Miss Pym and a Friend

Miss Pym and a Friend

Thursday, December 12, 2019

Skyward by David Levy: Tennyson and Astronomy

Figure 1`:  Last [pril i photographed a small piece of Comet Thatcher
(C/1861 G1),.    These fragments encounter the Earth's orbit annually
as the Lyrid meteor shower.  Tennyson might have seen this comet, but
he certainly saw the next one which appeared as the ZGreat Comet of
1861.

.Skyward for December 2019

When poetry reaches the stars.

Long, long ago, when I was as student at Acadia University in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia, we studied the poems of Alfred, Lord Tennyson.  The English 360 course was taught by one of my favorite professors, Roger Lewis.  Tennyson remains one of the truly great English poets, and even in his lifetime he knew that.  In 1850, upon the death of William Wordsworth, he was appointed poet laureate by Queen Victoria.    In that same year he published In Memoriam, arguably his greatest work. 
More than a poet, Tennyson enriched his life with a passionate interest in science, particularly the night sky.  Did he own a telescope?  He surely did.  Although he used it often, particularly from his home on the Isle of Wight, he often enjoyed the use of big refractor telescopes in England.  He viewed some of the great comets of his time, like Donati in 1858 and Tebutt in 1861.     He also noticed the discovery of Neptune in 1846.  Not only was he aware of these developments, but he also incorporated them into one of the greatest poems ever written, the epic called In Memoriam.
In Memoriam grew out of Tennyson’s profound loss when his best friend, Arthur Hallam, died suddenly and unexpectedly in 1831.   His grief evolved into several quatrains of poetry, then many, and he completed the work in 1850.  But this poem is far more than an elegy.  He framed it as a massive commentary on the progress of science during his time, particularly with regard to organic evolution and astronomy.  From its dramatic opening line “Strong son of God, immortal love,”  he delves into what the great telescopes of his time could reveal as
“Nature stretches forth her arms, and gleans
Her secret from the latest moon?” (CXX)

Passing over his wonderful praise of Darwin’s theory of evolution and natural selection…
“And let the ape and tiger die.” …
we encounter the epic’s truly powerful ending.  To write that it is like a bald eagle about to soar in flight is just insufficient. Like a gigantic Saturn 5 as it roars off its launch complex to the Moon, the last two stanzas germinate, then erupt in a fiery tribute to creation itself.
The poem closes with a return to Hallam: “That fiend of mine who lives in God,” …
Tennyson then specifies God as being immortal and loving; “That God, which ever lives and loves,” 
And then he defines the Universe as an  ordered realm with a specific goal: “One God, one law, one element”.  In that one line Tennyspon summarizes the purpose of In Memoriam as a statement about the interplay between science and religion.  Finally, Tennyson predicts a goal for the Universe:

“and one far-off divine event”
In Tennyson’s time that goal was not understood.  But  a century later, understanding of Hubble’s constant opened the great question as to whether the Universe will end in a “big crunch” in which the Universe is condensed into a single point as it was 13.7 billion years ago. The other possibility is that the universe will continue to expand forever.  It is one of these two faroff events               
“To which the whole creation moves.  And thus, we reach the close of In Memoriam as it moves proudly among the stars:

That friend of mine, who lives in God,

That God, who ever lives and loves,
                One God, one law, one element,
                And one far-off divine event,
To which the whole creation moves.



Memoir; Writing your Life Story: "And So this is Christmas . . "

Memoir; Writing your Life Story: "And So this is Christmas . . ": Every year the holidays seem to come and go much more quickly.  They are as ephemeral as the snowflakes that often accompany them, often dis...

Thursday, November 14, 2019

Thursday, October 31, 2019

Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Museum Update

Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Museum Update: Happy Halloween!  We had snow today!  It ruined trick or treating.  So, here I sit watching Bewitched and Roseanne Halloween shows.  We pu...

Tuesday, September 17, 2019

Doll Museum to Open Dec. 1!


After a lifetime of planning, it has finally happened!  more details will follow as the doll drama unfolds, but The American Doll & Toy Museum will open the first week of December!  This will be a smaller version of our collection because of space limitations, but there will be representative dolls from prehistory to the present, and a nice selection of doll houses, miniatures, toys and related objects.

