This Blog accompanies my class Miss Bronte Meets Miss Pym. There are graphics and photos, bliographies and lists of books in print. Included is information about related topics and The other Brontes, Shirley Jackson, Laura Ingalls Wilder and Susan Glapsell. Please visit often, and feel free to visit whether you are in my course or not. In Memory of our Friend Cathy Berta
Miss Pym and a Friend
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Friday, December 26, 2014
Antique Doll Collector Magazine: Cotillion; Come Dance with the Dolls
Antique Doll Collector Magazine: Cotillion; Come Dance with the Dolls: Happy Boxing Day, Merry Christmas (It's the 2nd day of Christmas!) and Happy New Year! When I was a little girl, I used my beautiful do...
Friday, December 19, 2014
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Merry Christmas!!
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Merry Christmas!!: VIRGINIA, your little friends are wrong. They have been affected by the skepticism of a skeptical age. They do not...
Sunday, December 14, 2014
The Moppet Children
We didn't call them "Big Eyes" when I was little, we called them
"Moppets." I still have the paintings, prints, greeting cards, and
dolls that featured the sad, big eyed children. Other artists made
them, too, I know, and some versions of these paintings featuring older
children hung at Ben's, our favorite restaurant.
They were wildly popular, and Pym would have known them. Some of her characters, the more waif-like women, resemble them.
Sunday Morning today feature the story of the Keane's, and the fact that Walter painted nothing; Margaret painted and let him take the credit. It was the early to mid sixties, and per "The Feminine Mystique" as Betty Friedan penned it, the credit for a woman's work went to her husband. We call it fraud today, but really, this is more common than we know.
The dolls of Bernard Ravca were allegedly made by his wife, Frances. She made a few smaller dolls on her own, but she is also supposed to be responsible for the realistic and fantastic needle sculpted and bread-crumb dough creations. Mme. Tolstoy heavily edited Count Leo's work, as told in Edward's "Sophia." I have to wonder how much she actually wrote. In the 80s, a California woman took the bar for her husband. He had threatened her and placed her under terrible duress. She dressed as a man, beat all the security, suffered because she was in the last stages of a difficult pregnancy, took the test, then had to go to the hospital. She passed.
I remember writing an article for a magazine I and my then "insignificant" other both wrote for. He hadn't finished his article, and pressured me into letting him take mine and put his name on it. That was the begininng of the end. No money was involved, and we weren't married, so I left.
Shortly after I came back home, before Walter Keane died, My aunt ran into him in hte Bay Area. She was buying some cards by Keane, and he told her he was the artist. He signed them for her, and she sent them to me, so I have Walter Keane's signature, and his provenance that a lie was perpetuated.
Many dolls like Lonely Lisa were created in the image of the Big Eye kids. I always thought they took after the Googleys, Kewpies, and Campbell Kids, but Margarate Keane didn't say this. Besides, her children are sad eyed as well, where most ofhte Googleys are happy.
Still, I love my moppets, and can't wait to see "Big Eyes," even if the artist took being an "excellent woman" to such an extreme, but we do what we must to survive.
They were wildly popular, and Pym would have known them. Some of her characters, the more waif-like women, resemble them.
Sunday Morning today feature the story of the Keane's, and the fact that Walter painted nothing; Margaret painted and let him take the credit. It was the early to mid sixties, and per "The Feminine Mystique" as Betty Friedan penned it, the credit for a woman's work went to her husband. We call it fraud today, but really, this is more common than we know.
The dolls of Bernard Ravca were allegedly made by his wife, Frances. She made a few smaller dolls on her own, but she is also supposed to be responsible for the realistic and fantastic needle sculpted and bread-crumb dough creations. Mme. Tolstoy heavily edited Count Leo's work, as told in Edward's "Sophia." I have to wonder how much she actually wrote. In the 80s, a California woman took the bar for her husband. He had threatened her and placed her under terrible duress. She dressed as a man, beat all the security, suffered because she was in the last stages of a difficult pregnancy, took the test, then had to go to the hospital. She passed.
I remember writing an article for a magazine I and my then "insignificant" other both wrote for. He hadn't finished his article, and pressured me into letting him take mine and put his name on it. That was the begininng of the end. No money was involved, and we weren't married, so I left.
Shortly after I came back home, before Walter Keane died, My aunt ran into him in hte Bay Area. She was buying some cards by Keane, and he told her he was the artist. He signed them for her, and she sent them to me, so I have Walter Keane's signature, and his provenance that a lie was perpetuated.
Many dolls like Lonely Lisa were created in the image of the Big Eye kids. I always thought they took after the Googleys, Kewpies, and Campbell Kids, but Margarate Keane didn't say this. Besides, her children are sad eyed as well, where most ofhte Googleys are happy.
Still, I love my moppets, and can't wait to see "Big Eyes," even if the artist took being an "excellent woman" to such an extreme, but we do what we must to survive.
