Three books to get a read on for National Read a Book Day

Did you know that reading makes you more empathetic? That’s according to a study at the University of Buffalo. It also gives you a boost in mental acuity, as a a number of psychologists and neuroscientists have found.

But besides making us kinder and brighter, the best reason to read is because we like to: it’s rewarding. Since September 6th has been decreed National Book Day, we thought it would be a good time to give you our reading on why these three Levenger Press books are worth cracking open (yes, they’re print books, complete with ribbon bookmarks): Don’t Quit Your Day Job, Thoreau on Cape Cod, and The Fantasia of Leonardo da Vinci.

 Don’t Quit Your Day Job: What the Famous Did That Wasn’t. Read this book if you like…

  • - Bite-size bios of famous people that are both entertaining and authoritative. Jack Lynch, the author, is on the faculty at Rutgers–and a superb storyteller.
  • - To read a chapter of a book in about 10 minutes tops (great bedtime reading)
  • - To impress your friends with little-known facts about the famous—like the cubicle number assigned to Scott Adams, the creator of “Dilbert,” before he defected corporate cubicleville for a comic strip. Or how Isaac Newton designed counterfeit-foiling coinage for the British Mint.

Thoreau on Cape Cod: His Journeys and the Lost Maps. Read this book if you like…

  • - Cape Cod. Thoreau walked the entire Cape, so if you’ve been there, chances are you’ve been where he’s been.
  • - Old maps. There are two facsimiles, pocketed loosely into the book, of maps of Champlain’s that Thoreau corrected in red ink.
  • - On Walden Pond. This is Walden with waves and salt water. Lots of the usual great epigrams from Thoreau, such as “A man may stand there and put all America behind him.” But along with the contemplative is plenty of action—Thoreau’s night spent in a lighthouse, and his encountering of a shipwreck of immigrants from Galway, Ireland.

The Fantasia of Leonardo da Vinci. Read this book if you like…

  • - Owning a book by a New York Times bestselling author, Ross King, that few others will have.
  • - Discovering a side of this famous artist that few people know about. The book contains Leonardo’s riddles, jests, fables and bestiary. (He was a great animal lover, in a time when few were.)
  • - Riddles. Try this one of Leonardo’s: “Men will speak with each other from the most remote countries, and reply.” (Find the answer here: http://www.levenger.com/LevengerPress/Excerpts/LPExcerpts_LeonardoFantasia.aspx)

You won’t find these books on Amazon or in bookstores. You’ll find them at Levenger—and we think you’ll find them a good read.

 

Mim Harrison

 

Share

Dear readers: Do you leave footprints?

Les Standiford, teacher, author and book lover, wouldn’t dream of writing in the hardcover books in his library. “I won’t underline or even dog-ear pages. The books have become important to me as artifacts.”

Tom Morris, philosopher, author and book lover, wouldn’t dream of not writing in them. “I underline and write and dog-ear like crazy. A book should never be just read; it should be used.”

Do you write in the hardcover books you own? Few questions polarize serious readers as much as this one.

The Preservationists

Les Standiford belongs to the group I call Preservationists. For them, the mere expression “writing in books” is akin to running fingernails down a chalkboard. Books are cherished objects, they say. Even if you intend to keep the book for your lifetime, eventually it will be passed on to others, so you shouldn’t contaminate it with your thoughts of the moment.

Preservationists are also quick to point out that besides being an affront to future readers, any writing in a book lowers its value dramatically.

The Footprint Leavers

Tom Morris belongs to the group I call Footprint Leavers. For them, books are like food to be heartily enjoyed, and if need be, consumed in the interest of a healthy diet. Writing in the margins and underlining are healthy interactions and make the book more valuable to them, which is their concern. There are plenty of unmarked books to go to posterity, they say; this one book will give its all to them.

Preservationists scoff at this. They may well take notes from a book, which they claim is more meaningful than merely underlining anyway. “Underlining is a fool’s way of absorbing knowledge,” says one accomplished Preservationist. Several others say that underlining can actually become a disservice to the underliner when, years later, he returns to the book and finds it difficult to read passages not underlined, or is forced to see the book the same way she did years ago, instead of with more mature eyes.

The Footprint Leavers will counter that if they wish to read a pristine copy, they can almost always buy another copy or get one from the library. And they like seeing how they previously viewed the book. It gives them insights into their viewpoints at an earlier age, and all-important self knowledge.

Famed Footprint Leavers

Alexandra Stoddard, the author of some 22 books on design and good living, is a devoted Footprint Leaver. She showed me her much-loved copy of Anne Morrow Lindbergh’s Gifts From the Sea. It was laden with colorful underlines, highlights and various triangles and rectangles in the margin. Alexandra could point to her original marks, when she first read the book as a girl, and then subsequent readings as the years went by and she matured. The book had transformed into a diary of sorts, imbued with her own visible testimony to the meanings she extracted over the years. “Books are food for me. I put them in my mouth,” she beams.

Studs Terkel, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author and interviewer, reportedly wrote all over the books written by the authors he interviewed, filling the margins with possible questions.

