Archivist Favorite Book For 2015

Attempting to pick a favorite book for 2015 was difficult task because many of the books that I have read this year have been books that I have read in the past and of those several k2-_5ee9edaf-90e1-432a-a41d-496896093b4c.v1were non-fiction. James Deetz (1930-2000), former University of Virginia archaeology professor, book In Small Things Forgotten is one book worth rereading. Deetz maintains his argument that understanding the significance of simple artifacts may give deeper insight into American history than letters journals and other written documents. In his 1996 edition, Deetz expanded many of the chapters and added an entire chapter on Africans and African-Americans, their artifacts, and lifestyles.

Deetz examines the definition of historical archaeology, as well as historical archaeologists’ relationships to material culture and how a site and its artifacts are important. Now this might sound a bit academic, but Deetz is able to write in a way that makes his work accessible and interesting to many outside the world of history. He also uncovers archaeology’s relationship with the historical record. For example, Deetz reveals that bones of wild animals were found in many African-American cellars and he hypothesizes that slaves most likely ate them to supplement their diet. This indicates that slaves had free time to hunt, which contradicts the historical record, which assumes that their white owners fully controlled their lives. Deetz mainly covers New England and the Chesapeake area because those are the locations of sites that he where he did the majority of his work. Although Deetz touches on the national and international context of his findings, for the most part he maintains a regional focus.

By studying everyday objects like dishes, houses, and gravestones, Deetz clearly draws the connection between history and archaeology, as well as the relationship to modern day life. Each chapter of In Small Things Forgotten explores a different aspect of historical archaeology. For example, chapter five, “I Would Have the Howse Stronge in Timber,” is especially fascinating because Deetz examines houses as material culture and writes about how saving houses creates its own issues. The last chapter, on Africans and African-Americans in America, is the most interesting. The written record is predominantly from white landowners and so the artifacts that slaves left behind allow historians to better understand their daily lives. Deetz also details how European housing differs from the housing that African-Americans had in America. Interestingly, he finds that the shotgun houses in America are more similar to those found in Haiti than those in West Africa.

Deetz uses a variety of sources throughout the book to support his arguments, including photos, journals, articles and books. A few of these sources include Noel Hume’s A Guide to Artifacts of Colonial America, which is a great book to help date early American objects and William Bradford’s Of Plymouth Plantation 1620-1647. The numerous illustrations are useful and well drawn, adding significantly to the book’s readability because they help to visually explain Deetz’s arguments.

While it is a pleasure to read Deetz’s In Small Things Forgotten, it also features clear language and structure. The book provides a new way to learn about early America because it serves as a counterpoint to the written record. Deetz has successfully updated this detailed and insightful book, explaining the importance of seemingly insignificant artifacts in a straightforward. It is a book that one can reread several times and continue to learn something new. The book is recommended for those interested in early American history or even those interested in genealogy.

http://evergreen.noblenet.org/eg/opac/record/1489233?locg=1

Erik Bauer
Archivist

Happy Birthday, Rex Stout!

It’s a good few weeks for literary birthdays, with Louisa May Alcott’s last Sunday, Mark Twain’s and Lucy Maud Montgomery’s on Monday (who saw the adorable Google Doodle dedicated to Anne of Green Gables?), and Rex Stout’s today (and there are more yet to come!).

Rex Todhunter Stout was a wizard words, a devil at mysteries, politically active, deeply concerned with issues of civil liberties and censorship and, not insignificantly,  is one of the very few gentlemen who could pull off facial hair like this:

 

Rex Stout, age 35
Rex Stout, age 35

Seriously, this beard should be reason enough to earn this guy a Wikipedia entry…..but, incredibly, he actually lived up to his facial hair with a life that went from Incredible Story to Incredible Story….

Born in Indiana on December 1, 1886, Stout was one of nine children, and raised by Quaker parents who were devoted to their children’s education–apparently, young Rex read the Bible twice by the age of four, and was the Kansas spelling bee champion at age 13.

From such illustrious beginnings, he joined the Navy in 1906, and served a yeoman of Theodore Roosevelt’s presidential yacht…pictures, of course, or it didn’t happen:

Rex-Stout-20s

Though Stout had written for most of his life, he began making a career out of writing in about 1910, penning pulp fiction stories for popular magazines.  These stories ranged from science fiction to romance to action-adventure…and two serialized murder mysteries.

