JF Ptak Science Books Quick Post
Well, there's busy and then there's busy. Somehow Dickens and Shakespeare managed to produce dozens of superb works--enough for one great work by dozens of other writers--all in a surprisingly short period of time, like 25 concerted years each, before they gave in to the immortal anti-beloved of eternity. John Ruskin--writer and art historian and critic--wrote a lot of books in his long life, and generally worked on many other things at the same time, all by hand, all hand-written, all stored in wooden files, all data fetched directly from books that he owned or had to make his way to.
I bring up Ruskin because of the letter I found that he wrote to Charles Eliot Norton outlining his activities. It is an impressive list (pp 180-181):
At least he wasn't fretting about sinister clouds!
http://jsbookreader.blogspot.co.uk/2010/03/ruskin-plague-cloud.html
Posted by: Ray Girvan | 05 November 2013 at 09:18 PM
Thanks for that Ray! The illustrations he provided on clouds are fabulous proto-cubist-something things! I came up this because I was trying to figure out if he was *the* John Ruskin who contributed a longish series of articles about agate/concretions in the Journal of Geology in 1867. He was! The articles are fascinating and the illustrations beautiful...
Posted by: John F. Ptak | 05 November 2013 at 09:48 PM