Four for #NonfictionNovember and #NovNov25: Hanff, Humphrey, Kimmerer & Steinbeck

I’ll be doubling up posts most days for the rest of this month to cram everything in!

Today I have a cosy companion story to a beloved bibliophiles’ classic, a comprehensive account of my favourite beverage, a refreshing Indigenous approach to economics, and a journalistic exposé that feels nearly as relevant now as it did 90 years ago.

 

Q’s Legacy by Helene Hanff (1985)

Of course we all know and love 84, Charing Cross Road, about Hanff’s epistolary friendship with the staff of Marks & Co. Antiquarian Booksellers in London in the 1950s. This gives a bit of background to the writing and publication of that book, responds to its unexpected success, and follows up on a couple of later trips to England for the TV and stage adaptations. Hanff lived in a tiny New York City apartment and worked behind the scenes in theatre and television. Even authoring a cult classic didn’t change the facts of being a creative in one of the world’s most expensive cities: paying the bills between royalty checks was a scramble. The title is a little odd and refers to Hanff’s self-directed education after she had to leave Temple University after a year. When she stumbled on Cambridge professor Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch’s books of lectures at the library, she decided to make them the basis of her classical education. I most liked the diary from a 1970s trip to London on which she stayed in her UK publisher André Deutsch’s mother’s apartment! This is pleasant and I appreciated Hanff’s humble delight in her unexpected later-life accomplishments, but it does feel rather like a collection of scraps. I also have to wonder to what extent this repeats content from the 84 sequel, The Duchess of Bloomsbury Street. But if you’ve liked her other books, you may as well read this one, too. (Free – The Book Thing of Baltimore) [177 pages]

 

Gin by Shonna Milliken Humphrey (2020)

Picking up something from the Bloomsbury Object Lessons series (or any of these other series of nonfiction books) is a splendid way to combine two challenges. Humphrey was introduced to gin at 16 when the manager of the movie theater where she worked gave her Pepsi cups of gin and grapefruit juice. Luckily, that didn’t precede any kind of misconduct and she’s been fond of gin ever since. She takes readers through the etymology of gin (from the Dutch genever; I startled the bartender by ordering a glass of neat vieux ginèvre at a bar in Brussels in September), the single necessary ingredient (juniper), the distillation process, the varieties (single- or double-distilled; Old Tom with sugar added), the different neutral spirits or grain bases that can be used (at a recent tasting I had gins made from apples and potatoes), and appearances in popular culture from William Hogarth’s preachy prints through The African Queen and James Bond to rap music. I found plenty of interesting tidbits – Samuel Pepys mentions gin (well, “strong water made of juniper,” anyway) in his diary as a constipation cure – but the writing is nothing special, I knew a lot of technical details from distillery tours, and I would have liked more exploration of the modern gin craze. “Gin is, in many ways, how I see myself: comfortable, but evolving,” Humphrey writes. “Gin has always interested a younger generation of drinker, as well as commitment from the older crowd, while maintaining a reputation among the middle aged. It is unique that way.” That checks out from my experience of tastings and the fact that it’s my mother-in-law’s tipple of choice as well. (Birthday gift from my Bookshop wish list) [134 pages]

 

The Serviceberry: An Economy of Gifts and Abundance by Robin Wall Kimmerer (2024)

Serviceberries (aka saskatoons or juneberries) are Kimmerer’s chosen example of nature’s bounty, freely offered and reliable. When her farmer neighbours invite people to come and pick pails of them for nothing, they’re straying from the prevailing economic reasoning that commodifies food. Instead of focusing on the “transactional,” they’re “banking goodwill, so-called social capital.” Kimmerer would disdain the term “ecosystem services,” arguing that turning nature into a commodity has diminished people’s sense of responsibility and made them feel more justified in taking whatever they want and hoarding it. Capitalism’s reliance on scarcity (sometimes false or forced) is anathema to her; in an Indigenous gift-based economy, there is sufficient for all to share: “You can store meat in your own pantry or in the belly of your brother.” I love that she refers to Little Free Libraries and other community initiatives such as farm stands of free produce, swap shops, and online giveaway forums. I volunteer with our local Repair Café, I curate my neighbourhood Little Free Library, and I’m lucky to live in a community where people are always giving away quality items. These are all win-win situations where unwanted or broken items get a new lease on life. Save landfill space, resources, and money at the same time! Compared to Braiding Sweetgrass, this is thin (but targeted) and sometimes feels overly optimistic about human nature. I was glad I didn’t buy the bite-sized hardback with gift money last year, but I was happy to have a chance to read the book anyway. (New purchase – Kindle 99p deal) [124 pages]

 

The Harvest Gypsies: On the Road to The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck (1936; 1988)

This lucky find is part of the “California Legacy” collection published by Heyday and Santa Clara University. In October 1936, Steinbeck produced a series of seven articles for The San Francisco News about the plight of Dust Bowl-era migrant workers. His star was just starting to rise but he wouldn’t achieve true fame until 1939 with the Pulitzer Prize-winning The Grapes of Wrath, which was borne out of his travels as a journalist. Some 150,000 transient workers traveled the length of California looking for temporary employment in the orchards and vegetable fields. Squatters’ camps were places of poor food and hygiene where young children often died of disease or malnutrition. Women in their thirties were worn out by annual childbirth and frequent miscarriage and baby loss. Dignity was hard to maintain without proper toilet facilities. Because workers moved around, they could not establish state residency and so had no access to healthcare or unemployment benefits. This distressing material is captured through dispassionate case studies. Steinbeck gives particular attention to the state’s poor track record for the treatment of foreign workers – Chinese, Japanese and Filipino as well as Mexican. He recounts disproportionate police brutality in response to workers’ attempts to organize. (Has anything really changed?!) In the final article, he offers solutions: the right to unionize, and blocks of subsistence farms on federal land. Charles Wollenberg’s introduction about Steinbeck and his tour guide, camp manager Tom Collins, is illuminating and Dorothea Lange’s photographs are the perfect accompaniment. Now I’m hankering to reread The Grapes of Wrath. (Secondhand – Gifted by a friend as part of a trip to Community Furniture Project, Newbury last year) [62 pages]

Check out Kris Drever’s folk song “Harvest Gypsies” (written by Boo Hewerdine) here.

