Collecting Lizzie
From the May 2005 NASIG (North American Serials Interest Group) Newsletter (with photos!),
Maggie Rioux, Systems Librarian for the MBLWHOI Library in Woods Hole, Mass., states, “I’ve been collecting Lizzie Bordeniana (is that a word?) since about 1981. When I first moved to Cape Cod in 1980 about the only thing I knew about Southeastern Massachusetts was “Lizzie Borden took an axe…†I had an interest in true crime reading anyway so I started acquiring a few things. Then when I went to library school (URI, 1991) and decided that any librarian worth her salt had to have a book collection, Lizzie Borden was a natural. After taking some courses at Terry Belanger’s Rare Book School at the University of Virginia, I got more serious about collecting. I now have almost 150 Lizzie Borden items, mostly books but including a couple of dolls, some CDs and videocassettes and an almost complete run of the Lizzie Borden Quarterly, which was published from 1993 until 2004. I also collect books by Maria Jane McIntosh, a relatively obscure 19th Century American author (further explanation upon request) and Edmund Lester Pearson, a librarian, humorist and author who wrote one of the definitive Borden books plus other true crime stuff (which is how I got interested in him). In addition I have stuff on books, libraries, Woods Hole and miscellaneous interesting things for a total of over 300 items in the collection. The most interesting is a little Japanese book called The Fisher Boy Urashima published in Tokyo in 1886. It’s in English, illustrated with woodblock prints and printed on paper which was then crushed vertically or “creped.†These were books of simple folktales published after the opening of Japan to the West and designed for Japanese who wanted to learn English or maybe for American or European traders to take home as souvenirs.”
Cool. Looks exactly like my bookcase. Nice to know there are other proud collectors of Borden kitsch out there! By the way, I sell that great bobblehead. Want one?
If you want to read about other collections by NASIG members, you can read the whole newletter by downloading the PDF here.