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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
May
Writer Andrei Codrescu donates
literary works to U. of I. Library
Andrea Lynn,
Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
5/20/05
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Kwame Ross |
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Miranda
Remnek, the head of the U. of I. Slavic and
East European Library and coordinator of the Andrei
Codrescu collection, stands in front of the new
acquisition of literary materials that Codrescu
recently donated to the library. After the collection
is processed, Remnek plans to produce a Web catalog
for it. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— If it’s possible to know a person by the books he reads,
patrons of one of the world’s largest libraries soon could be
on a first-name basis with an award-winning author, commentator and
observer-provocateur.
Andrei Codrescu, the prolific poet-novelist-essayist and widely recognized
radio celebrity, has given his collection of Romanian books, periodicals,
films and other materials to the Library of the University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign. The Library has more than 10 million volumes, making
it the largest public university collection in the world.
Although most of the 660 items Codrescu donated are in Romanian, his
native tongue, the collection also includes books in English and other
languages, including some of the author’s own writings.
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Kwame Ross |
| A
few of the rare titles of poetry, fiction, non-fiction
and journals that prolific writer and radio essayist
Andrei Codrescu gave the U. of I. Library are shown.
Most of the materials are in Romanian and many are
rare and were produced by small publishing houses. |
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The publications
are mostly contemporary – written since the fall of dictatorship
in Romania in 1989 – and many were produced by small publishing
houses. Nearly half of the materials are rare – not documented
anywhere else in the United States.
Codrescu’s collection, like his writing, is eclectic. Roughly
half consists of poetry, with smaller amounts of fiction and non-fiction.
Much of the material – 38 different titles – consists of
literary journals and magazines. There is a smattering of museum catalogs,
drama and documentaries, even a political joke book and a cookbook.
Codrescu gave his collection to Illinois because he recognized it as
an “institution of strength” in terms of Slavic materials
after a visit to the campus in 2004. It is a serendipitous time for
such a gift, since Illinois’ Library
has been expanding its focus “precisely in Balkan and Southeast
European studies,” said Miranda Remnek, the head of the U. of
I. Slavic and East European Library and coordinator of the Codrescu
collection.
While Illinois already owns about one-fourth of the titles in Codrescu’s
collection, the new books “add significantly” to Illinois’
materials by prominent modern Romanian novelists, including Norman Manea,
Remnek said.
Manea was deported to a Ukrainian internment camp at age 5. His fiction
deals with the Holocaust and with daily life in a totalitarian state.
The new acquisition contains 11 of his books – several in English,
including “The Hooligan’s Return” and “On Clowns.”
One of the collections’ most delightful books is “Postcards
From America,” written and illustrated by Dan Perjovschi. The
book reproduces 200 of the 1,000 vignette “postcards” the
Romanian artist made and publicly displayed every day of his 10-week
stay in the United States in 1994. He does with his cartoons what Codrescu
does in his commentaries: draws attention to the unusual, even absurd,
in everyday American life.
Perjovschi inscribed his book to Codrescu with a line drawing of himself,
and he tucked in a two-page letter.
About 40 of Codrescu’s books contain such personal items: inscriptions,
notes and letters from the authors to Codrescu, many of them “expressing
their engagement and disengagement with contemporary Romanian life,”
Remnek said.
According to Remnek, the Codrescu gift is “a very exciting development
for the Library, and for several reasons.”
First, the collection is “interesting in its own right,”
she said, since it includes many small-press editions by contemporary
Romanian poets writing after the fall of communism. “It presents
a colorful vignette of the issues currently faced by a range of Romanian
intellectuals, and in a time of uncertainty, but also promise,”
Remnek said.
The collection also is important because it is “the handiwork
of Codrescu, whose celebrity and highly imaginative literary persona
are well-known in many circles.” The writer has extensive contacts
with Romanian intellectuals, Remnek said, and promises to draw on them
“to help expand the richness of the collection.”
As he told her: “In fact, I can see the beginning of a passion.
I would like this collection to be the best.”
The MacCurdy Distinguished Professor of English at Louisiana State University,
Codrescu donated his personal papers and English-language books to LSU’s
library, which does not have a specialization in Slavic or Balkan studies.
The U. of I. acquisition ties in with other efforts the Library is making
to provide greater support for Balkan studies. These include subscribing
to a major East European database and librarian Janice Pilch assuming
an additional role as Librarian for South Slavic Studies.
Housed in the Rare Book and Special Collections Library, the Codrescu
Collection was acquired by the Slavic Library, which, with 755,000 volumes
and more than 3,500 serial publications, is the largest Slavic and East
European collection west of Washington, D.C., and the second or third
largest among U.S. universities.
Born in 1946 in Sibiu, a small town in the Transylvania region of Romania,
Codrescu immigrated to the United States in 1966, and became a U.S.
citizen in 1981.
He has written four volumes of poetry, four of fiction, four of memoirs
and travelogues, eight volumes of essays and five anthologies. He also
wrote and starred in “Road Scholar,” a Peabody Award-winning
movie. The New York Times Book Review called him “one of our most
prodigiously talented and magical writers.”
Codrescu has won many awards, including the Pushcart Prize (1980 and
1983) and the ACLU Freedom of Speech Award (1995).
Codrescu writes commentary and book reviews for many national publications
and continues his popular weekly commentaries on NPR, does a commentary
for “Nightline” and appears regularly on popular late-night
talk shows.
One of the things Codrescu laments about his adopted country is the
loss of personal stories – “Our own individual stories.”
He calls it one of the saddest things about the contemporary world and
blames the problem partly on television.
“… All those stories are disappearing because we don’t
have the time for them,” Codrescu told writer David Holzel. “And
that’s a tragedy, because people without stories are machines.”
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