Posts Tagged ‘diaries’

Deeds and diaries

Posted October 13, 2011 by
in Editorial, Pens, Paper & People | 1 comment »

Karen’s post about the Augustus Griffin diaries gave me a pang not out of personal diary-keeping aspirations (I’ve tried and failed too many times to hold that as a serious ambition), but because of how interesting Griffin’s diaries sounded.

I didn’t see the exhibit, but I remember how excited I was to learn that one of my aunts was transcribing my grandfather’s diary entries. I was dying to get my hands on them; he was born around the turn of the 20th century and was a pastor in a village in Germany at the time of his first entry — 1940. Growing up, I’d heard a few stories about those years, how Nazi soldiers passed through the village, boiling leather to make soup. I couldn’t wait to read his thoughts. In a time of such fear and censorship, I doubted he would say what he thought about the Nazis. But I figured he might record what he talked about in church, or what biblical passages he read to his parishoners.

Alas, I had no such luck. The diary focused almost exclusively on the birth and activities of his children: Inga was born in the evening at 9:25 Daylight Saving-Time (8:25 Central European Time), six months later she had her first bite of porridge, said “babababab” and “mememem” and “ni” and “brr,” and so on. There are incidental references to gas rationing — my grandmother had to travel to the larger town of Marburg to give birth — and one very gripping passage about the birth of my aunt Maria, in 1945, when the Allies were carpet bombing the city. But the events are presented without commentary, just as facts.

Have you read any of your ancestors’ diaries, or any other historical diaries? What did you think?

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Keeping a nature journal

Posted April 9, 2010 by
in Pens, Paper & People, Planning Tips | 1 comment »

We’ve gotten a couple of emails lately from people who use our products as nature journals, keeping track of special outings and recording what’s around them at home.

One reader in southwest Wisconsin uses a daily undated Exacompta Forum journal to track birds and other species. “I had been looking for one with dates but not days to use year after year,” she writes. The undated Forum, “while it wasn’t what I thought I wanted, works perfectly… It’s the right size, it has a lovely feel, and the lines are not too far apart.”

Greg Davis, a Milaca, MN based attorney who switched back to paper planners after a courtroom ban on cell phones, has been using a Habana to keep track of fishing outings. “I have been bitten by the Steelhead fly fishing bug and need to keep track of the outings so I can see what works… temperature, weather, water levels, water conditions, etc.,” Greg writes. (That’s his 26″ Hen in the photo above.)

It helps me see where I went wrong with the birding journal I started last year, then abandoned. I’d been using a day-per-page Notor, but after a while it seemed foolish since we don’t get a lot of variety here in Brooklyn on a daily basis, and the rest of the journal was sort of just going to waste. Still, it *is* nice to keep track of dates as well as species. I suppose it should have been obvious, but I’d never thought about using an undated journal or notebook, and keeping it for years to come!

Do you keep a nature journal?

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What makes a good engagement/wedding journal?

Posted March 12, 2010 by
in Pens, Paper & People | 3 comments »

A reader from Texas has a great idea for his daughter’s upcoming wedding, and he’s looking for advice:

I want to give journals to both my daughter and her fiance to record their thoughts and feelings while their hearts and brains are still mushy and creative. To be read at their anniversaries and low points. Do you have any suggestions?

What kind of a journal would you recommend? Something with a bit of structure, like a daily diary, or a more free-form notebook like the Habana or the Webbie? Any other ideas?

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Joan Didion, Elena McMahon, and Clairefontaine

Posted October 21, 2009 by
in Cabinet of Curiosities, Pens, Paper & People | Add your comment »

Didion

I was reading Joan Didion’s 1996 novel, The Last Thing He Wanted, the other day (not as good as Play It As It Lays or A Book of Common Prayer, but still gripping), when I came across the following passage:

Dream, the notebook entry is headed, all in caps. The notebook, a spiral-bound Clairefontaine with a red cover and pale-gray three-eight-inch graph paper inside, was one kept by Elena Janklow during the months in 1981 and 1982 immediately before she left the house on the Pacific Coast Highway and once again became (at least for a while, provisionally) Elena McMahon.

“I seem to have had an operation,” Elena Janklow’s account of the dream begins. Her handwriting, all but the last entries made in the same black fine-point pen.

Oh, and speaking of dreams, thanks to Diane Fennel for letting us know that Carl Jung’s Red Book recently arrived in New York City! You can see it at the Rubin Museum on 17th Street until January 25.

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What to do with those old diaries…

Posted October 1, 2008 by
in Cabinet of Curiosities | Add your comment »

dear-diary.jpg

I just found out about Cringe, a new book by Brooklyn based writer Sarah Brown that reprints real teenage diary and journal entries, letters, stories, and so on. The idea grew out of a monthly reading series that she organizes at Freddy’s Bar & Backroom, and the title’s more than perfect. I don’t own the book, but there are some excerpts on the Internet that make me think it’s worth reading, in a humble frame of mind:

OK. It’s the end of February. No more kidding around! You have to go out with someone! You haven’t gone out with someone since the summer! At least fool around with someone! Come on! You’ve got it in ya!

Kudos to the brave souls who bared their souls for our benefit… it’s more than I could do (though I never really kept a diary, anyway).

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