Many of you also follow our main doll museum blog, Dr. E's Doll Museum, and you know that I am Dr. E and this is our unofficial name.  I started a new Facebook Page called American Doll
In and Toy Museum, and will follow up with a Twitter, Pinterest, and other social media accounts to spread the word.

We'll have a small book shop selling doll related objects, vintage paper airplanes, licensed merchandise books, and perhaps some small antiques from the shop behind us. We also have a GoFundMe Page for donations.  https://www.gofundme.com/manage/ellen039s-campaign-for-american-doll-and-toy-museum

There will be special events and give a ways.  We'll celebrate each season and holiday, too. There will be rotating displays of all kinds.

I plan on have a doll trinket to give to each visitor as a memento.

Many of you have seen  the displays of my dolls at various museums. I've collected since age 3, and have been planning this museum since grade school.  We will join a small neighbor hood near one of my alma maters called College Hill, which hosts other events and houses several antique stores, a cafe, a hometown bar and grill, a hometown barber shop, sports apparel shop and more.  We will be contributing to small business and to our community.

We welcome everyone; we aren't just for doll collectors and dealers, and we hope by embracing the general public, that we will also encourage young collectors.

Below are some of our citizens, and there is a YouTube video with more.





Saturday, August 17, 2019

An Apologia for Countess Erzebet Bathory: Bathory 2008

An Apologia for Countess Erzebet Bathory: Bathory 2008: Finally, the film is on Netflix, and I am watching it! Below is a review. Much of the film is historical, and much is invented, including ...

Wednesday, August 7, 2019

Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: RIP Toni Morrison

Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: RIP Toni Morrison: The world of earthly literature just got smaller again.  I remember Toni Morrison for Song of Solomon, Beloved, and The Bluest Eye.  The lat...

Tuesday, July 16, 2019

Pymian Pumpkins hold their own!

These
volunteered themselves.  They look very healthy, and I have hope.  Usually, I get lovely vines and blossoms, and then the vine withers.

This is a flower arrangement I did; very Pym of me.  The rocks come from deserts and oceans around the world.
We used to travel.  The little boy with the wheelbarrow is a favorite.

Pepito has returned home after 55 years; once, he was bigger than I was.

Our evergreens are ageless, going on 63 years.

Wednesday, June 19, 2019

Detecting Femme Fatales


The femme fatale makes her appearance in Pym’s work, though far more subtly than in other works of literature.  These are the woman to paraphrase Lady Lamb, who are “mad, bad, and dangerous” for men to know.  They are the sirens, lamia, gorgons, home wreckers, gold diggers, black widows, dominatrixes Amazons, often emasculating, ball busting women that are the stuff of comics, legend, myth, and unfortunately, sometimes porn. Well, Lady Heather and others, please step aside, and don’t trip over your whips, boas, dripping diamonds, or weapons of choice.

Image result for femme fatale public domainPublic Domain

The femme fatales we discuss today are the women in pop culture who deal in death, yet still are smart, sexy, even fun to be around.  They are detectives, amateur or otherwise, and include Mrs. Mallory, Hazel Holt’s main PI.  Holt, you will remember, was Pym’s best friend, colleague, and literary executor.  Miss Marple is one, as is coroner Tina Kemp.  Include Patricia Cornwell’s Dr. Kay Scarpetta and her niece Lucy, V.I. Warshowski, Stephanie Plum, Hannah Swensen, Goldy Bear Schultz, and the cozy women of Deb Baker, Monica Ferris and others.    Sue Grafton and Edna Buchannan have created them.  Elizabeth George gives us Deborah St. James, Barbara Havers, and Lady Helen Clyde.

TV is full of them, from Dr. Samantha Waters of Profiler, to Jessica Fletcher of Murder, she Wrote.  Their sisters come from Crossing Jordan, Cold Case, Police Woman,Hunter, The Snoop Sisters, Mrs. Columbo, McMillan & Wife, The Closer, and other shows and sitcoms where women solve crime, and live hand in hand with death.


Image result for ally walker profiler public domainPublic Domain

For that matter, all these women as sisters to Death as Neil Gaiman creates her in The Sandman, or to the other graphic novel icon, Lady Death.

It’s a new way of defining what a femme fatale is, and a woman detective is a more positive cultural icon.  Some, like Miss Fisher, can be both traditional femme fatale, and detective.  They live  for themselves, and use their own sexuality any way that suits them, usually for good, but sometimes . .  .

Pym’s Prudence and Barbara Bird would have known the drill.  Scarlett O’Hara would have understood.