Monday, December 8, 2014
An Apologia for Countess Erzebet Bathory: An Allusion to Erzebet in The Book of Lost Things ...
An Apologia for Countess Erzebet Bathory: An Allusion to Erzebet in The Book of Lost Things ...: In some versions of Erzebet's legends, she has a great white wolf for a pet. Wolves are linked to vampires, and Dracula, whom Stoker al...
Saturday, December 6, 2014
New Book on Laura Ingalls Wilder
Pioneer Girl: The Annotated Autobiography
by Laura Ingalls Wilder
A treasure trove of new details about the life and experiences of Little House on the Prairie creator Laura Ingalls Wilder and her pioneer family is offered in this book, edited by award-winning Wilder biographer Pamela Smith Hill and based on the author’s letters, manuscripts, and other documents from the time. Morris says, "Perhaps the biggest draw of Pioneer Girl is that it was written as more of a diary of memories, skipping back and forth as her mind saw fit, and it was not changed as the Little House A treasure trove of new details about the life and experiences of Little House on the Prairie creator Laura Ingalls Wilder and her pioneer family is offered in this book, edited by award-winning Wilder biographer Pamela Smith Hill and based on the author’s letters, manuscripts, and other documents from the time. Morris says, "Perhaps the biggest draw of Pioneer Girl is that it was written as more of a diary of memories, skipping back and forth as her mind saw fit, and it was not changed as the Little House on the Prairie books were to add that little zing of which publishers are so fond. This is her story, stark, detailed, and wonderful, as she meant it to be." ...more A treasure trove of new details about the life and experiences of Little House on the Prairie creator Laura Ingalls Wilder and her pioneer family is offered in this book, edited by award-winning Wilder biographer Pamela Smith Hill and based on the author’s letters, manuscripts, and other documents from the time. Morris says, "Perhaps the biggest draw of Pioneer Girl is that it was written as more of a diary of memories, skipping back and forth as her mind saw fit, and it was not changed as the Little House on the Prairie books were to add that little zing of which publishers are so fond. This is her story, stark, detailed, and wonderful, as she meant it to be."
by Laura Ingalls Wilder
A treasure trove of new details about the life and experiences of Little House on the Prairie creator Laura Ingalls Wilder and her pioneer family is offered in this book, edited by award-winning Wilder biographer Pamela Smith Hill and based on the author’s letters, manuscripts, and other documents from the time. Morris says, "Perhaps the biggest draw of Pioneer Girl is that it was written as more of a diary of memories, skipping back and forth as her mind saw fit, and it was not changed as the Little House A treasure trove of new details about the life and experiences of Little House on the Prairie creator Laura Ingalls Wilder and her pioneer family is offered in this book, edited by award-winning Wilder biographer Pamela Smith Hill and based on the author’s letters, manuscripts, and other documents from the time. Morris says, "Perhaps the biggest draw of Pioneer Girl is that it was written as more of a diary of memories, skipping back and forth as her mind saw fit, and it was not changed as the Little House on the Prairie books were to add that little zing of which publishers are so fond. This is her story, stark, detailed, and wonderful, as she meant it to be." ...more A treasure trove of new details about the life and experiences of Little House on the Prairie creator Laura Ingalls Wilder and her pioneer family is offered in this book, edited by award-winning Wilder biographer Pamela Smith Hill and based on the author’s letters, manuscripts, and other documents from the time. Morris says, "Perhaps the biggest draw of Pioneer Girl is that it was written as more of a diary of memories, skipping back and forth as her mind saw fit, and it was not changed as the Little House on the Prairie books were to add that little zing of which publishers are so fond. This is her story, stark, detailed, and wonderful, as she meant it to be."
Wednesday, December 3, 2014
"I am Excellent Woman, and I Pack Heat" Charlie's Angels
Over the last few months, I've caught up with Charlie's Angels on Cozi TV. I confess to never having seen many episodes when they were on prime time. I was always, always studying at night. To me, the concept seemed like "Bimbo with a gun," though I admired Jaclyn Smith, and I still like her clothing like at K-Mart (Yes, K-Mart!).
They just seemed silly, and I used to make fun of Farrah Fawcett Majors, calling her "Farrah Fawcett Drip." I changed my opinion of her long before she lost a very brave battle with cancer. I used to love watching "Good Sports" with Ryan O'Neal, and loved her with A. Martinez in "Criminal Behaviors.'
In hindsight, I probably wasn't paying that much attention. Now, I watch when I can. All the actresses who played in the series went on to do other things, and Kate Jackson has been a favorite of mine since "Dark Shadows" [one day, I have to post about "Excellent Monsters!"] They all six have proved to be versatile actresses, and Smith went on to a successful business career. In the show, they are beautiful, even conventionally so, but they are all different in their tastes, all smart, all brave, all good detectives. They did a lot for women, like me, who now work in criminal justice and legal professions. Their clothes are still tasteful, but not frilly or silly. They encouraged women to defend themselves, to seek nontraditional careers, to build teams, friendships, and professions.
