Agatha Christie’s Notebooks

Any bookworm has probably read at least one Agatha Christie mystery– I read quite a few when I was a kid. Now there’s a book about how she used notebooks to do her writing: Agatha Christie’s Secret Notebooks: Fifty Years of Mysteries in the Making, by John Curran.

Curran stumbled on the notebooks while spending a weekend with Christie’s grandson, Mathew Prichard, and his family at Greenway, the family’s holiday home. He quickly became obsessed, spending most of that weekend and then the next four years using the notebooks to trace the development of Christie’s story ideas and map the events and objects of her life onto her art. The notebooks contain thousands of ideas, many dated years before the work they appeared in was finished, few of them consecutive, since she scribbled in whichever was nearest to hand. At any one time, Christie would have half a dozen notebooks going.

Christie’s promiscuous note-taking meant that any one novel or play might be distributed over multiple notebooks and many, many years. Christie used Notebook 3 for at least 17 years and 17 novels. The other notebooks were more or less like this; only five notebooks deal with a single title (three notebooks contain only chemical formulae, the last notebook is blank). There’s some evidence that Christie tried to take charge of the pile, listing the contents at the start of one notebook. For some novels, she tried to impose method on her chaotic practice, assigning letters to scenes and moving them around. But her efforts at organization petered out pretty quickly.

Read more at Slate Magazine. I wish there were pictures of the notebooks!

Moleskine Monday: Customized Planner at Library Notebook

Here’s another example of a customized Moleskine, this time from Library Notebook. She’s turned it into an all-in-one notebook, with lists, a calendar, and sections for specific projects. She’s also added some extra envelopes to hold business cards and snazzed the whole thing up with colorful artwork.

More info and images at Library Notebook: Another Library Notebook

Notebook Addict of the Week: Rusty Rocket

This week’s addict is a designer who wishes he could find one notebook that met all his needs:

One important characteristic I require is that the pages have to withstand watercolour paints, as this is the most common medium used when adding detail and colour to my sketches. The Windsor and Newton sketchpad does this really well, closely followed by the standard, much trusted Moleskin of which I also have a couple of slimline pads which I’m keen to try out. The two homemade matchbook pads, although not very good in the face of watercolour, are a good example of functional recycling and are great for jotting down small acorns of ideas.

Read more at The Designer’s Notebook «

Moleskines in Politics: Michael Ignatieff

It’s interesting to see how a notebook, particularly a Moleskine, and particularly a red one, can become a political symbol. Canada’s Liberal Party Leader, Michael Ignatieff, was spotted at a party conference jotting notes in a red Moleskine, and it seems to have whipped up a lot of commentary, sometimes rather snide :

“Perhaps Michael Ignatieff will write a Red Book (make that a red moleskine notebook), tear it up after the next election, and eliminate the deficit à la Jean Chretien.” (National Post)

“Susan Delacourt has a nice story this morning [The Star article quoted below] on Mr. Ignatieff and his moleskine notepads. He was up front all yesterday, and is again today, quietly taking notes. The Liberals should promise a moleskine for every child. I’m convinced this would boost our national productivity. Or at least our self-esteem. It’s impossible to carry around a moleskine and not feel like your thoughts are important and worth writing down. My egomania has improved immeasurably since I started using them.” (Macleans)

Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff is writing a book.
“Actually, the author-turned-politician is writing many books these days – filling small, red-covered Moleskine notebooks, to be precise, at a rate of one every couple of months.
On any given day, at any event, the faithful red notebook is at Ignatieff’s side and more often than not, he’s writing in it.
What’s in there? Speech ideas, to-do lists, personal diary entries.
He likes them lined and diligently stays between those lines. He says he likes to cram as much into each book as possible…” (The Star)

The term “Red Book” refers to Canadian policy documents, but as one of the articles points out, critics of the Liberals might also point out the comparison to Mao’s Little Red Book of Communist ideas. And at least one of these articles seems to imply that using a Moleskine is a sort of twee affectation of well-intentioned but clueless liberals, like drinking latte.

