cover image Letters of Note, Vol. 2: An Eclectic Collection of Correspondence Deserving of a Wider Audience

Letters of Note, Vol. 2: An Eclectic Collection of Correspondence Deserving of a Wider Audience

Compiled by Shaun Usher. Chronicle, $40 (368p) ISBN 978-1-4521-5383-4

This follow-up to 2014’s collection offers newcomers and fans of the series another outstanding compendium of correspondence from celebrities, U.S. presidents, and ordinary citizens. Like its predecessor, each entry includes a replica of the letter in its original form next to some contextual information. The breadth of the collection is impressive; it contains both record producer Steve Albini’s 1992 letter to the members of the band Nirvana about their upcoming collaboration on the In Utero album and Abraham Lincoln’s touching 1862 letter to a young girl whose father was killed in the Civil War. The letters written by ordinary people are just as noteworthy: an educated slave’s farewell letter to his wife after he was sold in 1858 and a soldier’s firsthand account of the Christmas truce between British and German troops in 1914 are just some of the heart-wrenching inclusions. Happily, there are just as many lighthearted entries as glum ones, including a University of Sussex professor’s cheeky cover letter applying for the Defense Against the Dark Arts teaching post at Hogwarts, Ayn Rand’s 1966 letter to the editor of Cat Fancy magazine, and an illustrated story Beatrix Potter sent to the five-year-old son of her friend and former governess. This fantastic collection of over 125 letters is endlessly entertaining. Color illus. [em](Oct.) [/em]