Pym would have approved, somehow, I'm sure. These are witty, clever, beautiful women, the kind she liked to write about, the kind she was.
They prove intelligence can go a long way, but that an attractive woman isn't all about sex appeal and men. They took a lot of ribbing when the show was being filmed, and some bad press.That 30 years later or so, people of all genders and ages still want to watch them, well, it speaks tomes.
They just seemed silly, and I used to make fun of Farrah Fawcett Majors, calling her "Farrah Fawcett Drip." I changed my opinion of her long before she lost a very brave battle with cancer. I used to love watching "Good Sports" with Ryan O'Neal, and loved her with A. Martinez in "Criminal Behaviors.'
In hindsight, I probably wasn't paying that much attention. Now, I watch when I can. All the actresses who played in the series went on to do other things, and Kate Jackson has been a favorite of mine since "Dark Shadows" [one day, I have to post about "Excellent Monsters!"] They all six have proved to be versatile actresses, and Smith went on to a successful business career. In the show, they are beautiful, even conventionally so, but they are all different in their tastes, all smart, all brave, all good detectives. They did a lot for women, like me, who now work in criminal justice and legal professions. Their clothes are still tasteful, but not frilly or silly. They encouraged women to defend themselves, to seek nontraditional careers, to build teams, friendships, and professions.
Pym would have approved, somehow, I'm sure. These are witty, clever, beautiful women, the kind she liked to write about, the kind she was.
They prove intelligence can go a long way, but that an attractive woman isn't all about sex appeal and men. They took a lot of ribbing when the show was being filmed, and some bad press.That 30 years later or so, people of all genders and ages still want to watch them, well, it speaks tomes.
Record Broken for 19th C. Doll-this Just In!
This is my favorite Jumeau, words below by Theriault's, and we thank them for allowing me to use their press release and photos.
A rare model from the "Series Fantastique" of French dollmaker Emile Jumeau set a new world record for a 19th century doll when it realized $285,000 at Theriault's antique doll auction at the Waldorf Astoria in New York on November 22. The series, introduced in 1892, featured highly expressive children who were gleefullylaughing, scowling, or impi...shly "making faces", and was a far cry from the beautiful idealized child dolls, known as bebes, that had been the mainstay of the Jumeau firm for the past quarter century. Parents immediately rebuffed these "outlandish" character dolls, preferring the classic "pretty" bebe for their little girls, and afteronly a few years, the production, which was always small, ended. This particular model, of which only one other example in this size is known to exist, was incised "201". Depicting a child with wide-beaming smile accentuated by dramatic large eyes, it sold to a private Boston collector.
The 308 lot auction by Theriault's realized $1.3 million, with enthusiastic bidders from throughout the United States, and internationally from France, Germany, Spain, Philippines, Russia, Switzerland and South America. The Maryland-based firm, which conducts auctions throughout the United States, is entering its 45th year specializing in antique dolls and related childhood ephemera. Collectors may also call 800-638-0422 or email info@theriaults.com for any additional information on the event.
A rare model from the "Series Fantastique" of French dollmaker Emile Jumeau set a new world record for a 19th century doll when it realized $285,000 at Theriault's antique doll auction at the Waldorf Astoria in New York on November 22. The series, introduced in 1892, featured highly expressive children who were gleefullylaughing, scowling, or impi...shly "making faces", and was a far cry from the beautiful idealized child dolls, known as bebes, that had been the mainstay of the Jumeau firm for the past quarter century. Parents immediately rebuffed these "outlandish" character dolls, preferring the classic "pretty" bebe for their little girls, and afteronly a few years, the production, which was always small, ended. This particular model, of which only one other example in this size is known to exist, was incised "201". Depicting a child with wide-beaming smile accentuated by dramatic large eyes, it sold to a private Boston collector.
The 308 lot auction by Theriault's realized $1.3 million, with enthusiastic bidders from throughout the United States, and internationally from France, Germany, Spain, Philippines, Russia, Switzerland and South America. The Maryland-based firm, which conducts auctions throughout the United States, is entering its 45th year specializing in antique dolls and related childhood ephemera. Collectors may also call 800-638-0422 or email info@theriaults.com for any additional information on the event.
Tuesday, November 25, 2014
hide-n-(sensory)-seeking: A Year in the Secret Garden - Tea Party, Book Revi...
hide-n-(sensory)-seeking: A Year in the Secret Garden - Tea Party, Book Revi...: We are still buzzing with excitement from this weekend. Our house was transformed Saturday afternoon into a dazzling venue for our Mid...
See above for a Secret Garden Teaparty
See above for a Secret Garden Teaparty
over 20,000! Free Newsletter
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Grodnertal with Provenance
Wooden doll provenance linked to Queen Victoria! The story of a doll once played with by the great Queen and Doll Collector herself.
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In Praise of Souvenir Dolls
Great collections like Sam Pryor's, Laura Starr's, and Janet Pagter Johl's have been seeded by souvenir and tourist dolls, those small ambassadors of goodwill from faraway lands. They are a worthy addition to any collection.
