Eric Sloane, A Reverence for Wood
Cults roam the world. We know this. We fear them, with their rites and their implements and their inscrutable commitment to causes dark and wild.
And then there are cults like the one around Eric Sloane: many Sloane fans are elderly, many wear suspenders and ball caps, and they quietly see The Way Forward in and from his detailed, sketch-illustrated books about bygone America.
I'm trying not to become a Sloanie myself, if I might coin a phrase, not just because celebratory Americana unnerves me (though it does), or because I'm cautious of movements generally (though I am), but because he's an Easterner through and through. Among American oldtimers, I want to throw my lot in with Wallace Stegner instead, and with his thoughtful passion for the West. I might as well say it, though: Eric Sloane's popular history is deeply compelling for someone like me.
A Reverence for Wood, first published in 1965, was Sloane's twenty-first of his thirty-eight solo-authored books. Many of them are popular works on early American history, especially on rural, agricultural, or labouring topics. This one focuses on -- anyone? anyone? yes, you in the back? correct -- wood. An organizing theme is an ancient variety of apple called the "Seek-No-Further," but Sloane is at pains primarily to articulate the depth and complexity of the early American connection with wood.
This "historical novel," as Sloane calls it, moves back one century at a time from 1965 to 1665. As a result, the first chapter is about a man dismantling a collapsing barn one nail at a time so he can re-use the wood. He's working with a very knowledgeable older local fellow: they figure out that some of the planks, for example, were cut as floorboards in the early 1700s, based on nail holes and saw marks. We learn about the history of nail production, from hammered to punched, square to round, as well as about the various cracks or "checks" that wood gets as it dries. Subsequent chapters on earlier centuries explain topics as diverse as:
Such a delight, this book! From now on I'm going to look out for some of Sloane's other ones when I'm in bookstores: maybe Our Vanishing Landscape, An Age of Barns, or A Museum of Early American Tools....
And then there are cults like the one around Eric Sloane: many Sloane fans are elderly, many wear suspenders and ball caps, and they quietly see The Way Forward in and from his detailed, sketch-illustrated books about bygone America.
I'm trying not to become a Sloanie myself, if I might coin a phrase, not just because celebratory Americana unnerves me (though it does), or because I'm cautious of movements generally (though I am), but because he's an Easterner through and through. Among American oldtimers, I want to throw my lot in with Wallace Stegner instead, and with his thoughtful passion for the West. I might as well say it, though: Eric Sloane's popular history is deeply compelling for someone like me.
A Reverence for Wood, first published in 1965, was Sloane's twenty-first of his thirty-eight solo-authored books. Many of them are popular works on early American history, especially on rural, agricultural, or labouring topics. This one focuses on -- anyone? anyone? yes, you in the back? correct -- wood. An organizing theme is an ancient variety of apple called the "Seek-No-Further," but Sloane is at pains primarily to articulate the depth and complexity of the early American connection with wood.
This "historical novel," as Sloane calls it, moves back one century at a time from 1965 to 1665. As a result, the first chapter is about a man dismantling a collapsing barn one nail at a time so he can re-use the wood. He's working with a very knowledgeable older local fellow: they figure out that some of the planks, for example, were cut as floorboards in the early 1700s, based on nail holes and saw marks. We learn about the history of nail production, from hammered to punched, square to round, as well as about the various cracks or "checks" that wood gets as it dries. Subsequent chapters on earlier centuries explain topics as diverse as:
- the evolution of the andiron;
- why stone fences zigzag through dense New England forests;
- how to make charcoal;
- how to make bentwood boxes; and
- how to pick and store apples, including how and why to individually hang high-quality eating apples from their stems.
Such a delight, this book! From now on I'm going to look out for some of Sloane's other ones when I'm in bookstores: maybe Our Vanishing Landscape, An Age of Barns, or A Museum of Early American Tools....
Comments
And I hear your doubt about the how-to bits, but I eat that stuff up: who doesn't want to know how to make clapboard with a froe and a huge mallet? (See http://members.fortunecity.com/john_deere/Tools/ for the sketch -- admittedly it's from another book, but same idea!)
But you know, it's surprisingly easy to learn how to do old things in old ways. You just have to be prepared to cock things up terribly the first few times!
Ruth
http://besttoddler.com