But here in the U.S., it seems the highest-profile Moleskine user is the very not-liberal Glenn Beck, much to the dismay of many people, and delight of many others. But as far as I know, Beck only uses black Moleskines, not red ones.

Whatever side of the political spectrum you favor, that’s the great thing about notebooks: there’s room in them for every kind of idea.

Behance Outfitter: New Products

A reader tipped me off to some new Behance products, also noted at this link: swissmiss | Behance Outfitter | New Products.
I like the little cahiers.

I always have mixed feelings about notebooks that force you to stick to a certain format, rather than free form pages, but I guess I can see how this can help you stay organized– using each box for an action item, and jotting associated notes on the dot-grid pages. Has anyone out there tried these? Let us know what you think!

Carnival of Pen, Pencil and Paper, 9th Edition

Welcome to our 9th Carnival of Pen, Pencil, and Paper, collecting the past month’s highlights from blogs about pens, notebooks, office supplies and art supplies. The iPad may be getting all the hype this week, but we’re here to celebrate pads made of paper, ink that is not e-ink, and pages that turn in actual 3D space rather than just a ripple of electrons across a screen. Don’t get me wrong– I’m not anti-technology and I love my Apple products. But for this month’s Carnival, I decided to highlight the long history of paper, pen and pencil by choosing a few Editor’s  Picks that remind us that some technologies stay in use for hundreds of years, while others will be replaced by something new in no time and won’t leave such interesting stories behind.

Editor’s Picks:

Okami0731 presents SPECIAL BULLETIN – J Herbin 340th Anniversary Ink posted at Whatever. Can you believe this company has been around since 1670? Wow.

Lito Apostolakou presents Pencil Leads in Paris Barricades. Victor Hugo’s Pencil Stub. posted at Palimpsest.  A fascinating story about a humble pencil stub’s role in French political upheaval.

JoniB presents I’m a Green Inker!?! posted at Daydreamers Welcome. An interesting bit of trivia about what “green ink” has historically meant.

And now on to the rest of our submissions:

Notebooks

Matt presents My Recent Moleskine Hacks posted at 0MAk0’s Posterous, saying, “Notebooks, Moleskine, Piccadilly Inc, Pens, etc …”
Superpooky presents Tracking Weight with Field Notes posted at Trains, pens and planners, saying, “Perhaps more about how I’m using my Field notes rather than a review but we need to use our notebooks sometime. Right?”
travisthetrout presents Flip-Over Books: Things to do Today posted at Notes in a Book.

Pens

Margana presents A Variation on the Levenger True Writer Theme posted at An Inkophile’s Blog, saying, “Some gorgeous journals have paper that just isn’t fond of fountain pen ink. To make them useful, friends helped me find something suitable for these lovely but unloved journals.”
Tom Overfield presents yard-o-led viceroy victorian – oozing of craftsmanship « lady dandelion posted at lady dandelion, saying, “Her pictures here are incredible. So hard to take ones of metallic objects but these are flawless.”
Patrick Sikes presents The Fountain Pen is Back!” posted at Norsk Woodshop.
David Garrett presents J. Herbin Poussière de Lune posted at seize the dave.
Tom Oddo presents How does the Pen Addiction Start? posted at Goldspot Pens, saying, “How do we become so infatuated with writing instruments?”
TonyB presents President Obama’s 22 Signature Pens posted at Tiger Pens Blog, taking a detailed look at how and why the President used all those pens to sign the health care bill.

Miscellaneous

Alberto presents Canson Fanboy Create Your Own Comic Book Kit Review posted at Kid Sketches, saying, “Nice paper sample introductory kit for artists exploring the tools commonly used in creating sequential art and graphic novel stories.”

That’s it for this month. Thank you to everyone who submitted these excellent posts! Next month’s Carnival will be hosted at Whatever by Okami. You can submit a post using the carnival submission form. Past posts and future hosts can be found on our blog carnival index page. More info about the Carnival posted here too.