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Why not Everyone Collects Antique Dolls
You might be surprised at why some collectors prefer not to collect antique dolls, even when they admire them.
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"Thrifty Treasures:" Discovering a Vintage Collection at Goodwill
A wonderful find gets better with great customer service. The dolls are now sorted and put away, some awaiting TLC, others ready for display. Thrift stores are still great places to find dolls, and buying them there does some good for others as well.
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Wednesday, November 19, 2014
Newsletter About.com
Those who get the Doll Collecting at About.com Newsletter; please be patient. There has been a glitch with publishing it beyond my control. You may read it on my blog, Dr. E's Doll Museum. at http:// wwwdollmuseum.blogspot.com/ I am sorry for the incovenience. I did resend it, so you may get two copies.
Thursday, November 13, 2014
Memoir; Writing your Life Story: Doll Museum: Antique Doll Collector Magazine: This...
Memoir; Writing your Life Story: Doll Museum: Antique Doll Collector Magazine: This...: Doll Museum: Antique Doll Collector Magazine: This just in: 6 F... : Antique Doll Collector Magazine: This just in: 6 Fridays till Christmas...
Thursday, November 6, 2014
Antique Doll Collector Magazine: Jumeau Highlights from our Current Issue
Antique Doll Collector Magazine: Jumeau Highlights from our Current Issue: Laughing gleefully on the cover of ADC is a fantastically rare Jumeau 201 , never auctioned before, only one of two known examples. Will sh...
Wednesday, October 29, 2014
An Apologia for Countess Erzebet Bathory: The Countess Replies
An Apologia for Countess Erzebet Bathory: The Countess Replies: The Countess Replies Alright; enough is enough! What rubbish! I am as civic minded as the next member of the nobility, but m...
Free Newletter with a Link on Huguette' Clark, another Excellent Woman
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Sewing Kit for an Antique Doll Antique Doll Collector Magazine www.antiquedollcollectormagazineblog.com |
Weekly Newsletter Doll Collecting at
About.com;collectdolls.about.com. It’s
Free!!
From Ellen Tsagaris, your Guide to Doll Collecting
Happy Halloween Week all Doll Collectors and
Enthusiasts! There are lots of chances to find interesting dolls this
time of year, I hope your spooky doll dreams come true! Get out your
witch, scarecrow, and Dracula dolls, and let the Pumpkin Heads Reign
Modern dolls sold at a farm auction. See
what happened to the estate dolls I worked on earlier this year.
Search Related Topics: auction
danbury mint patsy
The Shelter for Misfit Doll is a wonderful
site; I hope that The Little Dead Girl will refresh and add new material soon!
Search Related Topics: shelter for misfit dolls outsider dolls folk dolls
Read about a doll club's pilgrimage to the
ultimate doll store.
Search Related Topics: gigi's dolls and sherry's teddy bears selling dolls doll clothes
An Amazing Portrait in Wax of the beloved queen and doll
collector was a star in the not to distant past Theriault's auction.
Featured Articles:
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Antique Doll Collector Magazine: Vintage Dolls Group on Facebook
Antique Doll Collector Magazine: Vintage Dolls Group on Facebook: For anyone interested in Vintage Dolls; here is a great book on FB; I often share our posts, there. Very nice people and many interesting V...
Dolls from Pym's heyday; she does mention "stuffed animals" and Cylcadic idosl, and Marcia from "Quartet" is in Susan Pearce's The Collector's Voice Series; Modern Voices.
Dolls from Pym's heyday; she does mention "stuffed animals" and Cylcadic idosl, and Marcia from "Quartet" is in Susan Pearce's The Collector's Voice Series; Modern Voices.
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Theriault's |
Monday, October 27, 2014
Doll Museum: A Video on Wax Dolls
Doll Museum: A Video on Wax Dolls: Here is a video I did on wax dolls, to continue our 19th c. history. Besides Mary Hillier's books, good information is available at Dol...
The Bronte Sisters played with these, so did Nellie Olesen of On the Banks of Plum Creek.
The Bronte Sisters played with these, so did Nellie Olesen of On the Banks of Plum Creek.
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Courtesy, Theriault's |
Thursday, October 23, 2014
A Dried Piece of Fish Leftover
Wednesday, October 22, 2014
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: This Week's About.com Doll Collecting Newsletter
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: This Week's About.com Doll Collecting Newsletter: From Ellen Tsagaris , your Guide to Doll Collecting Review our site at About.com for more. We think variety is the spice of doll coll...
Friday, October 17, 2014
More Pym Links on the Web
For those who enjoy Pym surfing; after reading and studying Pym, I can't Make room for Daddy anymore; the Feminine Mystique ruined "The Danny Thomas Show" for me! Enjoy the links:
1. Philip Hensher toasts the novelist Barbara Pym - Telegraph
1. Philip Hensher toasts the novelist Barbara Pym - Telegraph
Jun 2, 2013 - In her centenary year, Philip Hensher celebrates the uniquely English comedies of novelist Barbara Pym
2. Barbara Pym Quotes (Author of Excellent Women)
www.goodreads.com/author/quotes/104015.Barbara_Pym
60 quotes from Barbara Pym: 'Of course it's alright for librarians to smell of drink.',
'The small things of life were often so much bigger than the grea...
