【My Stepsisters Natural Tits (2016) XXX Movie】
Tools of the Trade
Nostalgia

Foote‘s nib of choice. Photo: Elizabeth, via Flickr
INTERVIEWER
I’ve heard that during the middle of writing The Civil Waryou bought all the dip pens left in the United States.
FOOTE
My favorite pen-point manufacturer had all but gone out of business—Esterbrook. I was running out and fairly desperate. On Forty-fourth Street just east of the Algonquin Hotel, on the other side of the street, there used to be an old stationery shop, all dusty and everything, and I went in there on the chance he might have some. He looked in a drawer. He had what I wanted—Probate 313. I bought several gross of those things, so I’ve got enough pen points to last me out my life and more. Another problem is blotters. When I was a kid and when I was writing back in the forties on into the fifties, you could go into any insurance office and they had stacks of giveaway blotters for advertising.
INTERVIEWER
What precisely is a blotter?
FOOTE
This is a blotter [pointing] and if you haven’t got one you’re up the creek. You use the blotter to keep the ink from being wet on the page. You put the blotter on top and blot the page. I was talking about blotters in an interview, what a hard time I had finding them, and I got a letter from a woman in Mississippi. She said, I have quite a lot of blotters I’ll be glad to send you. So I got blotters galore. Ink is another problem. I got a phone call from a man in Richmond, Virginia who had a good supply of ink in quart bottles. I got three quarts from him, so I’m in good shape on that.
INTERVIEWER
Do you reckon you’re the last writer to be using dip pens in the United States?
FOOTE
There’s probably some other nut somewhere out there doing it.
—Shelby Foote, the Art of Fiction No. 158, 1999
Shelby Foote was born on November 17, 1916, and died in 2005, six years after this interview was published. Though he was a prolific novelist, he remains best known for his three-volume history of the Civil War.
His is one of my favorite Writers at Work interviews, and not coincidentally it’s probably one of the longest—Foote’s three (!) interlocutors find him in a loquacious and expansive mood, such that almost whenever he opens his mouth he seems to speak in wry, eloquent, discursive paragraphs. He declaims on everything from pajamas to the Ku Klux Klan, and he appears to have known more or less every writer of relevance; his anecdotes include the likes of Faulkner, Hemingway, O’Hara, Kubrick, and Walker Percy, among others.
He also relishes the role of gentle, aging eccentric, as evidenced in the passage above. I’ve just spent an embarrassingly long while trying to find the name of the defunct stationery shop he references—no luck. I can report, though, that the Esterbrook Probate 313 is readily available for all your dipping needs, even as blotter paper seems now entirely relegated to the realm of LSD paraphernalia.
The Esterbrook Pen Manufacturing Company, founded by Richard Esterbrook in 1858, was once the oldest and largest manufacturer of steel pens in the United States. A midcentury brochure (“INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT ESTERBROOK STEEL PENS”) notes that the company once turned out more than two hundred million pens a year, “used in every civilized country in the world.” The factory went under in 1972.
“You have to communicate sensation,” Foote said of the writer’s mission,
the belief in what life is, what it’s about, and you do it through learning how to handle a pen. That’s the reason why I have always felt comfortable with the pen in my hand and extremely uncomfortable having some piece of machinery between me and the paper—even a typewriter let alone a word computer, which just gives me the horrors.
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Small Man in a Memory Hole
2025-06-26 01:46This viral optical illusion will make your head hurt
2025-06-26 01:399 Zoom Halloween costumes and tricks for your virtual party
2025-06-26 01:36CNN just fired it's biggest pro
2025-06-26 01:25Whitewash
2025-06-26 01:08Popular Posts
Whale Vomit Episode 7: Hope in the Time of Cholera
2025-06-26 02:43Facebook's tools for 'at
2025-06-26 01:51Deadpool’s woman problem has been haunting me for years
2025-06-26 00:28Bankers’ Robberies
2025-06-26 00:21Featured Posts
The Long View in Granada
2025-06-26 02:14The inevitable Trump/Kim Jong
2025-06-26 01:00Remembering Philip Levine’s Poetics of Labor
2025-06-26 00:06Popular Articles
The Unofficial Chief of Staff
2025-06-26 02:38Video of dancing Philadelphia voters makes us believe in democracy
2025-06-26 02:14Tokens of Appreciation
2025-06-26 00:08Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (51967)
Time Information Network
The John McCain Phenomenon
2025-06-26 01:24Neon Information Network
5 tweets that highlight actions you can take on Latina Equal Pay Day
2025-06-26 01:02Unique Information Network
New AirPods and AirPods Pro are coming next year, report claims
2025-06-26 00:24Mark Information Network
A drunken American saluted Hitler in Germany and it did not go well for him
2025-06-26 00:18Era Information Network
The Eclipsing of Steve Bannon
2025-06-26 00:05