone who came out to hear me speak about Harriet Hosmer at the Watertown Free Public Library on Thursday.  It was great to talk about HH in her hometown.  If you are interested in her and ever find yourself in the area, it is certainly worth stopping by and seeing the library’s Hosmer collection of sculptures and artifacts.

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