Friday Links, October 2, 2020

Long-listed books for 2020 National Book Awards, the recovery of lost languages and other important things in the world's oldest library, and Dappled Things editors build Châteaux in the air.

The 2020 National Book Awards Longlist: Fiction

Katy Carl, Dappled Things Editor-in-Chief, recommended this link to a New Yorker article on the top ten contenders (the long list) for the 2020 National Book Award for Fiction. If you have don't have access to the New Yorker, you can go to the source, "The ten contenders for the National Book Award for Fiction" at the National Book Foundation website. On October 6, the foundation will reveal the five finalists.

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The Lost Languages Discovered in One of the World’s Oldest Continuously Run Libraries

Associate Editor, Josh Nadeau, recommended this link with the comment, "Librarian monks for the win."

At POCKET WORTHY at the Smithsonian Magazine, Brigit Katz writes about  a remarkable collection of ancient texts preserved, and sometimes erased and then written over, by monks at isolated Saint Catherine’s Monastery at Mount Sinai in Egypt and about the work being done to uncover the original texts. The monastery is  the oldest continuously inhabited monastery in the world, and it is also known as the "Sacred Monastery of the God-Trodden Mount Sinai." On the grounds is a living bush believed to be the actual "burning bush" from which God talked to Moses. The monastery houses the oldest library in the world.

Among the newly revealed texts, which date from the 4th to the 12th century, are 108 pages of previously unknown Greek poems and the oldest-known recipe attributed to the Greek physician Hippocrates.

"But perhaps the most intriguing finds are the manuscripts written in obscure languages that fell out of use many centuries ago."

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Doing It Ourselves

An initial link from Dappled Things Fiction Editor Natalie Morrill to an episode in the "Doing It Ourselves" vlog series—which is about an English family buying and restoring an old French château—led to a lot of wishful daydreaming by other editors and contributors about how great it be would to buy a Dappled Things Château.

Roseanne T. Sullivan

After a career in technical writing and course development in the computer industry while doing other writing on the side, Roseanne T. Sullivan now writes full-time about sacred music, liturgy, art, and whatever strikes her Catholic imagination. Before she started technical writing, Sullivan earned a B.A. in English and Studio Arts, and an M.A. in English with writing emphasis, and she taught courses in fiction and memoir writing. Her Masters Thesis consisted of poetry, fiction, memoir, and interviews, and two of her short stories won prizes before she completed the M.A. In recent years, she has won prizes in poetry competitions. Sullivan has published many essays, interviews, reviews, and memoir pieces in Catholic Arts Today, National Catholic Register, Religion.Unplugged, The Catholic Thing, and other publications. Sullivan also edits and writes posts on Facebook for the Benedict XVI Institute for Sacred Music and Divine Worship, Catholic Arts Today, the St. Ann Choir, El Camino Real, and other pages.

https://tinyurl.com/rtsullivanwritings
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