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Sara Hudson '04
Shelf Life
ara
Hudson owns so many books that she's removed almost all of the
furniture from her bedroom at her home in Boerne, Texas, leaving
only her bed and the massive bookshelves that cover her walls and
dominate her closet. Hudson, who designed her own major in Latino
studies, has been collecting books since she was six. Though she
has obviously grown older and wiser, her passion is for collecting
the books she grew up with.
But Hudson, who owns more than 1,000 books, doesn't just like lining
her shelves with them. She is a book academic whose studies have
taken her from London to the small village of Xocén, Mexico,
to the University of Virginia's Rare Book School, which offers
weeklong courses for book collectors, librarians, and others. Her
pet project is a descriptive bibliography of children's books from
what she calls the "golden age" of children's literature--beginning
with the publication of Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland in
1865 and ending with A.A. Milne's Winnie the Pooh in 1926.
She began the project in high school. Last summer, with the help
of a grant from the Center for International Studies, Hudson spent
seven weeks in London, home to many golden-age authors, working
on the bibliography. Each entry includes a close, physical description
of a book, complete with information on binding, illustrations,
and paper type.
Book collectors use descriptive bibliographies to identify first
editions, and the work can require extensive patience, Hudson says. "One
of the tenets of producing an authoritative descriptive bibliography
is looking at as many copies of a text as you can find." Her
bibliography of children's books from the golden age already contains
more than 500 pages of information and thousands of digital pictures
on works by Louisa May Alcott, J.M. Barry, and L. Frank Baum, among
others.
Some students might want a break after such intense research. But,
after leaving London, Hudson spent only one day at home in Texas
before flying to Mexico. She had lived and studied in Xocén
the previous summer, becoming proficient in Yucatec Maya--a language
still spoken by one million Mayas in the Yucatan Peninsula--through
a program run by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
This summer, armed with a Benenson Award (a $3,000 arts award)
and a Mellon Foundation grant, Hudson began work on a trilingual
children's book with the help of some twenty-five Xocén
boys and girls. "The older people in Xocén speak only
Mayan, but the younger people are speaking Spanish, too, to work
in Cancun," she says. "I wanted to do something to preserve
[Xocén] cultural history, but also create something all
generations could understand."
Hudson met with the children each day, and, together, they chose
three stories that had been orally passed down in the village for
generations. She asked the children first to write each story for
themselves in journals. Then they wrote the stories as a group,
with different children contributing different details. The children
illustrated the stories, too, and now Hudson is assembling all
of the material into a book that she hopes to have published.
Despite her passion for books, Hudson is not your stereotypical
bookworm. Like most Duke students, she goes out with her friends
and is active on campus--as a member of the selective house Roundtable
and as co-president of Mi Gente, the primary undergraduate Latino
group. She is also the co-founder of the Duke-Durham Hunger Alliance,
which has raised thousands of dollars in unused student food points
for Durham's food banks.
But in the end, Hudson always comes back to books. "My whole
family loves books. We're one of those families where you'll come
down to breakfast, and everyone will be reading." But, she
adds, "I'm the most obsessed."
--Lucas Schaefer '04
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