Mary Richards of MTM, well, she’d at least keep an open mind.

Wednesday, June 12, 2019

Monday, June 3, 2019

Life in the Fast Lane


This morning, as I once again joined the Monday rat race, or race to death as some might see it, I listened to the Eagles’ Life in the Fast Lane.   God Bless them; they are more relevant now than ever.

How many times have I been literally lost looking for something, going up and down the highway and not seeing a God Darned thing!  For those of us of a certain age who work and have family responsibilities, it should be our anthem.

How many of you run around like little rats in a maze?  How great is your reward?  How much satisfaction or reward to you get?  I’d love to hear from you, because this is something that hits people of all genders and walks of life, all over the world.

Think and answer in our comments, how hard is it for you to get from point A to point B?  Do you get any support?  How is your health?  Emotional well being?

Let’s be careful out there, and let’s carry on.  Pym’s Excellent Women come in any gender, lifestyle, culture.  One Excellent Person to another, remember I'm here for you.  Happy Birthday Miss Pym!





Image result for rat race public domain
Public Domain Image

Sunday, June 2, 2019

Memoir; Writing your Life Story: Write on!!!

Memoir; Writing your Life Story: Write on!!!: In my musings, I realized today how many time’s I’ve heard that signs of dementia include writing notes and keeping notebooks.   It’...

Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Monday, May 20, 2019

An Apologia for Countess Erzebet Bathory: Anne Boleyn

An Apologia for Countess Erzebet Bathory: Anne Boleyn: In Memoriam, May 19, 1536.   I try to remember every year, though this year has been my crucible, as have the last four.  Anne Boleyn, C...

An Apologia for Countess Erzebet Bathory: Anne Boleyn

An Apologia for Countess Erzebet Bathory: Anne Boleyn: In Memoriam, May 19, 1536.   I try to remember every year, though this year has been my crucible, as have the last four.  Anne Boleyn, C...

Friday, May 3, 2019

Tuesday, April 23, 2019

A Day of Literary Landmarks

Good Morning!  On this day, Shakespeare died in 1616; it may have been his birthday, too.  Cervantes was born and died in 1616, and his date is the same as The Bard's.  James Joyce died on this day as well, and the dates for his life were the same for Virginia Woolf, who found him vulgar.  It is also the feast day of St. George, patron saint of England, from what I gather, important in Greece, important to me because of my Great -Uncle George, and my Uncle George.

It is Greek Orthodox Holy Week, and the week past Easter and Passover.  We have had terrible events, from the fire at Notre Dame, to the terror attacks in Siri Lanka, where my school friend and colleague, Wilfred J. and his family lived.

Safe and Healthy Week, and pickup a book by these literary greats, as would have Pym and Bronte, though not Joyce in Charlotte's case :)




Wednesday, April 3, 2019

Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: The Doll Collecting Blues

Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: The Doll Collecting Blues:   Lately, times have been less than happy or easy.   We are very close now to getting a building, and are holding fundraisers.   Yet, it i...

Sunday, March 31, 2019

Demonologie Domestic


Demonologie Domestic

Below is a work of fiction; any resemblance to any person living or dead  is purely coincidental.  Live with it.

Before I can have a cup of coffee, I have to weave through the maze of other people’s crumbs, coffee cups, wrinkled Kleenex and unfolded clothes.  I make trips go the garbage in my nighty; I feed the cats before I wash my face.

If I finish a cup of coffee, it’s a small miracle.  When did I become a slave to other people’s schedules?  When did I turn into a Martha a la The Handmaid’s Tale?  When did I cease to be important except as a drone and source of income?

I’m not a domestic goddess, or even an angel of the house.  In my hand, I hold a first class ticket to anywhere; I won’t disclose the information.  Once I clear the security check, I want to be nowhere to be found.

Public Domain

Monday, March 25, 2019

Suzanne Gibson and NIADA Artists

Many artists turn to creating dolls because they are a fresh medium, something to take their art in another direction.  Artists who recognized the importance of the relationship between dolls and art founded the National Institute of American Doll Artists, NIADA, in 1963. Originally, four artists founded NIADA, Helen Bullard, Gertrude Florian, Magge Head, and Fawn Zeller. Today, there are over 60 members elected by their peers and member-patrons.  The purpose behind founding NIADA was to recognize the art behind original, hand made dolls.  Members hold annual get-togethers that include visiting doll makers and doll fans to share work and ideas with each other.  There is also a NIADA school for those who wish to learn doll making techniques from the artists of NIADA. The artists’ group also offers publications on artist dolls.  For more information about the annual conference and school, visit the NIADA website, www.niada.org.