It turned out that Stout enjoyed writing mysteries.  After a decade of working to make money, during which he served on the board of the American Civil Liberties Union’s National Council on Censorship in 1925, he decided to return to mysteries, and in 1934, published Fer-de-Lance, a mystery featuring a private investigator named Nero Wolfe, and his assistant, the long-suffering and thoroughly charming, Archie Goodwin.

Wolfe and Goodwin would go on to become one of the most beloved mystery-solving duo in literature, and the collection of their adventures, who was comprised of 33 novels and about 40 novellas written between 1934 and 1975 won the nominated Best Mystery Series of the Century at Bouchercon XXXI, the world’s largest mystery convention.  Incidentally, Stout was also nominated as the Best Mystery Writer of the Century.

Hughes_Fer-de-lance-by-Rex-StoutFor those who have yet to encounter the delightfulness that is Nero Wolfe, allow me to introduce you.  Nero Wolfe is a massively overweight man (according to Archive Goodwin, he weighs “a seventh of a ton”) who was apparently born in Montenegro and who, gloriously, is always 56 years old.  Wolfe is a man of habits, almost obsessively so.  He refuses to leave his house–actually, he refuses to move–for anyone’s pleasure but his own.  He is a fanatical orchid-grower, and beer aficionado.  And honestly, this description makes him sound rather maudlin–but through the eyes of Archie Goodwin, he becomes a wonderfully loveable curmudgeon.

Archie Goodwin is, pure and simple, one of the best sidekicks in all of literature.  He is clever, street-smart, caustically sarcastic, dapper, sweet, and a narrator par-excellence.  It is Goodwin who makes this series so attractive, and Goodwin who keeps Nero Wolfe from taking himself too seriously, so that we can enjoy him, too.

Apart from this series, though, Rex Stout created Dol Bonner, one of the first female private detectives in 1937, who continued to appear in the Nero Wolfe books through the years.  Think about that…how many female private detective novels have you read?  Rex Stout knew we needed more of them 78 years ago.

PelhamDuring the Second World War, Stout joined the Fight for Freedom organization, and wrote propaganda for the American War Effort.  After the war, he moved to an estate in New York and became a ‘gentleman farmer’, and fostered a life-long friendship with P.G. Wodehouse (pictured at right), who created Jeeves and Wooster.  They were so close, in fact, that Stout actually appears in the Jeeves and Wooster novels–it turns out Bertie Wooster and his Aunt Dahlia are fans.  So you don’t have to take my word for it….

And yes…he rocked that beard for the rest of his life:

Rex-Stout-9496453-1-402

If you want to get a little better acquainted with the wonderful works of Rex Stout, here are some suggestions:

1345075Fer-de-Lance: The book that introduced Nero Wolfe and Archie Godwin to the world.  This story begins with Wolfe giving up bootleg beer and sending his cook, Fritz, to find a suitable replacement (setting the book 2 months after the sale of certain beers was legalized again in the United States).  But the action really started when a local blue-collar investigator, Fred Durkin (who would become a recurring character) brings a woman to Wolfe whose husband has disappeared after coming into a great deal of money.  Though the characters in this book aren’t all as well-developed as they would become, Wolfe and Goodwin are vivid, unique, and delightful from the very start.

3179608Nero Wolfe: Back when A&E was a TV powerhouse, they adapted a number of Stout’s stories for television, starring Maury Chatkin as Nero Wolfe, and Timothy Hutton are Archie Goodwin.  The writing and scenery are spot-on in these stories, but better than anything is the casting.  These men are precisely what I pictured when reading the books, and their banter together is pitch-perfect.  Though nearly a decade old, these are shows that just get better with viewing, and would make an ideal binge-watch for a lazy holiday weekend.


2986506Son of Holmes
: Fans of Sherlock Holmes will love John Lescroart’s spin on the cannon, and the introduction of Auguste Lupa, the son of Sherlock Holmes.  Though how that all happened is (thankfully) obscure, these stories are historically detailed, engrossing, and have the same understated emotion and razor-sharp insight that make the Holmes stories so terrific.  Why am I mentioning this book here?  Because, rumor has it, Lescroart intended Auguste Lupa not only a sequel to the Sherlock Holmes stories…but a prequel to the Nero Wolfe stories.  That’s right…Lupa and Wolfe may very well be one and the same.  Which, now that I know that, is going to necessitate an immediate re-reading.