"Hace mucho tiempo, en un reino muy lejano, había una ciudad encantada que se llamaba Caracas...." Y de ahí en adelante el bello libro, enjaezado de joyas y arabescos, abría lentamente su pesada portada para empezar a dar rienda suelta al cuento de hadas.
Qué potencia, qué fuerza tenían esos libros como cofres, joyeros guardando con siete cerrojos el precioso tesoro de una historia! Cuanto más poderosos se volvían los cuentos y leyendas tras la gruesa cerradura y sus bisagras centinelas!
Sin santo ni seña en la tapa, al abrir el "Vintage Miniature Souvenir Book Charm", encontramos su título: "CARACAS". No obstante su arcaico aspecto exterior, la historia que va a presentársenos es moderna. La narración comienza con la visión de una torre inexpugnable, enclavada a la mejor manera Disney en lo alto de una montaña. El Hotel Humboldt.
Cordialmente,
-Billy Strayhom. My Little Brown Book (Duke Ellington y John Coltrane, 1962).
"Once upon a time, in a very distant kingdom, there was a village named Caracas..." And from then on the beautiful book, harnessed with jewels and arabesques, slowly opened its heavy cover to give free reign to the fairy tale.
How strong, how powerful were those books like chests, jewel cases keeping safe behind seven locks the precious treasure of a story! How more powerful these stories and legends became behind their hinges and guarding locks!
Walt Disney was the most skillful artificer of this image in the 1950s. Inspired by medieval volumes filled with pages illustrated by artistic scribes, he always started his animated pictures with a book that was in itself an objet de vertu, just as precious as its treasured contents. The cover, weighed in gold, silver, bronze or leather, and studded with precious stones, contained a world and unleashed a spell. Just a love kiss was enough to awaken Sleeping Beauty, the beauty that sleeps, in our lives.
No wonder, then, that this spell was so used in the 1950s by the tourism industry as a resource to catch the fleeting dream of a trip. I had in my childhood several little books like the one I am sending you today, don Arístistides. The Liliputian little book could be offered hanging from a key holder, or singled-out as a charm.
With no traces on the cover, after opening the "Vintage Charm Miniature Souvenir Book," we read CARACAS. Despite its archaic exterior appearance, the story inside presented is modern. The narrative begins with the vision of an impregnable tower, located according to the best Disney way, on the top of a mountain. The Hotel Humboldt.
Seeing them from up close, they are black and white photo postcards that have been delicately illuminated by hand in shades of pink and blue, yellow and green... probably by secret artist scribes coming from a nearby medieval abbey. Charming, isn't it?
Cordially yours,