Pittsburgh’s Own Pan

Before we get started, here are two books I’ve been meaning to tell you about!

Instructional drawing book by Emily Fiegenschuh

For anyone who has a young, budding artist at home — or who knows one — or who would like to learn to draw fantasy creatures him/herself, this is the book to have! The Explorer’s Guide to Drawing Fantasy Creatures is by Emily Fiegenschuh. You’ll remember her as the artist of “The Star Shard” in Cricket — she who enabled us to see Cymbril, Loric, Miwa, Urrt, The Thunder Rake, and all the other characters and settings of the story. (I urge everyone to visit Emily’s web site at http://www.e-figart.com, where you can find galleries of many wondrous images, including a section dedicated specifically to the art of “The Star Shard.”) But anyway, this book is receiving rave reviews. It’s a user-friendly, wise, exuberant, step-by-step, entertaining, extremely helpful manual for learning to get those fantastic visions onto the paper or canvas in all their expressive, gesturing, glowering, enchanting glory!

Here’s another really cool new addition to the canon of fantasy:

The first of The Books of the Shaper, by John R. Fultz

 Seven Princes is the first part of The Books of the Shaper trilogy by John R. Fultz. I’ve interviewed John twice before on this blog; just type his name into the search bar, and you can revisit those insightful discussions. I happen to know that John is the real thing, a stellar, kind, generous, wise, and noble friend. But that’s not why I’m recommending his book here. I’m doing it because he also knows how to write. If you like fantastic worlds and epic struggles brought to life on a large, vibrant canvas of language, this is a book you’d love. John goes beyond the tropes and conventions of big fantasy; he makes them his own with original twists, and he always, always tells a human tale, the story of characters that engage us. He asks some pretty big questions and allows Story to illuminate the path toward answers. John R. Fultz. Seven Princes. Orbit Books. This book is on store shelves now!

Groinnk! New subject: mythology is indeed alive and ubiquitous, and Pittsburgh has its own remarkable statue of Pan!

A Song to Nature, a statue in Pittsburgh

The construction of Pittsburgh’s Schenley Park was made possible by a gift of 300 acres from Mary Schenley. In 1911, a design competition was held to create a memorial in her honor. In 1913, the winner was announced: A Song to Nature, sculpted by Victor David Brenner, best known for designing the Lincoln penny.

Pan is serenaded by Sweet Harmony.

The statue was dedicated in 1918. Described as “a happy combination of poetry and passion,” the statue depicts Pan the earth god being serenaded by the nymph Sweet Harmony. At the time, the figures represented culture’s power to tame nature.

Pan and Sweet Harmony

The statue’s architect, H. Van Buren Magonigle, used as the sculpture’s foundation the old Bellefield Bridge, which had been buried during the filling of St. Pierre’s Ravine. So this is yet another instance of the newer Pittsburgh springing from the bones and roots of its past (as in the case of my bookshelves).

A Song to Nature, designed and sculpted by Victor David Brenner

 “What was he doing, the great god Pan,

Down in the reeds by the river?”

The statue stands outside the main Carnegie Library in Pittsburgh.

“Spreading ruin and scattering ban,

Splashing and paddling with hoofs of a goat,

And breaking the golden lilies afloat

With the dragon-fly on the river.”

 — from “A Musical Instrument,” by Elizabeth Barrett Browning

“‘Afraid?’ murmured the Rat, his eyes shining with unutterable love. ‘Afraid! Of Him? O, never, never! And yet — and yet — O, Mole, I am afraid!'”

  — from The Wind in the Willows, by Kenneth Grahame

In the background stands The Cathedral of Learning:

Almost like the eroded natural spires of the American West it appears: The Cathedral of Learning in Pittsburgh.

Here’s a view from inside the Cathedral.

Cathedral windows

And looking down on the city:

Pittsburgh from above

The Carnegie Library as seen from The Cathedral of Learning

So here’s my idea of what to do with that last ARC. For a reading experience, you’re now much better off with a copy of the finished book. But the ARC is a piece of history — a collector’s item if the book does well — or a very eccentric collector’s item if it doesn’t. If someone would like to win it, here’s what I suggest.

This “contest” requires no problem-solving, no decoding, and it’s completely on the honor system. There’s no way of verifying what you claim. This contest will close on March 15th, the Ides of March. The winner will be the person who recommends The Star Shard to the most people by midnight at the end of that date. Here are the rules:

1. I don’t think mass-mailings should count. I’m not encouraging or rewarding spam here. You can’t write one announcement and send it to everyone in your address book, either electronically or on paper. These must be one-on-one human contacts, but yes, they may be written or electronic. If you write a heartfelt letter or e-mail to someone specific, that counts.

2. To count the recommendation, you have to say more than “Buy The Star Shard.” You have to tell the other person something about the book and why s/he might like it.

3. If you are able to get a librarian to order the book for a library, you can count that as five points — five recommendations. But the librarian has to agree; you have to know that s/he is going to order the book; you can’t just have fired off a message to which no response has come. (If you are a librarian and have ordered the book for your library, five points!)

4. Ditto with a bookstore. If the owner is going to order copies to stock because of your recommendation, five points.

5. If you are speaking formally to an audience (in a live setting) and you deliver an impassioned recommendation of this book, yes! — you can count every audience member. You’ve recommended it to them all. (Shouting to the crowds in a bus terminal or on a busy street doesn’t count.)

6. If you post an ad for the book on your blog or web site, count that as five.

7. This is retroactive, so if you’ve already recommended the book to some people according to the above rules, you can count those toward the contest.

8. As with the previous contest, if you already have an ARC of The Star Shard but choose to take part in this contest anyway, and if you win, you and I can decide together to which other player the ARC should go.

I’m signing off for now. Best wishes and blessings to all!

16 Responses to Pittsburgh’s Own Pan

  1. Pingback: John R. Fultz ———— VIRTUAL SANCTUARY

  2. Daylily says:

    It so happens that the first week of March is “Share A Story – Shape A Future Week” and March 4 is “March Forth – Do Something Day”! So the timing of this contest is terrific! We can march forth and tell people about The Star Shard, thereby sharing a story and helping to shape Fred’s future. 🙂

    • fsdthreshold says:

      Yes! You can count any recommendation you’ve made to a person, even before the start of the contest!

  3. Joe M says:

    And until the contest is over I shall give no more numbers. But if I recomend a book to everyone I have ever met I can have like 3567.

  4. Joe M says:

    A good question is though. Can we recommend things to people in a large group individually? I would geuss no because that would be taking advantage. I mean one person could get 25 points for a group when they are only entitled to five.

    • fsdthreshold says:

      Hi, Joe! As the rules say, if you’re formally speaking to an audience — any group of people who are truly listening to you — and you recommend The Star Shard and tell them something about it, then you can count every member of the audience!

  5. Scott says:

    That’s a great picture of the Carnegie Library. That place is huge! I may have to put that on my “Places that I want to visit” list.

    • fsdthreshold says:

      Thanks, Scott! Yes — before I moved here, when I was just visiting, the Carnegie Library was one of the places that made me think seriously about relocating here! This is the main library, but they have branches all across the Pittsburgh area, and they can easily send books back and forth; so if a book is anywhere in their system, you can get it from any branch. (I suppose that’s true of big urban libraries everywhere.) This library also has full-sized dinosaurs!

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