Script and Scribble: The Rise and Fall of Handwriting
Melville House
In the digital age, do we still need legible handwriting? If so, how is that being taught in schools today? If not, what are we replacing it with? What happened to the Palmer Method of my own childhood, drilled into us by Sister Victorine in third grade? Who was Palmer, anyway, and how does he fit into the history of handwriting? Who invented the printing we learned in first grade? What happened to fountain pens? How did my once-artistic script degenerate into scrawls and scribbles? And should I do something about it?
Determined to find out the answers to these questions, I began a year-long journey into the wonders of handwriting, from the Phoenicians to the Bic -- and beyond. I was thrilled to discover a whole new world – of medieval monks toiling in their scriptoria, of the script Shakespeare wrote, of Dickens and his quill, of the far-from-dead art of Spencerian flourishes, of typewriter fanatics and pencil collectors. Perhaps best of all was what happened to my own handwriting in the course of my researches. And, by the time I was done, I found out that the position of handwriting in today's world isn't quite what I expected!
This new book is in the tradition of Sister Bernadette’s Barking Dog: part history, part memoir, and part examination of a fascinating – and surprisingly crucial – 21st-century controversy.
*Publication date is now January 23 -- National Handwriting Day (who knew?) and John Hancock's birthday.