Marvelous Spinster by C. Frye, Pym at 100
From Last Year's June 2, 2013 100th Birthday of Pym, an excerpt:
A note in Barbara Pym's diary instructs: "Read some of Jane Austen's last chapters and find out how she manages all the loose ends." Next entry, a fairly typical one: "The Riviera Cafe, St. Austell is decorated in shades of chocolate brown. Very tasteless, as are the cakes." This was written in 1952. She was 38, had published two novels, Some Tame Gazelle and the resplendent Excellent Women, and was at work on the next. It had taken 15 years of dutiful revising and circulating it around for Some Tame Gazelle to find a publisher. During the rewrites she had tried to heed her agent's advice to "be more wicked, if necessary."
This is all so worthy, so stealth, so Pymian! Hazel Holt, her friend (and later biographer and literary executor), shared an office with her at the Institute. In her life of Pym, she describes their conjectures about the home lives and backstories of their Institute colleagues, the Anthony Powell Dance to the Music of Time quizzes they'd give each other in the long afternoons, how Pym would repurpose old galleys as stationery for typing her novels. Once an anthropologist, visiting their office, told them that years before he'd been to a party Virginia Woolf had given. The two leapt on this: glamorous brilliant Bloomsbury, what had the party been like? "But, alas, all he could remember was that the refreshment had consisted only of buns and cocoa." This, too, seems very Pymian.
Another Pym thing is always to be a little in need of a revival. One critic-friend, attempting to spark interest in her novels after they'd gone out of fashion in the early 70s, recommended them as "books for a bad day." And they are, it's true. They're comforting and deeply funny. Try to describe them, though, and they go all muzzy: curates and jumble sales, tea urns and "distressed gentlewomen." (You can make Wodehouse sound similar with this sort of inventorying: country houses and cow creamers, prize pigs and school prizes.) Their human values—modesty, compassion, generosity, stoicism—are quiet. Worse, they're so beautifully crafted, so stringently revised and edited, they appear deceptively as if they had been easy to write. What's hard to get across is that Pym's novels are, basically, spinster drag novels—the emotions quite genuine and at the same time a send-up, a pose. Love, Melancholy, Poetry, and Death, all the most Romantic Trappings, courtesy of the vaguely nice-looking lady in dowdy shoes at the next table who you didn't notice jotting down everything you said into her little spiral notebook.
"Let me… add that I am not at all like Jane Eyre, who must have given hope to so many plain women who tell their stories in the first person," says Mildred Lathbury in Excellent Women.
http://www.theawl.com/2013/05/the-first-century-of-marvelous-spinster-barbara-pym
A note in Barbara Pym's diary instructs: "Read some of Jane Austen's last chapters and find out how she manages all the loose ends." Next entry, a fairly typical one: "The Riviera Cafe, St. Austell is decorated in shades of chocolate brown. Very tasteless, as are the cakes." This was written in 1952. She was 38, had published two novels, Some Tame Gazelle and the resplendent Excellent Women, and was at work on the next. It had taken 15 years of dutiful revising and circulating it around for Some Tame Gazelle to find a publisher. During the rewrites she had tried to heed her agent's advice to "be more wicked, if necessary."
This Sunday, June 2, marks the centenary of Barbara Pym's birth: If you aren't lucky enough to be with the Barbara Pym Society in Oxford, you could make something from her cookbook (downloadable!) or just read one of her novels with champagne, tea or your hot milky drink of choice.
For new Pym readers: I'd start with either Excellent Women or No Fond Return Of Love. Other nice starting points: A Glass of Blessings, Less Than Angels, and The Sweet Dove Died. Do not start with Crampton Hodnet.
During her 20s, she'd completed several other books, including a Finnish novel (she'd never been to Finland) and a spy novel written during WWII, which was very good except for the actual spy parts (she had never met a spy). During the war she'd been placed in the Censorship Department, then joined the Wrens; she now lived in London with her younger sister Hilary. She didn't expect to make a living off her writing. She worked at the International African Institute in the editorial department, managing its journal and ushering various "dusty academic" anthropological monographs and studies through publication. Only a handful of the anthropologists she worked with knew or appreciated that the woman overseeing their indexes and edits was one of Britain's great comic novelists. Many an acknowledgement went: "I am grateful to Miss Barbara Pym for the considerable work involved in preparing the final version of the text for the printer." For new Pym readers: I'd start with either Excellent Women or No Fond Return Of Love. Other nice starting points: A Glass of Blessings, Less Than Angels, and The Sweet Dove Died. Do not start with Crampton Hodnet.