 One of the Vinyl Kalico Kids, Tsagaris collection.



For many years, I was a pen pal of the late Suzanne Gibson, a NIADA artist known for her Kalico Kids and porcelain little girl series.   She was trained as a ballet dancer and was from Capitola, CA, not far from my family.  When I was nine my dad bought me one of the little girl dolls of porcelain from Knott’s Berry Farm.  The legend was that Gibson only made three dolls from each mold then broke it, though the dolls were clearly sisters.  They resembled each other closely.  My Dad used to say that his hand hurt from writing the check.  She is a lovely little girl with long lashes, long, strawberry blonde curls with pink ribbons, and a white eyelet dress and bloomers. Her shoes and stockings are also white.  There were other little girls, and Suzanne sent me a picture of one with dark curls and a pink dress.  She made vinyl dolls for several years with Reeves International, including a Mother Goose set in collaboration with Steiff.  The Kalico Kids were a departure, and based on her own childhood.  She sent me an autographed copy of her book about them at one point.

S. Gibson Holly by Reeves International via Public domain




When I went to a doll show, I would check on her dolls, if any.  I only found vinyl versions of the Kalico Kids and other dolls.   Currently, the Reeves dolls are a bargain on ebay.

Spinning Wheel's Complete Book of dolls features Gibson in an article; there is a great scion on doll artists in the book.  The NIADA sight is full of information, of course.  Many artists are past members of NIADA, and there are other groups, but notable artists include Debbie Ritter, Uneek Doll designs, R. John Wright, elinor peace bailey, Greg Ortiz and many BJD artists and designers. Glenda Rolle, featured in photos on this blog, does great sand babies and jewelry.

Teracotta doll bust by the author, c. 1988.

Spinning Wheel’s Complete Book of Dolls has a good article about her, and a good section on Doll artists.  Other books include Max von Boehn’s Dolls, Carl Fox’s The Doll,  Clara Hallard Fawcett’s books, Janet Pagter Johl’s and Eleanor St. George’s books that talk about Emma Clear, Helen Young’s The Complete Book of Doll Collecting, Edwina Ruggles’, The One Rose, Spinning Wheel’s Complete Book of Dolls, vol. I, Doll Reader Magazine, Doll Castle News, Kimport’s Doll Talk, Manfred Bachman’s Dolls, the Wide World Over, and Bernice’s BambiniWonderful books by NIADA include   Krystyna Poray Goddu, ed., The Art of the Doll: Contemporary Work of the National Institute of American Doll Artists. NIADA, 1992, and other books by Goddu on the artists. NIADA serves many wonderful purposes in the world of dolls, but the artists remind us above all of the historical and artistic value of dolls for collectors and doll lovers of all ages.

R:  Dealer Laverne Koddy with a Jan McClean doll.

The author's Baby Dear, originally designed by Eloise Wilkin.
This version c. 1964,  and she wears a dress from her varied
wardrobe.  She is the author's favorite doll. 

Fairy with butterfly wings, artist made

Art doll by Joniak.

COD character doll, coinciding with movements in the Bauhaus Art
Movement and German Realism.


Older artists and designers include Joseph Kallus, Cameo Doll company and innovator of the modern vinyl Kewpie, Rose O' Neill, Grace Story Putnam, Grace Drayton, Grace Corey Rockwell, Johnny Gruelle, A. Marque, Picasso, Degas, Tony Sarg, and Bil Baird.


Other doll artists, some former NIADA members are Magge Head Kane, R. John Wright, Glenda Rolle [see her sand babies on this blog], R. Lane Herron, and Teri Long-Long Gone Dolls.  A. Marque and is an artist of the past that created dolls, as did DeWees Cochran, Madame Alexander, Dorothy Heizer and Emma Clear .  Peggy Jo Rosamund is an amazing paper doll artist.  Robin Woods did amazing work, and so did Anna Avigail Brahms.  The list goes on.


