Posts tagged UIowa

chicagopubliclibrary:
“ What Is This, A Book For Ants?
From The Atlantic:
“ The University of Iowa library contains more than 4,000 miniature books, all measuring fewer than three inches in either height, width, or both. Three inches is not a lot for...
chicagopubliclibrary:
“ What Is This, A Book For Ants?
From The Atlantic:
“ The University of Iowa library contains more than 4,000 miniature books, all measuring fewer than three inches in either height, width, or both. Three inches is not a lot for...

chicagopubliclibrary:

What Is This, A Book For Ants?

From The Atlantic:

The University of Iowa library contains more than 4,000 miniature books, all measuring fewer than three inches in either height, width, or both. Three inches is not a lot for a book, but three inches is outright capacious when compared with a little red bug of a book, one of the smallest objects in the entire collection, measuring 0.138 inches square and 0.04 inches thick.

Based on the cover, library staff assumed the little book was a Bible, or at least some part of one, and a photograph taken through a magnifying glass and cleaned up on Photoshop confirmed this suspicion. But everything else about it was unknown. Librarian Colleen Theisen, who found it in a box marked “microminiatures,” calls it the “most perplexing” of the miniature collection: a book so small it could not be read by the naked eye. What was it? Who made it and when? Whatever clues its text contained were locked between its tiny binding.

Click here to find out what this ladybug-sized book contains!

If you want to find out more about this tiny treasure, check out the UI Special Collections tumblr!

irisblasi:

“This course began as Form and Theory of Fiction, became Form of Fiction, then Form and Texture of Fiction, then Surface Criticism, or How to Talk out of the Corner of Your Mouth Like a Real Tough Pro. It will probably be Animal Husbandry 108 by the time Black February rolls around. As was said to me years ago by a dear, dear friend, ‘Keep your hat on. We may end up miles from here.’ ””

Kurt Vonnegut’s term paper assignment in his “Form of Fiction” course at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop in 1965

via Slate

as an English major at the University of Iowa, this makes me enormously happy.