Showing posts with label mystery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mystery. Show all posts

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Detective work

Today on the way home from getting our hair cut, my mom and I stopped at an estate sale. Estate sales are interesting. Much more interesting than regular garage sales. With estate sales, nearly everything in the house is for sale, because someone has died or moved into a retirement home (usually). You can find some reeeeaaally interesting stuff there... At one estate sale we went to, the whole front room was covered in creepy dolls. One that we looked at online had TONS of old Star Wars memorabilia.
My mom goes for the fabric. I go for the books. Once I found the Complete Works of Shakespeare for $1!!
The sale today had lots of old games (from the 30's or 40's, it looked like), teddy bears, and books.Wow, I have never seen so many old books that well preserved in one place before! Well, at least, all together in a place where you could pick them up and scrutinize them. Where they weren't behind lock and key to keep grubby little fingers off of them.
Anyway, this person was obviously a Sherlock Holmes fan, and a fan of classics, for he/she had an old Complete Sherlock Holmes book from the '60's, along with two or three of the novels in hardback. There were also collections of Nathaniel Hawthorne and Herman Melville.
I came away with three books and honestly I can't believe I'm making this post so composed because these three books are SO. EXCITING!


All three are over a hundred years old! And in excellent shape. And I got all three for $5! A steal!
On the top is Little Dorrit by Charles Dickens. It didn't have a date in the front of it, but I looked up the publishing house and it was only active from 1897-1906, so I'm supposing that this book was printed then.
On the bottom is The Prince and Pauper by Mark Twain. The date in the front of the book is from 1909. It's in such good condition, though, that it might be from a later date. I'm not sure. This one, unfortunately, has pen scribbles all over the front cover.
Both of these books were formed library books (hence the scribbles and the big black "discarded" in the front cover). Old books from libraries are really wonderful. Old books are wonderful. They were made so differently years and years ago.
I was telling my mom that I felt so good so buy these, because it's like preserving a piece of history. So many people have switched over to eReaders, and so many people just don't read at all. Or if they do, they only read the books that are popular right now (like Twilight or The Hunger Games or Divergent or any other YA book). I don't believe one can truly be a well-balanced bookworm if one does not read books from a variety of different times, in a variety of genres, on a variety of subjects. Or maybe one can be a bookworm, but not a well-read bookworm.
Anyway, the middle book is the most exciting one! It's The Valley of Fear, the final Sherlock Holmes novel by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
The Valley of Fear was originally published serial style in a newspaper (probably The Strand, but I've forgotten) from 1914-1915. The first book copy came out in 1914 from the George H. Doran Company. (It was an American publishing company who published many British books during World War One to help out with the War effort. This explains why The Valley of Fear was published in America, rather than in Britain. They also published P.G. Wodehouse's books!)
Now here's the exciting part... my copy is also from 1914! Though the publisher is different.




Because this copy is "in agreement with George H. Doran Company" I'm supposing it to be a 2nd or 3rd printing. Or maybe A.L. Burt Company had a deal with Doyle too.


This is why I love shopping second hand for books. You never know what you're going to find! I think it adds to the joy of loving "classics" or "old books" as well. Someone who exclusively reads modern day fiction will never experience the same thrill of holding a book with so much history within it's very fibers. Where has this Valley of Fear been before? Whom was it's original owner?

...as I continue to flip through these books just now, I notice in the cover of Prince and the Pauper an imprint which says "Wilton Manor Public Library." So I look it up - it's a library in Florida! Strange, because in the front cover of Valley of Fear, there is one of those address-sticker-things, and the address there is from Florida too (though Wilton Manor and St. Petersburg, the address in the Valley of Fear are about 4 hours driving distance from each other).
Did this "Walter Wende" on the sticker in Valley of Fear live in Florida and then move to the Pacific Northwest and take his books with him? Or did the previous owner of these books buy them from a "Walter Wende" in Florida once upon a time?
...I just did a Google search of "Walter Wende" and found a list of death records. Two Walter Wende's from Florida... One I can rule out because his name is Walter R Wende, and my Walter is Walter A. Wende. 
Walter no-middle-initial Wende was born in 1890 and died in 1974. He was from St. Petersburg, Florida. The Walter Wende on my sticker was from St. Petersburg, Florida. Could it be the same man?



I looked up the address in the book cover and this is what Google Maps came up with (I apologize to whoever is now living here. lol)


Perhaps as a young man of 24, Walter bought the new Sherlock Holmes mystery when it came out. Perhaps later in life, he went off and served in either or both of the World Wars. Or perhaps he bought The Valley of Fear from someone else who bought it when it first came out.
Since Walter Wende died 40 years ago, he obviously did not live in the house we went to today. So who bought the book from Wende? Did it pass down to a family member after he died? Or was it carted off to a thrift store where someone else picked it up? How did it get all the way across the country? And were Little Dorrit, The Prince and the Pauper, and the other old books at the estate sale from Mr. Wende's collection as well? Is this Walter Wende even my Walter Wende?
This is where the people in those history programs would say "Well, we've run up against a wall. I guess some questions will never be answered. Thank you for joining us in this journey. We hope you join us next week when we try and discover..."