Bil Baird Puppet, photo the author

Dolls and art have gone hand in hand for centuries.  Even in prehistory, humans were creating small statues of women and an occasional man according to their standards of aesthetic beauty.  Artists used small articulated models or lay figures to create masterpieces of art.  A few artists like Marque, Picasso, and Degas,  either created dolls, or were inspired by dolls to create other works of art.  Many great artists, including Rembrandt, were collectors themselves. Leonardo da Vinci dabbled in creating automatons, along with other gadgets and machines.  Artists like Joseph Cornell and Jarvis Rockwell created works of art using dolls.  Norman Rockwell, father to Jarvis, painted them, as in his Doctor and Doll. The artistry of antique dolls influenced Pleasant Rowland’s American Girls.  Of course, sculptors and artists have always been involved in creating dolls for play and to collect. There are many non-NIADA books and magazines  about doll making including The Art Doll Quarterly.   Behind every Barbie, Kewpie, or Betsy Wetsy, there is an artist or sculptor working his or her particular doll magic.


Artist doll after the work of Ted de Grazia.  Author's collection.

Other great books abound on dolls and art, as well as videos of the Santa Fe Doll Art conventions. Just remember, behind every great doll, there is a great artist!  We will be featuring Helen Kish, George Stuart, Shelley Thornton and more at the June Virtual Doll Convention.

Pat Thompson, Vlasta Dolls. Author's Collection












Sunday, March 10, 2019

American Doll and Toy Museum: Virtual Doll Convention; by Rachel Hoffman & Happy...

Happy Birthday to another Excellent Woman who shows us Sixty is Scintillating!















American Doll and Toy Museum: Virtual Doll Convention; by Rachel Hoffman & Happy...: Dear Virtual Conventioneers, Across the world, many collectors and institutions have joined in a celebration of the the Iconic Barbie!...

Monday, March 4, 2019

Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: March Skyward by Dr. David Levy; On Comets

Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: March Skyward by Dr. David Levy; On Comets: ������Once again, it is with great pleasure that we look away from our doll cases and doll houses towards the heaven, to share the passion o...

Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: March Skyward by Dr. David Levy; On Comets

Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: March Skyward by Dr. David Levy; On Comets: ������Once again, it is with great pleasure that we look away from our doll cases and doll houses towards the heaven, to share the passion o...

Wednesday, February 20, 2019

Pymian Ponderings on Passions and Things to Love


A friend of mine recently wondered whether there was anything new that could be written about dolls. I certainly hope there is; I have another book about then being published, and one ready to go.  One is sort of a memoir, the other is poetry. I can admit that I have a lot more to say.  Just tonight, I was watching the old Johnny Carson Tonight Show and discovered two dolls I didn’t know about, Suzy Snapshot by Galoob and Bottle Baby by Tyco.  I was able to find both on ebay.

 

One subject to pursue is the pop culture fad that dolls are creepy and scary.  I’ve harped on that before, I know, but it is affecting peoples’ lives and businesses now.  Children are discouraged from playing with dolls, commercials make fun of collectors, doll dealers have to put up with would be patrons telling them their dolls are creepy.  

 

I have the TV on in the background, and I saw Halloween dolls and props on The Office, and a teddy bear on The Nanny.  There is a bobble head mascot on The Office.  The Nanny often features dolls as props, and there is a Nanny doll, which I have.  I love my Halloween monster dolls; they are cute, and reflect us and our interests as humans. I love our own Terror at Skellington Manor haunted house because they have a doll room, full of dolls, but they take care of them, and even ask me to identify them for them.  They also have wonderful animatronics, cousins of automatons and mechanical dolls. They really like dolls, and the whole thing with them is tongue in cheek.

 

Lately, things in my life have been very difficult. Were it not for the dolls and the dollhouses, these past few years, I’m not sure what would have happened to me.  Our passions keep us alive.  Mine are similar to those my late mother, my best friend, my inspiration, shared.  Often, I can’t believe my parents are gone and I’m alone.  The dolls were always a family endeavor.  We took trips to find them, bought them as souvenirs, Dad built doll houses and doll cases, ’he drove my mother to find them when I was away at school, and my mother made dolls, dressed them, helped me fix them. Both were supportive and proud of them.  The rest of my extended family was in on it, too.

 

We also liked coins, stamps, books, and shells.  We have postcards and ticket stubs and lots of slides from all our trips.  These are not just things; they sustain me and remind me that life was once good.

