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Creativity mindfulness Nature Writing

Finding Leonard Cohen down a Rabbit Hole

One of my favorite things about the work I get do to for my books and zines is the sleuthing. Hunting down random (often misappropriated) quotes, getting permissions to reprint, finding hard copy proof. Evidence for my readers โ€” and myself โ€” that I have done due diligence to make what you hold in your hands valid and true to the best of my abilities.

As a student of English literature and journalism, and as a life-long writer and citer, I feel an incredible responsibility to validate as many of my references as possible. To remind my readers, for example, that it was Henry Stanley Haskins who wrote โ€œWhat lies behind us and what lies before us are but tiny matters compared to what lies within us,โ€ not Ralph Waldo Emerson or Gandhi, and not Buddha.

When I was writing LOOK UP! Musings on the Nature of Mindfulness, in which I used that quote, I actually spent six months researching and properly attributing quotes. That task included rabbit holes like the quote sourced to a 1970s motivational poster printed by an academic publisher in Texas written by a retired social worker in Oak Park, Illinois.

I get a little geeky when it comes to that kind of thing. Like a dog with a bone. Truth be told, I love it as much Alice loved going on her adventures!

My most recent adventure involved Leonard Cohen and a 60-year-old book.

While I was working on the spring issue of MANIFEST (zine): CRICKETS, I found a beautiful poem by Cohen called โ€œSummer Haiku.โ€ The poem appeared in his book The Spice-Box of Earth of which there was a rare, limited edition hardcover edition that included illustrations by Frank Newfeld, a renowned Canadian illustrator and book designer.

There were several copies of the book available online starting at around $200, which is a tad higher than my budget for the zine project. Less expensive copies did not include the Newfeld illustrations, and by this point in the adventure those were key.

I did find and purchase issue number 56 of The Devilโ€™s Artisan: A Journal of the Printing Arts that featured Newfeldโ€™s work on delicious, offset-printed, antique laid pages. It even included a letterpressed color keepsake of Newfeldโ€™s illustration for Cohen’s poem โ€œThe Gift,โ€ which appears in The Spice-Box of Earth.

I went on to find a bookseller in Canada, Steven Temple, who owns a copy of the 1961 edition. Searching through the 10,000 books he attends to in his home-based bookshop, he found and took the photo of โ€œSummer Haikuโ€ that appears in CRICKETS.

Of course, I was still curious. What did the rest of the book look like? How many poems were there? How many illustrations? How could I see it? Read it?

My local library did not have a copy of the book, nor did Google Books. According to a 2016 article in Toronto Life, the University of Torontoโ€™s Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library is โ€œhome to 140 bankerโ€™s boxes worth of Cohenโ€™s archivesโ€ including โ€œhandwritten notes and letters, portraits, CDs, paintings, novel manuscripts, books, early drafts of his poetry and lyrics, and even art he made when he lived as a Buddhist monk.โ€ Would it include a digital copy of The Spice-Box of Earth?

It did not.

Nor did the online Library and Archives of Canada or the Canadian Electronic Library. But on the Hathi Trust Digital Library website there was a helpful โ€œFind in a Libraryโ€ link that, when clicked, revealed some familiar and within-driving-distance names: Yale University, Wesleyan University, Connecticut College.

Lightbulb! I immediately emailed a woman I know at our local library, Deb Trofatter, who is the Associate Librarian for Reference Services and Technology, and askedโ€ฆby any chanceโ€ฆcan you get a copy ofโ€ฆ

Which is how, on May 15, I came to have in my hands a 60-year-old hardcover copy of Leonard Cohen’s The Spice-Box of Earth to savor and share.

NOTES & LINKS

โ€ข The Spice-Box of Earth, illustrated by Frank Newfeld. (Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1961).

โ€ข Click here to purchase my book LOOK UP! Musings on the Nature of Mindfulness

โ€ข Meditations in Wall Street by Henry Stanley Haskins (New York: William Morrow & Co., 1940).

โ€ข The Quote Verifier: Who Said What, Where, and When, by Ralph Keyes (New York: St. Martinโ€™s Griffin, 2006).

โ€ข Learn more about The Devilโ€™s Artisan : A Journal of the Printing Arts

โ€ข Discover Steven Temple Books

โ€ข Read โ€œA look inside U of Tโ€™s massive archive of Leonard Cohen poems, letters and pictures,โ€ in Toronto Life

โ€ข Check out the University of Torontoโ€™s Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library

Alice photo from a Fortnum & Mason (London) holiday window display, possibly 2006. Photographer not found yet.

MANIFEST (zine): Crickets is a riff and a rant about the consequences of creative bravery. Itโ€™s a 24-page, full color booklet that includes a curated Spotify playlist for your listening pleasure. Click here to order your copy today!

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