Friday, September 6, 2013

Tags gallore!

Two bloggers are doing tags to celebrate the releases of their books!

The first tag I received from Miss Jack Lewis Baillot over at However Improbably... She received the tag from Joan Bassington-French, who published her first book, Christmas at the Tittletons, on September 4. It looks like a wonderful mystery book, so go check it out here!

Here are the rules for the tag:

1. Please post ALL the rules
2. Please answer ALL the questions
3. Comment on THIS post when you have completed the tag and include a link to your tag post
4. Tag five other people
5. Let the people know that you tagged them
6. Include a link back to this post. There is the link to her blog, since the link to the specific post is up in question #3.
 
And now the questions...
 
1. What is your favourite Historical Mystery book? I'm not sure if he's exactly historical... but the Sherlock Holmes mysteries are my favorites.
Is Tintin considered a mystery? There is certainly mystery woven into his stories, and you don't know how many times in past years, when we were learning something in history, and I would jump up and say, "I learned about that in Tintin!" I would run to my room and grab whichever Tintin book it was and bring it back to my mom, flipping to the page where it mentioned whatever we were learning in history at that moment.
 
2. Would you rather read a Classic or a Mystery?
How about a classic mystery? Sherlock Holmes! If I had to choose between the two, I would probably choose... a classic. Maybe? I don't know! That's a hard question! Probably a classic, because mystery can fit under that genre, and then I can still have my Jane Austin and Robert Louis Stevenson (why is it, that every time I try to write out his name, it comes out as 'Roberty Lousid Stevenson'?)
3. How do you think Christmas at the Tittletons will compare to your favourite mystery?
I'm not sure, I haven't read it yet! Though I'd like to. Hopefully it will fit in nicely with the other mysteries I've read.
4. How do you think Christmas at the Tittletons will compare to your favourite Classic?
See above answer.
5. Do you think you would like to write a Historical Mystery sometime?
A mystery: yes. Actually, I've been working on my first mystery (it's a short story) since April. I need to sit down and finish it.
A historical mystery... perhaps someday! You never know. Currently, I don't have any plans to write one, though.
 
Hmmm... I don't know if I have five people to tag... but I'll try.
I would tag Jessica at Authorly Insane (to annoy her :P) but she's on hiatus for a month or so due to the beginning of school...
And I would tag Kendra at Knitted by God's Plan, only she's already been tagged.
And I would tag Clair at Working Title, but I have a sneaking suspicion that someone else is going to tag her... But if they don't, consider yourself tagged, Clair!
So I will tag Emilyn J. Wood at The Story in a Spider's Web. Her blog is fabulously thought-provoking, though I'm not sure if she does tags or not.
And I will tag Arabella at ShiningHisLight97 so that she will have to post there! Hee hee.
And there's five people, even though three of them I didn't technically tag... Does it still count?
And now I will stop starting sentences with 'and.'
 
The second tag is from Kendra E. Ardnek, who is celebrating the release of her third book, The Ankulen, with a party! Go check it out, there's bound to be lots of fun! (Also, if you do this tag, and comment on her blog before Monday, you get entered in a giveaway!)
 
Here are the questions:
 
1. Did you have any imaginary friends as a child? If so, tell me about them!
I had quite a few imaginary friends when I was younger! There was Dabby (a clever play on my own name... I think he was a whale). And there were also the two birds from the Your Big Backyard magazine (or was one a squirrel? I can't remember). There were one or two others, but I can't remember who they are at the moment.
And, of course, I could go no where without my two favorite stuffed animals. They were kind of like imaginary friends. They had special voices and still sleep with me every night.
 
2. An Ankulen is a piece of jewelry that brings imagination to life. If they actually existed, what would yours look like?I'm not sure... I don't wear jewelry. Maybe a simple ring with a stone set in it. Or maybe a watch? Is a watch jewelry? That's the only kind of thing that I wear on my wrist/hand/neck/ears/wherever else jewelry goes.

3. Based on what you've heard about the Ankulen, what part of it are you most looking forward to? If you have already read it, what was your favorite part?
I'm looking forward to all the places Jen goes in her imagination! Especially the mermaids... I'm looking forward to the mermaids.

4. What was your favorite book as a child?
That's a hard question. When I was too little to remember, my mom says that I loved a board book called "Eating the Alphabet." There were a million picture books that I loved... like Tuesday by David Wiesner, Mike Mulligan's Steam Shovel, Harry the Dirty Dog, Bread and Jam for Frances, and Richard Scarry. As I got older, I enjoyed the Magic Tree House books by Mary Pope Osbourne and Bernstein Bear mysteries. After that, for a loooong time, my favorites were the Warriors series by Erin Hunter, books by Sharon Creech, and Tintin by Herge (which are still my favorites!).

5. How do you think this book will compare to my previous three books?
I think that The Ankulen will be the best out of all of them! One, because with every book, you learn and mature and grow. Two, because it's longer. :P Three, because I LOVE the idea behind it.

And there you have it. Hopefully I have not forgotten anything.

Live long and prosper!