Saturday, December 31, 2011

Hooray for "Hugo"

Our family saw "Hugo" this week.  It is the story of a 12-year-old orphan who lives in a Paris train station and is trying to repair an automaton, believing it has a message from his late father. He meets a toy shop owner who turns out to be forgotten and disillusioned cinema legend, Georges Melies. Hugo and Georges' goddaughter, Isabelle, reconnect him with his past and a new generation of film lovers. Anyone interested in cinema history won't want to miss this charming film. Here is an interesting story from the Los Angeles Times about how "Hugo" has revived interest in Melies.

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Remembering Kennesaw Mountain


In wrapping up the manuscript for my book on Civil War journalism, I have been thinking about how I first got interested in the subject. Twenty years ago, our family was living in Marietta, Georgia, less than a mile from Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park. I enjoyed hiking in the park and that's when I first started thinking about the reporters who covered the fighting that took place there in 1863. I've been writing about the subject ever since.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

A Christmas Gift from the Past

My oldest daughter's favorite Christmas gift this year was a record player, yes, a record player. A college friend has one and Emily decided that she wanted one, too.  It was a lot of fun showing her how it worked--that needle can be tricky she learned--and then digging out some of our old records from the basement for her to play.

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Pioneering Art Director Dies

Louis Silverstein, who became known as the “godfather” of modern newspaper design, died last week at 92.  As art director of the New York Times, Silverstein made the “Gray Lady” more visually appealing in the 1970s at a time when newspapers faced increasing competition from television. By using creative typefaces, enlarging photographs and adding graphics, he modernized a paper that had always been slow to change its look. Silverstein made his first changes to the newspaper's look in 1967 when he changed the typeface and eliminated the period that had followed the Times name since its founding. “Every time you pick up the paper, you have in your hands a reflection of Lou’s sparkling talent,” former executive editor A. M. Rosenthal once said.