This is all so worthy, so stealth, so Pymian! Hazel Holt, her friend (and later biographer and literary executor), shared an office with her at the Institute. In her life of Pym, she describes their conjectures about the home lives and backstories of their Institute colleagues, the Anthony Powell Dance to the Music of Time quizzes they'd give each other in the long afternoons, how Pym would repurpose old galleys as stationery for typing her novels. Once an anthropologist, visiting their office, told them that years before he'd been to a party Virginia Woolf had given. The two leapt on this: glamorous brilliant Bloomsbury, what had the party been like? "But, alas, all he could remember was that the refreshment had consisted only of buns and cocoa." This, too, seems very Pymian.
Another Pym thing is always to be a little in need of a revival. One critic-friend, attempting to spark interest in her novels after they'd gone out of fashion in the early 70s, recommended them as "books for a bad day." And they are, it's true. They're comforting and deeply funny. Try to describe them, though, and they go all muzzy: curates and jumble sales, tea urns and "distressed gentlewomen." (You can make Wodehouse sound similar with this sort of inventorying: country houses and cow creamers, prize pigs and school prizes.) Their human values—modesty, compassion, generosity, stoicism—are quiet. Worse, they're so beautifully crafted, so stringently revised and edited, they appear deceptively as if they had been easy to write. What's hard to get across is that Pym's novels are, basically, spinster drag novels—the emotions quite genuine and at the same time a send-up, a pose. Love, Melancholy, Poetry, and Death, all the most Romantic Trappings, courtesy of the vaguely nice-looking lady in dowdy shoes at the next table who you didn't notice jotting down everything you said into her little spiral notebook.
"Let me… add that I am not at all like Jane Eyre, who must have given hope to so many plain women who tell their stories in the first person," says Mildred Lathbury in Excellent Women.
http://www.theawl.com/2013/05/the-first-century-of-marvelous-spinster-barbara-pym
Memoir; Writing your Life Story: Doll Museum: Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Antique Dol...
Here is a link to a blogpost on an excellent little girl, Betsy McCall, who reigned during Pym's time, and long before The American Girls.
Memoir; Writing your Life Story: Doll Museum: Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Antique Dol...: Doll Museum: Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Antique Doll Collector M... : Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Antique Doll Collector Magazine: Vint...
Memoir; Writing your Life Story: Doll Museum: Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Antique Dol...: Doll Museum: Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Antique Doll Collector M... : Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Antique Doll Collector Magazine: Vint...
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1995 Betsy; near the end of the Magazine |
Sunday, October 12, 2014
Pym on Twitter
See Below:
https://twitter.com/Barbara_Pym/status/519239910558294016
We thank them for retweeting us!
https://twitter.com/Barbara_Pym/status/519239910558294016
We thank them for retweeting us!
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Excellent Doll Women, courtesy Antique Doll Collector magazine |
Tuesday, October 7, 2014
Our Salute to More Excellent Women in TV Media
A quick salute to Aunt Bea, who could run the sheriff's house like a warden if needed, and still bake cakes for the church social, and to Jane of F-Troop, who was true to herself and could outride any of the silly men she dealt with every day. A special salute goes to Edith Bunker, who in her own gentle way, did as she pleased, got a job, made diverse friendships, lived where she wanted, and dealt with life on her own terms. She made "dingbat" a compliment, and an intellectual pursuit. If we look at things with a different perspective, we see there were strong female characters in media, even as they were written into the script of The Feminine Mystique. Finally, I salute my late, beloved mother, now of blesse memory, who worked, married, raised a family, and did it all when married women who worked were criticized every which way but loose. And, to my Dad, who macho soldier though he was, did housework, minded kids, ran the house like courts martial at times, but who believed women could work, have career, and be anything.
Thursday, October 2, 2014
Memoir; Writing your Life Story: A few hints
Memoir; Writing your Life Story: A few hints: As many of my readers know, I have been very busy with my work as an expert guid for About.com, collectdolls.about.com, and as social media ...
Wednesday, September 24, 2014
Antique Doll Collector Magazine: Have you Seen These Stolen Dolls?
Antique Doll Collector Magazine: Have you Seen These Stolen Dolls?: Sold on the Internet. Please email owner at starvegut@aol.com . This is a photo of the first 8 dolls with descriptions. Please help, if...
Tuesday, September 23, 2014
Doll Museum: The 19th c. Continued; Wax dolls
Doll Museum: The 19th c. Continued; Wax dolls: Wax Religious or Devotional doll, 18th c, Antique Doll Collector Magazine For my money, Mary Hillier's book on Wax Dolls is the best...
Sunday, September 21, 2014
Antique Doll Collector Magazine: Q and A with Donna Kaonis, the Editor of Antique D...
Antique Doll Collector Magazine: Q and A with Donna Kaonis, the Editor of Antique D...: This smallest size KPM has a great hairdo. As a regular feature of this blog, we will feature a different collector and/or writer ...
