
Letters
The Hand Press in a Kansas Barn
On a farm outside Lawrence, Kansas, a 200-year-old iron hand press still prints books. The man who runs it says the press has taught him patience he did not ask for.
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Letters
On a farm outside Lawrence, Kansas, a 200-year-old iron hand press still prints books. The man who runs it says the press has taught him patience he did not ask for.

Letters
In a basement at the American Antiquarian Society, the unpublished correspondence of a forgotten Boston printer reveals what a working life looked like before the telephone.

Letters
For thirty-two years, a small-town Iowa schoolteacher wrote down every day. What she made was not a diary. It was a country.

Letters
In a workshop above a bindery in the Spanish Quarter, an old woman recites, from memory, the catalog of a library that no longer exists.

Letters
In a small village on the western Scottish coast, two verbs of Scots Gaelic survive in daily use that have died everywhere else. A linguist has spent a decade trying to understand why.

Letters
In a village outside Girona, a family began a dictionary in 1923. The grandson finished it last year. He says the hardest entries were the ones his grandfather had already attempted.

Letters
In a fishing town on Iceland's north coast, a small library lends seeds, fiddles, and bicycles. The librarian says she is only extending what a library always was.

Letters
For twenty-seven years, two amateur translators traded letters about a single Borges story. What they were really arguing over was the shape of attention.