Will Provine, a historian of science and collector of rare books, has examined the libraries of many scientists, including Nobel Prize winners. He says that most scientists didn’t write in their books, yet Charles Darwin almost always did so. “A book is generally worth more if written in by an important person,” Will says. Darwin’s comments are considered of enormous historical significance.

Samuel Johnson was an even earlier luminary who wrote in books (often to the annoyance of the friends he borrowed them from), as he selected words for his famous dictionary of 1755.

Tom Morris, who has written a score of scholarly and popular books on philosophy (including Philosophy for Dummies), yearns for his books to be abused. “When I see one of my books in someone’s home, I want to open the dog-eared pages and see comments on nearly every page, and maybe some suntan oil and jelly smears as well. I want to know it was used!”

Are you a Preservationist or a Footprint Leaver?

For all these accomplished Footprint Leavers, my inquiries suggest there are far more Preservationists. Perhaps the world is better for this, since future readers will have more pristine books to inherit. Although even dedicated Footprint Leavers will not ruin an obviously valuable book. If it’s a costly first edition, they will probably not read it at all—thus ensuring they won’t be tempted. It’s the ordinary hardcovers they write in with abandon. It’s live for today and read as if no librarian were watching.

In case you’re wondering, I leave footprints. How about you?—Steve Leveen

 

Share

Steve’s Top 10 Picks for Holiday Gifts

Steve Leveen, CEO of LevengerLevenger CEO and co-founder Steve Leveen
shares some of his favorites for holiday giving.

 

 

 

Long Remembered: Lincoln and His Five Versions of the Gettysburg Address

Long Remembered: Lincoln and His Five Versions of the Gettysburg Address

1. Long Remembered: Lincoln and His Five Versions of the Gettysburg Address.

What an honor to give readers the inside story of an American masterpiece, thanks to our collaboration with the Library of Congress. It’s our way of conveying history, as David McCullough says, as interesting as it actually was. More inside scoop for you: our JFK book is the same size as Lincoln. Pair them and give the backstory of two of America’s most iconic speeches.

 

 

St. Tropez iPad Tote

St. Tropez iPad Tote

2. St. Tropez iPad Tote

In this era of high technology, we bring you the heritage technologies—paper, wood, and in this case, leather—that make tablets and other marvels ever more pleasurable to use. There’s lots of room in this leather bag to keep your iPad in its cover, plus pockets for chargers and earbuds.

 

 

Circa Mezzo Foldover Notebook

Circa Mezzo Foldover Notebook

3. Circa Mezzo Foldover Notebook

In the future, will paper notebooks be obsolete? As I learned reading Walter Isaacson’s biography of Steve Jobs, the easiest way to predict the future is to create it. So we are creating the future of notebooks by designing them to be more functional and beautiful than ever before. Give the joy of heritage technology from Levenger.

 

 

Levenger Staff iPad Tote

Levenger Staff iPad Tote

4.  Levenger Staff iPad Tote

Economical, yet the quality is still there. We wouldn’t offer it any other way.

 

 

 

 

Proust's Questionnaire Board Game

Proust's Questionnaire Board Game

5. Proust’s Questionnaire Board Game

Speaking of staff, our resident game testers hooted and hollered so loudly the day they played Proust,  we knew we had a winner. Think you know your friends well? Maybe not—and you’ll get lots of laughs finding out. (No prior knowledge of Proust required, thank goodness for me.)

 

 

Cambridge 7" Tablet Case

Cambridge 7" Tablet Case

6. Cambridge Tablet Case by Tusting

One glance and you just know this classic tobacco leather is going to gain character over the years. Tablets will come and go. This case will go on getting better. Beautifully made in England.

 

 

 

SoHo 10" Tech Protector

SoHo 10" Tech Protector

7. SoHo Tech Protector

We may work in the cloud, but we still work on tablets and other gravity-grounded devices. This cushy microfiber saves your electronic cargo from hard knocks. A cool way to show you care.

 

 

 

Leather iPad Pillow

Leather iPad Pillow

8. Leather iPad Pillow

It’s the lap of leather luxury and right now, at a price as irresistible as this soft leather. Here’s how to curl up and read with your e-reader.

 

 

 

E.B. White Dog Pillow

E.B. White Dog Pillow

9. E. B. White Dog Pillow

It’s not just tablets that get pillow pampering at Levenger. This bolster pillow is for the humans, especially the breed that loves dogs. I smile every time I read this poochly poem that E.B. White wrote. Who knew that the beloved author of pigs, spiders and little mice also loved dogs?

 

 

Tusting English Messenger

Tusting English Messenger

10. Tusting Messenger Bag

British tradition at its best—a nubuck leather made for the ages, and made to hold up to the needs of the age. It’s as much briefbag as messenger, as much investment as purchase. Score major points in your gift giving with this one. And while there will always be an England, where this is made, there won’t always be a supply of this limited-edition bag.

 

True Writer® Fountain Pen, Kyoto

True Writer® Fountain Pen, Kyoto

10 + 1. True Writer Kyoto

How can it be a Levenger List without a fine pen? This is my favorite True Writer at the moment. What’s yours? http://www.flickr.com/photos/15939353@N00/sets/72157619749511075/

 

 

–Steve


Share