Friday, September 19, 2014
Antique Doll Collector Magazine: Q and A with Donna Kaonis, the Editor of Antique D...
Antique Doll Collector Magazine: Q and A with Donna Kaonis, the Editor of Antique D...: This smallest size KPM has a great hairdo. As a regular feature of this blog, we will feature a different collector and/or writer ...
Wednesday, September 17, 2014
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: New Alexander Ada Lovelace
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: New Alexander Ada Lovelace: See below: This fully articulated 10" classic Cissette doll is dressed as the famous Ada Lovelace, mid 19th c. founder of scientific c...
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: New Alexander Ada Lovelace
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: New Alexander Ada Lovelace: See below: This fully articulated 10" classic Cissette doll is dressed as the famous Ada Lovelace, mid 19th c. founder of scientific c...
I Couldn't have Said it Better: In Memory of my Mother, the most Excellent Woman of All
I love Anne Rice, and she and I have a lot in common. The following quote on the death of her mother sums up everything I feel about losing mine, enough said:
''It's difficult for me to discuss it,'' she said. ''I'm not really ready yet. When I lost my mother I lost the one person in the world who was really interested in me, interested in me in a selfless way. I took it all for granted.''
I thought my Mom was immortal; she wasn't.
Monday, September 15, 2014
View Catalog Item - Theriault's Antique Doll Auctions
This wonderful doll has historic ties, attributed to Julia Ward Beecher, doll maker, through Beecher, she has ties to Julia Ward Howe and Harriet Beecher Stowe.
View Catalog Item - Theriault's Antique Doll Auctions
View Catalog Item - Theriault's Antique Doll Auctions
Saturday, September 13, 2014
Antique Doll Collector Magazine: Vintage AKA Antique Dolls About to Happen!
Antique Doll Collector Magazine: Vintage AKA Antique Dolls About to Happen!: Soon, antique dolls of all types will be closer than you think! Collectible and vintage dolls from the 1930s and 1940s are approaching the ...
Friday, September 12, 2014
Antique Doll Collector Magazine: Welcome to our First Post- For the Love of Antique...
Antique Doll Collector Magazine: Welcome to our First Post- For the Love of Antique...: Welcome to the new blog for Antique Doll Collector Magazine ! Look for us on Twitter, Facebook, and soon on YouTube and other social media...
Thursday, September 11, 2014
An Apologia for Countess Erzebet Bathory: September 11, 2013
An Apologia for Countess Erzebet Bathory: September 11, 2013: Once again, we are forced to remember a grim holiday no one wanted, and yet, how can we forget? As I played bridge prisoner today and navig...
Wednesday, September 10, 2014
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Theriault's, Antique Doll Collector, and Thinking ...
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Theriault's, Antique Doll Collector, and Thinking ...: Soon, I hope to create another Facebook page dealing with my book on metal dolls, "With Love from Tin Lizzie . . " and my other bo...
Sunday, September 7, 2014
An Apologia for Countess Erzebet Bathory: My Comment on NPR.org on Erzebet
An Apologia for Countess Erzebet Bathory: My Comment on NPR.org on Erzebet: Of course, Jason Porath calls Erzebet a serial kller, and we know this is based on 19th c. hearsay, based on 17th c. hearsay, but whatever. ...
Saturday, September 6, 2014
Joan Rivers
We celebrate the life of Joan Rivers, friend of a friend, who proved that having a passion, something to love, provided a woman success and a good life, even if you didn't have a man in it. Our mutual acquaintance called her "the best dressed woman in Hollywood," quite a compliment for one who lived into her 80s. And, we celelbrate Lauren Bacall, who visited my home town a few years ago, and who mesmerized with that honeyed, roaring voice. We loved her as the mother of another excellent woman in "The Mirror has Two Faces," a film of which Pym would have approved. There will be more posts on the Excellent Women of TV in the fifties and sixties, shows that Pym must have seen and speculated about.
Thursday, August 14, 2014
Two Excellent Women; Janet Coulter and Marie Fanakos
The 14th and 15th of August are bittersweet days for me. A young friend of mine, Janet Coulter, was killed on the 14th 40 years ago in a freak car accident. She had just recovered her health after being in the hospital nearly a year, and was riding home from her job in a fastfood restaurant. She was my next door neighbor's great niece; Charlotte, our neighbor, lived to be 106. Janet and I would write, and she would visit her aunt during the summer. She was from a little town in a very rural community. We talked about farms, and boys, and music. She still liked dolls, and the summer we were ten we played Barbies in twilight. We used illustrated books as backdrops for doll houses, some were books about dolls, and they made a great stage. We caught fire flies in jars, and let them go, and watched the sun set. I have a couple photos, her letters, and two necklaces her mother gave me, and the memories that are never far from my heart.
