GREAT BARRINGTON -- Cornelia Brooke Gilder of Tyringham will discuss her new book, "The Tanglewood Circle: Hawthorne's Lenox" Oct. 22 at 7 p.m. at the W.E.B. DuBois Visitor's Center at North Star Books (684 South Main St.). The free event is sponsored by the Great Barrington Historical Society.
Ms. Gilder partnered with Julia Conklin Peters, Lenox librarian, and longtime friend of her mother Louisa Ludlow Brooke, in writing this 126-page book chockful of early photographs and 18 never-before seen drawings.
It provides insight into the people, personalities and social history of both Boston and New York society -- and how those families chose to live in Lenox. "Anyone who loves the Berkshires will love this book," says Pulitizer Prize winner Debby Applegate, historical writer.
The first 30 years of the era of Great Estates is detailed. Profiled are the Sedgwicks, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Oliver Wendell Holmes, and others who traveled the "croquet lawns and drawing rooms" of Berkshire "Cottages." In Hawthorne's case, he was a tenant in a shabby, drafty house on the Tappan Estate (now Tanglewood) and his 20-page diary of that mid-19th C. extended visit, gives poignant insight via musings on "exchanged eggs, periodicals, mail and a pet bunny."
Many of the families were in the forefront of academic, literary, humanitarian causes. They had mile-long drives, elaborate gateposts, piazzas and lengthy carriage trails, crafted by prominent architects and landscape designers of the day.
Copies of the book will be available for purchase and signing that evening, courtesy of the Bookloft. Ms. Gilder is a lifelong Berkshire resident who previously co-authored "Houses of the Berkshires: 1870-1930" with Richard S. Jackson Jr.
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