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Common Book, Voume Three : Paris Review Common Book.

BIB_ID
454446
Accession number
MA 23894.1
Credit line
Gift of the Estate of John Train in honor of the Morgan's Centennial, 2024.
Description
1 volume ; 34 x 21.8 cm
Notes
Common books were collaboratively written notebooks, kept by magazine staff and used for general office notes, containing reminders, contact information, records of phone messages, to-do lists, and other memoranda. Many common books contain ephemera such as newspaper clippings, office photographs, business cards, documents, and letters. In the words of novelist and former magazine staff member, Mona Simpson, common books were used for "anything and everything." These common books originated in the New York office of The Paris Review, with the sole exception of a volume kept in the Paris office (MA 5040 BD 2). The common books were left open in the office and moved around different desks and countertops. The preferred notebook for Paris Review common books was the 300-page-count Columnar Book manufactured by Boorum & Pease. The common books provide viewers a glimpse of the everyday workings of The Paris Review office, from the magazine's early infancy to its rise as an established literary publication and cultural icon of the twentieth-century American literary scene.
Provenance
Helen Train Klebnikov.
Summary
Labeled "COMMON BOOK, Volume Three." First page reads: "Addenda to Crank File Series Pages 143 on in Common Book Volume Two." Contains a letter from an employee with criticisms of the magazine's office management and financial practices. Contains a letter from Terry Southern admonishing the magazine for editing out a profane word in his story, "The Accident" printed in the first issue.