Books on Books: The Sixteen Pleasures

The Sixteen Pleasures by Robert HellengaAfter reading People of the Book, I’ve been looking for more fiction that features books and bookmaking. My friend Sharon suggested Robert Hellenga’s 1995 book The Sixteen Pleasures, about a 29 year old midwestern American, Margot, who is trained as a book conservator and goes to Florence in 1966 when the Arno flooded and destroyed or damaged millions of books and other artwork. Ostensibly she goes to Italy to help repair and protect the books, but she’s really in search of adventure and the memory of living in Florence as a teenager. She ends up staying at an abbey of cloistered nuns and one day a nun comes upon a pornographic volume bound with a prayer book that has been damaged by the flood. It turns out to be the only copy of long lost erotic sonnets, accompanied by rather anatomically explicit engravings. The abbess asks Margot to take care of the book and sell it, to help the abbey (but to be sure the Church doesn’t find out about it). So Margot rebinds the folios and repairs the spine and covers and goes about trying to sell the book. In the meantime, there’s lots of fine detail about the restoration as well as wonderful passages about art and the life of Florence. Plus Margot finds lots of romance and adventure.
The book was a good read. And I quickly discovered that Hellenga recently wrote another book about Margot, The Italian Lover — I always want to know what happens to the characters in the books I’ve enjoyed. “The Italian Lover” takes place in 1990, Margot is now 53 and still living in Italy, still restoring books. The conceit in the new novel is that Margot wrote a book called “The Sixteen Pleasures” about her life and it is to be made into a film. While Margot is still (mostly) front and center, and there’s a bit of book restoration, there are many more characters in the new novel and a lot of plot about making movies. Worse are the annoying product placements (not just an espresso maker, an Alessi espresso maker). Oh well, I did enjoy finding out more about Margot’s life.

Book Vases

lauracahill1.jpgLaura Cahill makes vases and furniture from discarded books. For the vases she wraps the spines around test tubes. She says “My idea of using second hand books came around after doing research into common unwanted objects. One of the most common unwanted objects that can be found at either charity shops, car boot sales and sometimes on the streets are books. I discovered that the glue in old books make them extremely difficult to recycle. Aware of this I challenged myself to turn the second hand books that I had been collecting, into desirable objects such as furniture, lighting and ornaments.” You can see more on Dezeen.

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Palm Leaf Books

Indic Palm leaf manuscriptPalm leaf books are a traditional book form of Southeast Asia and India. They are long, narrow dried and painted palm leaves, strung together on a cord. Being vertical they are a nice alternative to the omnipresent horizontal accordion fold book. (The one to the right is from the Columbia University Library.)
I’ve been thinking about palm leaf books this week (and what I might do with the vertical format in general) after reading Holland Cotter’s NY Times review of an exhibit of one especially beautiful example in the exhibit Early Buddhist Manuscript Painting: The Palm-Leaf Tradition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NY. Cotter says “sturdy and compact, they weigh next to nothing. The collapsible format protects them from dirt and light … Such practical features — size, resilience, portability — help explain why … the illustrated book was popular in India between the 10th and 13th centuries. And they suggest why such books and their illustrations have survived into the present, while painting in more perishable media has not … The palm-leaf sheets varied in length, but were seldom more than a few inches wide. They were stacked like slats in Venetian blinds and bound by threads passed through two holes in the center of each sheet. Rather than forming a single surface, as in modern palm-leaf paintings, the sheets in books were meant to be seen one at a time. The sequence for viewing them was determined by the flow of an inscribed text, which was punctuated with tiny paintings.”
Several years ago, I made a book loosely based on the palm leaf (see it here). There’s instructions for making them here.