Hidden Gems - SPRING 2012

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Left: Gabrielle Fulton with pop-up books from the Children’s Literature Research Collection Right: Later version of the map of Prydain, circa 1964, Lloyd Alexander papers, 1941-1995, Free Library of Philadelphia, Children’s Literature Research Collection

HIDDEN GEM

87

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Inspiring Today’s Children

FREE LIBRARY OF PHILADELPHIA FOUNDATION 1901 VINE STREET, SUITE 111, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19103

PAID Philadelphia, PA Permit No. 5872

WITH YESTERDAY’S FAVORITES RECOGNIZED PRIMARILY FOR HIS

beautiful AND REALISTIC

Don’t forget!

images of birds, JOHN JAMES AUDUBON EMBARKED ON AN

Photo credit: Ryan Brandenberg

AMBITIOUS PROJECT IN THE 1840S TO PAINT THE QUADRUPEDS

The Free Library’s Children’s Literature Research Collection features more than 65,000 non-circulating books published from 1837 to the present, as well as the papers of renowned authors and illustrators Lloyd Alexander, Tomi Ungerer, Evaline Ness, and Virginia Lee Burton. Gabrielle Fulton, Head of the Children’s Literature Research Collection, invites you to come relive—and share—your favorite childhood stories. Everyone has a favorite story from childhood. Whether this story was told to us by a parent or a grandparent or we discovered it ourselves on a shelf in the library, it holds a place in our hearts. The Children’s Literature Research Collection (CLRC)—one of the great children’s historic collections in the United States—exists to preserve these stories. While scholars from around the globe rely on the treasures in our Collection—which enlighten their understanding of the history of children’s literature—I’m most touched when individuals arrive looking to reread their favorite childhood story. Every day people come in to request a book that they’ve had difficulty finding elsewhere. Books go out of print; copies are damaged; and the memory of many of them fades away except for those that sparked a child’s imagination. The Collection consists mainly of books, but also contains prints, paintings, and an archive of author and illustrator papers which includes manuscripts and preliminary sketches. CLRC holds such classics as the

Horatio Alger tales, fantasies like the Dungeons & Dragons series, and well-loved humor as in The Man Who Didn’t Wash His Dishes. One of the gems in our archives collection is Lloyd Alexander’s manuscripts and notes for The Chronicles of Prydain series along with both his original sketches and Evaline Ness’s final illustrations. The fifth book in the series, The High King, won the prestigious Newbery Medal in 1969. Many of Alexander’s books are still in print, and his publisher still receives letters from children writing about their love for his stories. Maybe you wanted to be a girl detective like Nancy Drew or an inventor like Tom Swift. Perhaps it was the pictures that caught your attention and you’d like to reread The Last of the Mohicans with N.C. Wyeth’s illustrations. Come in and relive the memory. Graduate students working on their theses; artists studying a particular illustrator’s style; parents and grandparents who long to share the thrill of a cherished story with the next generation—all are welcome to enjoy the gems in CLRC.

A generous grant from the Council on Library and Information Resources enabled the Free Library to process and catalog important archival collections in CLRC.

Nonprofit Org. U.S. Postage

OF NORTH AMERICA, BECOMING

the first to illustrate

AND DESCRIBE THESE ANIMALS IN A SINGLE PUBLICATION. HE, HIS SONS, AND DR. JOHN BACHMAN PRODUCED

150 drawings AND DESCRIPTIONS WHICH WERE THEN HAND PRINTED AND

hand colored BY PHILADELPHIAN

JAMES T. BOWEN AND PUBLISHED AS VIVIPAROUS QUADRUPEDS OF NORTH AMERICA. PICTURED HERE IS ONE OF THESE RARE PRINTS, KNOWN AS

the imperials, SHOWING

TWO RICHARDSON’S COLUMBIAN SQUIRRELS.

2963081

THE YEAR OF DICKENS 2012 CONTINUES WITH EXHIBITIONS IN THE RARE BOOK DEPARTMENT! THROUGH MAY 25, “FROM THE DESK OF CHARLES DICKENS” SHOWCASES FIRST EDITIONS, LETTERS, ORIGINAL DRAWINGS, AND PERSONAL EFFECTS. ON JUNE 4, “DICKENS AND THE THEATRE” OPENS, FEATURING PLAYBILLS, SCRIPTS, AND EPHEMERA THAT HIGHLIGHT DICKENS’S FLAIR FOR THE DRAMATIC. INFO AT FREELIBRARY.ORG/DICKENS.

The Free Library is one of the most important educational and cultural institutions in Philadelphia. The City of Philadelphia provides funds for the operations of the Free Library system, including staffing at our 54 locations. Through the generosity of individual gifts, the Free Library Foundation supports many of the Library’s incredible programs and services, which advance literacy, guide learning, and inspire curiosity throughout our city.

Hidden

GEMS A PERIODICAL HIGHLIGHTING THE FREE LIBRARY OF PHILADELPHIA’S RARE AND UNIQUE SPECIAL COLLECTIONS

THE AUDUBON PRINT SHOWN HERE IS PART OF THE PRINT AND PICTURE COLLECTION.

“Richardson's Columbian Squirrel, #5,” by John James Audubon from John James Audubon and John Bachman, The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America (New York, 1845-1848).

To make a gift to the Foundation, please visit freelibrary.org/support or call 215-567-7710. SPRING 2012


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