L. Frank Baum, Lighthouse Stays, Eisner Nominees, New Crime Novels & More: Endnotes 15 May

L. Frank Baum, Lighthouse Stays, Eisner Nominees, New Crime Novels & More: Endnotes 15 May

Friday, 15 May, 2026

Every Friday, we celebrate the weekend — and all the reading and relaxing and daydreaming time ahead — with Melissa's favorite book- and travel-related links of the week. Why work when you can read fun stuff?!

This post is part of our Endnotes series.

rule

Happy Birthday to L. Frank Baum, born on this day in 1856 in the village of Chittenango, New York. You probably know him as the author of the beloved fantasy story The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. (Did you know that book is the first in a series of 14 Oz tales?!) He also wrote 41 other novels (like the YA mystery The Daring Twins), 83 short stories, at least 42 scripts, and more than 200 poems. You can find many of them on Gutenberg. His collection of stories based on Mother Goose rhymes — Mother Goose in Prose — was illustrated by the painter (and master of light) Maxfield Parrish; flip through it on Internet Archive. Although the vast majority of Baum’s works were driven by his imagination, he also authored the how-to book The Art of Decorating Dry Goods Windows and Interiors — subtitle ‘A Complete Manual of Window Trimming, designed as an Educator in all the Details of the Art, according to the best accepted methods, and treating fully every important subject.’ The book is based on his experiences creating department store displays. It’s available to read online, should you need a quick primer on color theory or instructions for washing windows. Baum was also an active suffragist and an advocate for women’s rights. Read more about his remarkable life here and here. You might also watch a short documentary, a video about his literary legacy, or a longer doc from PBS. I’ve got plans to watch the 1939 classic movie this weekend — here are the 9 best Wizard of Oz adaptations, ranked by Mental Floss.

 
  • I’ve wondered this, too: Why do we always forget about Anne? ‘Perhaps it is simply that Anne was the youngest in a remarkable family, and so in death is overlooked as she may have been in life. Or her stories are not the gothic fantasies featuring troubled and problematic literary heroes like Rochester and Heathcliff we immediately associate with the Brontë name.’

  • Related: On the Death of Branwell Brontë and the Shadow of Grief It Cast Upon His Literary Family. This essay is by Deborah Lutz, the author of the wonderful book The Brontë Cabinet, which tells the Brontës’ story through nine objects they owned: Charlotte’s sewing box, their tiny books, mourning jewelry. I’m excited to read her new biography of Emily, This Dark Night.

  • Novels That Unfold Like Personal Revolutions. ‘Some books entertain. Others transform. The ones in this gallery do something rarer still. They unfold in private, turning readers gently, almost imperceptibly, into someone slightly new.’

  • Dua Lipa’s songs are great for a dance break in the middle of a workday, and this makes me like her even more:

 

‘Everything in life is unusual until you get accustomed to it.’ — L. Frank Baum, The Marvelous Land of Oz

Top image courtesy of W.W. Denslow.

Want to keep up with our book-related adventures? Sign up for our newsletter!

keep reading

Every Friday, we share our favorite book- and travel-related links. This week, we've got a readers' guide to Quebec, the new Czech constitution, Artemis II photos, modernist houses, best mysteries of 2026, and more.
Every Friday, we share our favorite book- and travel-related links. This week, we've got the 'horrid' novels in Northanger Abbey, fun journaling prompts, European bookshop cafés, Guardian's 100 best novels, and more.
Every Friday, we share our favorite book- and travel-related links. This week, we've got new sci-fi/fantasy and crime novels, music playlists from The Gap, epic nature murals, Gothic romance's golden age, and more.

sharing is caring!

Can you help us? If you like this article, share it your friends!

our mission

Strong Sense of Place is a website and podcast dedicated to literary travel and books we love. Reading good books increases empathy. Empathy is good for all of us and the amazing world we inhabit.

our patreon

Strong Sense of Place is a listener-supported podcast. If you like the work we do, you can help make it happen by joining our Patreon! That'll unlock bonus content for you, too — including Mel's secret book reviews and Dave's behind-the-scenes notes for the latest Two Truths and a Lie.

get our newsletter

Join our Substack to get our FREE newsletter with podcast updates and behind-the-scenes info — and join in fun chats about books and travel with other lovely readers.

no spoilers. ever.

We'll share enough detail to help you decide if a book is for you, but we'll never ruin plot twists or give away the ending.

super-cool reading fun
reading atlas

This 30-page Reading Atlas takes you around the world with dozens of excellent books and gorgeous travel photos. Get your free copy when you subscribe to our newsletter.

get our newsletter
Sign up for our free Substack!
follow us

Content on this site is ©2026 by Smudge Publishing, unless otherwise noted. Peace be with you, person who reads the small type.