27 responses

  1. Elle's avatar

    Four very different and intriguing choices! Gin has always felt implicitly classy – posh, even. Maybe that’s connected to its cross-generational appeal? I don’t make that association with vodka (mental connotations: depressed Scandis and over-excited sixth-formers) or whisky (my liquor of choice, but mental connotations are, unfortunately, dirtbag badasses and investment bros) or rum (connotations: Jack Sparrow).

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Ha ha, I can relate to most of your stereotypes, though the ladies who slam double G&Ts at my local arts venue (where I volunteer behind the bar) are not what I’d call classy! Complicating the picture: I’ve recently gotten into rum, while C is dipping into whisky and has become fond of some unpeated types.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Elle's avatar

        Hah! There’s a nice spectrum when it comes to whisky – it’s not all super-smoky.

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  2. hopewellslibraryoflife's avatar

    I lost my post. I loved Q’s Legacy–read it in high school and my English teacher even borrowed it. I learned so much. I’d probably find Steinbeck in NONFICTION fascinating. I hated the Grapes of Wrath because we were forced through it in English class. Have you read The Tortialla Curtain by T.C. Boyle–modern take on GofW.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I think we have that Boyle novel, but I’ve not read it — thanks for letting me know about the connection! I hated the Steinbecks I was forced to read in school (two novellas: The Pearl and The Red Pony, both depressing and the one involving animal death), but liked The Grapes of Wrath because I discovered it on my own.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. hopewellslibraryoflife's avatar

        We had to read The Oearl which I was ok with and Of Mice and Men which I disliked. All Steinbeck was made worse by everyone having take turns to reading aloud in class. In the late 1970s the barely literate wre mixed with those who coukd go to Harvard so it was torture.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Rebecca Foster's avatar

        That and being forced to write formulaic essays are sure to turn anyone off a book.

        Liked by 1 person

      3. hopewellslibraryoflife's avatar

        Ha! In the 1970s we took multiple-choice tests with maybe 1 question with long answer to write. School was a joke. Getting to college changed that. Thankfully I took the college prep English classes my last two years of high school.

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  3. Marcie McCauley's avatar

    I enjoyed reading about all of these but particularly the find of the Steinbeck pieces pre GoW (one I would love to reread, also, but I feel I should read East of Eden first before rereading anything of his). Seeing what inspired a work of fiction from the other side: so interesting!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      East of Eden is glorious. I couldn’t believe my luck to find this book, which I didn’t know even existed, over here. I originally gave it to C because he and his one band have a faux anecdote about sourcing their name from Steinbeck.

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      1. Marcie McCauley's avatar

        It seems like one you would have found back in the States, if at all.

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  4. whatmeread's avatar

    I don’t think we have serviceberries here, or if we do, they might be called something else.

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    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Kimmerer is based in upstate New York, I believe, but that’s where my mother is from and I’d never heard of them. The berries do have lots of different names.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. whatmeread's avatar

        Hmmm, a berry I first heard about when I moved here was salmonberries. Well, who knows? I’m not exactly a berry expert. Maybe it’s more of a catchall name, because I just googled it and found eight other names (none of them familiar) as well as an article about nine types of serviceberry trees.

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  5. Cathy746books's avatar

    I loved 84 Charing Cross Road so I think I would like to read the Hanff.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      It’s fun to hear about all the fan mail she got for that book and the different adaptations that were made. You’d think it would be a difficult format to adapt!

      Liked by 1 person

  6. Jane's avatar

    The Hanff sounds good but I’m particularly interested in The Harvest Gypsies, I absolutely loved The GOW and could read anything around it!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      You can see how the Joads’ experiences are an amalgam of what he witnessed on this trip.

      Liked by 1 person

  7. WordsAndPeace's avatar

    the 84 sequel is good too!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I’ll look for it secondhand. This one is an odd amalgam of prequel and sequel so I’ve called it a companion volume.

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  8. Laura's avatar

    There are SO many of the Object Lessons that I want to read I’ve almost given up. I’ve still only read Glitter (which was very good!)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I’ve managed to find a few on Edelweiss, but they’re curiously difficult to access in general. Glitter sounds fun. I love how interdisciplinary and random the books are.

      Liked by 1 person

  9. Rebecca Moon Ruark's avatar

    I remember loving Steinbeck’s The Pearl, but maybe because it’s short?? That nonfiction sounds fascinating.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      It was being forced to read it for school that turned me against it, I expect.

      Liked by 1 person

  10. […] review that I was finally inspired to pick this up from the pile and read in time for Cathy and Rebecca’s Novellas in […]

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  11. Liz Dexter's avatar

    I like Q’s Legacy but I always read it as part of the omnibus I have of the whole lot of her books so it all meshes into one after a bit! I actually bought some nice hardbacks of Q’s writing after reading this the first time. I keep meaning to read The Serviceberry, so must do so, and Braiding Sweetgrass of course.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Ah, an omnibus would be a good way to encounter it. It does feel like a curious mix of prequel, sequel and simultaneous companion. How lovely that you were inspired to read Q!

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