Facts, Fables, and Footnotes for the Week of May 14, 2023

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THIS WEEK IN
 
 
This Week in Literary History
 
 
MAY 14 — MAY 20
blurb

The word “blurb” is invented.

In the literary world, blurbs are a fraught business. These days they’re an industry standard, and writers and publishers need them to promote their books, but they are, above all else, a favor economy, and lots of people sort of wish they didn’t exist. But no matter your take on the blurb, we all have to admit that the word for them is perfect: a little ugly, a little like a puddle, but juicy, taking up space, defiant and happy to be here. So where did the word come from?

 

In a 1922 issue of The New York Times, writer and drama professor Brander Matthews gave readers an overview of one small but mighty literary genre: the blurb. Matthews was writing primarily about publisher’s blurbs, which he noted can range from the plain to the over-exaggerated (“The blurb-writer, when he is truly a master of his craft, will exaggerate so cautiously and so imperceptibly that we must believe him to be uttering truth”)—but the term has of course since expanded to include endorsements from other writers. Much of what he writes still rings true: “To me, at least, “blurb” is the Siamese twin of “jacket”: they go inseparable, united in life and passing together into oblivion.”

 

But if in 1922, the word was gaining traction, where did it come from? In his article, Matthews calls the word “a colorful and illuminating neologism which we owe to the verbal inventiveness of Mr. Gelett Burgess.”

 

Gelett Burgess, as it turns out, was a Bay Area humorist and writer of nonsense verse, famous-ish for his 1895 poem “Purple Cow,” which he published in his own magazine The Lark and which goes like this:

 

I never saw a Purple Cow,
I never hope to see one;
But I can tell you, anyhow,
I’d rather see than be one.

 

Fitting, perhaps, that it was this mind that invented the term “blurb”—in 1907 on a mock cover of his own book, Are You a Bromide?, which he presented at a dinner given by the American Booksellers’ Association on May 15, 1907. Publisher’s blurbs, of course, had existed before then, but it was Burgess who put a name to them: the name of Miss Belinda Blurb (whose image Burgess reportedly “lifted from a dental advertisement”).

 

Later, Burgess included the term in his Burgess Unabridged: A New Dictionary of Words You Have Always Needed, defining it this way:

 

Blurb, n. 1. A flamboyant advertisement; an inspired testimonial. 2. Fulsome praise; a sound like a publisher.

Blurb, v. To flatter from interested motives; to compliment oneself.

 

As it turned out, it was a word we had always needed.

 

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MORE ON BLURBS AND BOOK PROMOTION
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The Language of Blurbs, Decoded

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I Really Didn’t Want to Write This Promotional Essay Tied to My Book Release

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How I (Barely) Survived the Abject Failure of My Much-Hyped Debut Novel

 

BLURBS ARE GOOD, ACTUALLY:

“I think about what Toni Morrison once said, that the whole purpose of having power is to empower someone else. And so there’s power that comes from having a book that has been successful and has won awards. And every day I think to myself, how can I use this power for good and to help other people? . . . So that’s how I view the world of blurbing and the importance of it, that it’s literally lending your power and your access to someone else so that their book can be successful too.”

—DEESHA PHILYAW
 
 

In other (old)

news this week

Virginia Woolf’s endlessly resonant novel Mrs. Dalloway is published (May 14, 1925) • The BBC broadcasts a 30-minute excerpt of Twelfth Night; it’s the first known instance of a Shakespeare play being televised (May 14, 1937) • Alexander Pope’s “An Essay on Criticism” is published anonymously (May 15, 1711) • Voltaire is banished from Paris and sent to the Bastille (May 16, 1717) • A month after his death, a group of Lord Byron’s friends and executors gathers to destroy the writer’s scandalous memoirs (May 17, 1824) • Fancy poultry expert L. Frank Baum’s The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is published (May 17, 1900) • James Baldwin’s beloved and widely influential Go Tell It On the Mountain is published (May 18, 1953) • Oscar Wilde is released from Reading Gaol after two years imprisonment; as his last act before leaving the country, he visits Hatchards bookshop (May 19, 1897) • Shakespeare’s sonnets are first published in London (May 20, 1609) • Robert Browning meets Elizabeth Barrett for the first time (May 20, 1845) • Sarah Bernhardt premieres an adaptation of Hamlet with herself in the title role (May 20, 1899).

 
 
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Lyric Essay
 
 

“You better make them care about what you think. It had better be quirky or perverse or thoughtful enough so that you hit some chord in them. Otherwise it doesn’t work. I mean we’ve all read pieces where we thought, Oh, who gives a damn.” 

nora ephron

–NORA EPHRON

Born this week in 1941

“All which I feel I must write has become obsessive. So many truths seem to be rushing at me as the result of things felt and seen and lived through. Oh, what I think I must tell this world.”

lorraine hansberry

–LORRAINE HANSBERRY

Born this week in 1930

 
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