Notebook Addict of the Year: Carmen

You might think April is a little early to be declaring a Notebook Addict of the Year. Well, I’m ashamed to say I have been trying to get this post ready for months, so it really should have gone up last year. But I’m not sure it even matters what year it is, because Carmen has to win the prize for notebook addict of the decade, or century!

You know how they say if you really love something, you let it go? That’s how much this notebook addict loves notebooks. She found all these fabulous items while traveling in France and Germany, and she sent them to me, to share with all the rest of you notebook fans. There are so many, I won’t even attempt full reviews of all, but there are plenty of photos below, and you can see larger versions of them on Flickr.

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My favorite was the notebook below, from Rationella. I’d seen the brand mentioned online and was very excited to try one– it’s a Swedish brand, though this example was purchased in Germany. It’s got a clothbound cover that makes it similar to the HandBook Journal (shown here in blue), but it’s slightly smaller and thinner, and includes a pen loop. Rationella’s website says their products are produced according to “old bookbinding traditions,” and that comes through in this notebook– it just seems like a really nice, tight, good quality product.

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Below is a German notebook, this one slightly taller than the usual pocket Moleskine size, shown next to it for comparison. It’s got deep notches that keep the elastic in place. The colored page edges are a neat touch. Here again, there’s also a pen loop on the edge.

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This next one is pretty cool– like some of the notebooks sold by Levenger, it has pages that can be detached and then reinserted, keeping the slim format of a spiral notebook without the bulk added by the usual looseleaf rings of most refillable notebooks.

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An attractive black and red journal:

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This Le Zippe notebook is another one of my favorites. It can double as a wallet. I just love how different it is from anything else I’ve ever used– funky coloring and materials, and really practical features. I’m not sure how the plastic would hold up to being stuffed with a lot of cards and papers and money, but it would be worth a try!

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The slipcased notebook below is interesting– it comes with its own pencil, but it’s a bit awkward to have to take out the notebook and then shake the pencil loose from deep within the slipcase.

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This one reminds me of the Xonex notebooks you see in some shops in the USA. It’s a little taller and wider than a pocket Moleskine.

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I didn’t realize TeNeues made any journals like this– they have other small notebooks that I’ve seen, as well as calendars and art books– this large notebook resembles a Moleskine, but with an embossed cover and silver page edges. Very snazzy.

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Another German notebook, with two ribbon markers.

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A slim exercise book, with a little cut-out in the cover

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A basic lined notebook from Muji

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Another thin exercise book:

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A hardcover journal:

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The whole pile again:

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Whew, that is a lot of notebooks! I’m sure you can imagine how it felt to open a box filled with all these fabulous goodies. A HUGE thank you once again to Carmen– you are truly a notebook queen!

Shutting Down this Blog

I want to thank all of you who have become loyal readers over the last year and a half. I’ve had a great time sharing my notebook obsession with you all. But now that I’ve bought an iPhone, this is the only notebook I’m going to be using from now on:

It’s so handy to keep everything electronically– no more scratchy pen on paper, no more doodles in the margins and pasted-in clippings. And I’ll never run out of pages, so no more stacks and stacks of dusty old notebooks and journals. I mean, who cares what size or color the outside of the notebook is, or how flexible the cover is, or how thick the paper is? It’s all just so irrelevant when you can tidily store every bit of information you’d need to remember in clean, uniform letters typed out on a screen.

So that’s it. I’m done. No more notebooks.

Bye!

Oh yeah– April Fool! ;)

Time for Another Carnival!

Since I’ve reconsidered my decision to chuck all my notebooks in favor of my iPhone :) , I thought it was about time I hosted another Carnival of Pen, Pencil and Paper. You can submit a post relating to notebooks, pens, pencils, office supplies, art supplies, etc at this link anytime up until 5pm EST on April 4. The Carnival will be posted here at Notebook Stories on Tuesday April 6.
Read more about the Carnival here.

Next month’s Carnival will be posted by Okami at Whatever on May 4. Hosting spots beyond that are open, so contact me if you’re interested.

Notebooks, journals, sketchbooks, diaries: in search of the perfect page…