Sunday, March 24, 2013

The Beatrix Potter Gallery

For an author, there’s always the temptation to publish your own writing, and today’s technology makes that process easy.  Just write your novel or memoir, go to a company’s website, and in a few hours or days, your ebook can be available for sale on Amazon.com.  Some self-published authors even make it big, as Christopher Paolini demonstrated when his dragon novel Eragon was picked up by a major publisher, and became an international bestseller.   Another author who self-published her first novel was Beatrix Potter.

Looking for some great Beatrix Potter merchandise?
Try this place.

During last year’s trip to England, we visited Hawkshead in the Lake District.   This village consists of a few short streets, with most of the businesses tailored to tourism.  Gift shops offered a variety of Beatrix Potter souvenirs and books (in addition to the bookstore).  William Heelis, who married Beatrix Potter after she moved to the Lake District, once had his law office in Hawkshead, and this building now houses the Beatrix Potter Gallery.  

Interested in learning about the author and her stories?
Try this place.

The theme of the Gallery changes annually.  Last year, it focused on Beatrix Potter’s first book, The Tale of Peter Rabbit.  Before Frederick Warne & Sons published her children’s book with color illustrations, Miss Potter self-published the book with pen and ink drawings.  We toured the small (tiny, really) rooms downstairs, then climbed the narrow stairway, bending to avoid the wooden beams in the low ceiling, and watching our feet on the uneven steps.  Upstairs, we were given two versions of her first story, so we could compare the self-published work to the version that we have all come to know and love.  It was interesting to notice how much more refined the drawings were in the Frederick Warne & Sons' version.  I also found interesting which pages, both text and illustrations, didn’t make it into the later, official edition.  As we made this comparison, we enjoyed the full sensory experience, making use of the headsets that hung from the ceiling, and followed along as the narrator read the official story.  Before we left, we toured each upstairs room, in which framed, full size illustrations from the story hung on the walls.

Just watch your step (and your head) inside.
As the sign above the door warns,
"Bend or Bump."

I remember reading Beatrix Potter as a child.  From watching the movie about her life, “Miss Potter,” I can understand the long-standing and far-reaching allure of her books.  Comparing the two versions of The Tale of Peter Rabbit demonstrated the significant role a publisher plays in an author’s life.  Any company can format, reproduce, and make copies of a book available for sale.  Editors at a publishing house, who fall in love with an author’s work, and desperately want it to succeed, can insist on edits and alterations to the material.  Their suggestions (or mandates) may not always be right, but in this case, I found Frederick Warne & Sons' version superior to the self-published version.

I’m glad I got to read them both, and make that comparison.

Dragon Dave

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