 

Planning this doll museum has been a huge dream, and a big project.  Dolls and “the doll motif” have been a huge part of my life.  Barbara Pym, the writer I wrote a book and my dissertation on, stated we all needed something to love, even if that something were not another person. She meant we had to have a passion in life, something that got us excited and made us want to wake up each morning.  Virginia Woolf, who preceded Pym at Oxford and whom Pym read, said we should all have a room of our own, hence her work, A Room of One’s Own.  If you don’t want to read it, get Eileen Atkins one woman portrayal.  It makes you think.   That room could be a shelf, a “she shack”, or again, something you do that is unique to you, like collecting dolls, crafts, arts, sports, it is up to you to define.

 

During one of my dark times when I couldn’t decide what to do and felt useless, I mentioned to my Dad that all I really knew had to do with dolls. “That’s a talent’, he said.  It surprised me, but it didn’t.  It is a talent to assemble, curate, and maintain a great collection.  It takes organization, management, memory, and communication skills.   What I’ve learned about them took years of study, and not just on dolls.  I read historical texts, plays, literature, sociology books, psychology texts, legal cases and texts, patents, and more.  Books on art and costume crept into my library, and of course, lots of paper dolls, fashion plates, and ephemera.    The dolls have been the best education I’ve had, and I have 12.5 years of college and grad school alone behind me. I could have been a surgeon, but I’d rather be a doll doctor!

 

It’s a shame so many people are ditching good dolls in charity and thrift shops.  It’s a shame doll snobs with high prices and bad attitudes discourage people from getting interested in the hobby.  It’s a shame haunted doll crap is making us all ignorant and driving away kids who are missing out on a lot of fun and chances to make friends and learn something.

 

Dolls are more than money or investment, though good antiques can out do the stock market any day.  I find most doll dealers to be passionate about their inventory and eager to help new collectors learn.  They respect collectors, and are enthusiastic about sharing information and coming together. They are part of the doll community, and important to all of us who study and who collect.

 

Doll shows are social events where we catch up with each other.  I’ve made many friends over dolls, some near and dear to me, as much as my own family.  Dolls have brought my husband and me closer as we work on books and museum projects together.  

 

So, my advice?  Collect, keep an open mind.  As Genevieve Angione wrote, all dolls are collectible.  Study and notice it, even if you don’t collect it, but good general collections have their place.  To paraphrase George Orwell, break any of my rules before doing something barbaric.  In other words, collect what you like in dolls.  Follow your passion, but don’t put down someone else’s.  As for all the negative creepy doll nay sayers, you’re a regrettable part of doll history, but grow up and straighten out your miserable lives. Quit ruining it for everyone else, learn to think for yourselves, and don’t follow every pop culture fad. Finally, well, go get a hobby!  Try collecting dolls seriously. 

 

Happy collecting everyone!


"Oh, Mr. Sheffield!" Why I love The Nanny

She's part Cinderella, part Jane Eyre, part Olive Oyl, with the most nasal voice in the world!  She's The Nanny named Fran.  I love to watch her over and over, and I love to see the love between her and her unsuitable attachment, Max Sheffield, slowly fall in love.  I'm accused of hating Romance, but in this case, I love watching their relationship develop, and I could watch their wedding over and over again. 


Pym would have loved this show, so would Bronte.  It's a Pymian experience, indeed, to watch The Nanny slowly find and marry her way upstairs!


Belated Happy Valentine's Day!



Wednesday, February 6, 2019

Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Skyward February 2019

Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: Skyward February 2019: Skyward February 2019   March 23   In 1963, while living as a patient at the Jewish National Home for Asthmatic Children ...

Friday, January 18, 2019

The Murder Room


An interesting point of where literature and criminology intersect:  From The Murder Room:  “But it was Vidocq’s remarkable story of redemption and his belief in the redemption of others that touched Fleischer most deeply. The chief cop of Paris was a great friend of the poor and said he would never arrest a man for stealing bread to feed his family.   Vidocq was Hugo’s model for Javert, the relentless detective in Les Miserables, as well as for Valjean, the excon who reforms and seeks redemption for  his deeds” (Capuzzo 135).  Vidocq was a criminal who became a detective, and who formed an agency even before Pinkerton.  He is considered a father of modern criminology.  This well researched book by Michael Capuzzo tells the story of The Vidocq Society, named in his honor, and of three remarkable criminologists who lead the pack of those who would solve the most unsolvable of crimes.

Thursday, January 3, 2019