My grandma Marie was born August 15th, a holy day commemorating the Assumption of the Virgin. She, my great grandmother Margo on my dad's side, and my friend, Rosemary, are the three truly good, guileless people I've known. They never lost their tempers, never were vain, never said a bad thing about anyone. Grandma Marie sufferred her whole life; as a child, she had no toys, and went to school at 11 to learn to be a seamstress. She wore black because her father died when she was a little girl. She sufferred from ill health, World War II, the deaths of two children, her mother, her mother -in-law who was her best friend, and the death of my Grandpa Steve.
She taught me Greek, though she had no former schooling past age 11. She was magnificient with her crochet hook, creating her own designs and pictures, never using a pattern. She baked, but not Greek pastires, rather she made cherry pie and chocolate chip cookies. She loved poems, and cut them out with her pinking shears from Greek newspapers. She would make little books by fastening her poems together with safety pins.
She married grandpa Steve through an arrangement, and they met in Paris. She had a complete French trousseau. After the War, they came back to Villa Grove, IL, and resumed their business, Fanakos Bros. Restaurant. During the Depression, when transients would come to beg for food, she would make them fried egg sandwiches and ask if they wanted mustard. She always crossed herself when she passed a church, and she heated our dog's meat scraps so he wouldn't eat cold food.
Before I started school and everyone moved across country but for me and my parents, I stayed with her and grandpa Steve. It was the best time in my life. I helped her bake, and plant flowers. We took little walks, and she told me stories and sang.
She never complained, even when she broke her hip in a car acccident the day before Christmas Eve that nearly killed all of us. No matter what pain she suffered, she never let on. She would just pick up a quilt, or her crochet hook.
Grandma Marie was famous for disliking nudity. She cut the photos out of certain Nataional Geographics, and if I left a naked doll lying around, it would have dress sewn for it by morning. She asked my uncle, who was an artist, to paint outfits on the Greek Figures on the vases and plates my family collected.
After the war, she and the rest of my family travelled. They brought back lots of dolls, and two of those started my doll collection. Grandma loved dolls, but never had any when she was little; she worked all the time, and they were too poor. She also wore pins on special occasions, and that started me wearing them, and collecting them.
She died in 1981, and I miss her everyday. My grandpa Steve died in 1979. My mother, her sister,my great grandparents, two uncles, and that little aunt who died in infancy are with her. If there were prizes given for being excellent women, she would have won them all. I miss you, Yia-yia.
Tuesday, August 12, 2014
She Walks in Beauty by Lord Byron (George Gordon) : The Poetry Foundation
It's hard to tell who was the most excellent man, Byron, or Keats? What would Pym say? Where is Rocky Napier when you need him?
She Walks in Beauty by Lord Byron (George Gordon) : The Poetry Foundation
She Walks in Beauty by Lord Byron (George Gordon) : The Poetry Foundation
Saturday, July 26, 2014
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: My Collision with Inside Edition, Freeing the Tale...
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: My Collision with Inside Edition, Freeing the Tale...: There I was Friday, about to go to lunch, and begin a short day at work. A good friend was holding an estate sale, and there was a large bea...
Thursday, July 24, 2014
Pym Book is an eBook without my permission
Well, interestingly enough, I've found my book on Pym on Google as a free eBook. I didn't give permission for it to be there, and yesterday, I found it on another site, with good reviews, but apparently for sale as an eBook. For anyone who cares, I do get royalties, and I feel a lot of empathy right now with singers and actors who don't get the royalties they should for their book. It is just the idea. We plan on taking action to register our displeasure. I have to wonder, what would Pym do?
Wednesday, July 23, 2014
Memoir; Writing your Life Story: http://www.cozy-mystery.com/Free-and-Cheap-Kindle-...
Memoir; Writing your Life Story: http://www.cozy-mystery.com/Free-and-Cheap-Kindle-...: http://www.cozy-mystery.com/Free-and-Cheap-Kindle-Mystery-Books.html See above for Free and Cheap Mystery Books on Kindle and Nook, also,...
Two Quick, Great reviews of The Subversion of Romance in the Novels of Barbara Pym; Thanks!
See below, though I am investigating how this book got on line without anyone asking me:
2 comments
Anna
21 July 2014
Good book. Very useful, thanks for it!
Reply
Steve
5 July 2014
The best book I've ever read.
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Wednesday, July 9, 2014
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Tasha Tudor's Doll House Goes Home
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Tasha Tudor's Doll House Goes Home: See below from Cellar Door, which features the works of Tasha Tudor, who was kind enough to write to me and to illustrate her letter with Se...
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Tasha Tudor's Doll House Goes Home
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Tasha Tudor's Doll House Goes Home: See below from Cellar Door, which features the works of Tasha Tudor, who was kind enough to write to me and to illustrate her letter with Se...
Tuesday, July 8, 2014
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: See below from a local news report; I love yard s...
The "yanks" version of the "jumble sale!" My goal is to actually find a Pym book at a sale! That would be serendipity she'd love!
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: See below from a local news report; I love yard s...: See below from a local news report; I love yard sales, and find many dolls there, despite the admonition from the author of "Haunted ...
Sunday, July 6, 2014
The Writings of Anne Boleyn
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