Friday, June 26, 2026

The books that Louise Brooks read and / or owned

For more than a few years now, I've been keeping lists of book that Louise Brooks either owned, read, or is know to have owned and / or read. Brooks never kept a list herself, so what I have compiled is gathered from a number of sources -- such as the archive at the George Eastman Museum (to whom Brooks gifted her film books) and the archive at Wichita State University (who have her personal books). Other books are referenced in both vintage and contemporary newspaper and magazine articles, in Brook's letters, in the Barry Paris biography, etc....

I have handled a few books over time, and currently own two. The one I have owned the longest is The Twenties in Vogue, by Carolyn Hall and a foreword by Gloria Swanson. (This first edition hardback was published in 1983 by Harmony Books. For those interested, inexpensive used copies can be found online, including amazon.) My copy includes a few handwritten annotation by Brooks. The half-title page has three annotations (as shown) including a notation mentioning that the book was a gift from the New Yorker editor William Shawn received on September 27, 1983. Below it, the actress signed her name, and added "Rochester, N.Y." (Shawn edited the essays in Lulu in Hollywood, and wrote that book's original foreword.)

Louise Brooks gave away many of her books, even valuable ones, and said so. There is, as well, a notation on the title page. "To Marge - all my love - Louise - September 28, 1983." This notation suggests Brooks gave the book away the day after she received it, and seemingly after recording that her picture (the Edward Steichen portrait) appears on page 89 and her name (in the index, now underlined) on page 158.

On page 104, Brooks also wrote the name of George Gershwin next to a portrait of the composer. And as well, on pages 134 and 135, in the chapter "New Books for Your Morning Room Table", Brooks checked off a number of titles. They were A Passage to India by E.M. Forester, Antic Hay by Aldous Huxley, An American Tragedy by Theodore Dreiser, To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf, Death in Venice by Thomas Mann, and Decline and Fall by Evelyn Waugh. I would guess these were books Louise had read. Not checked off were Fiesta by Ernest Hemingway, The Mystery of the Blue Train by Agatha Christie, Anna Livia Plurabelle by James Joyce, and Living by Henry Green. (I am pretty sure Brooks had read other Hemingway.)

I'll guess and say the "Marge" to whom the book is dedicated was the neighbor upstairs who is prominently mentioned in the Paris biography. They were close, and Marge helped the then elderly Brooks on a number of occasions. 


[For those wondering, I purchased this book on-line some years ago -- likely from someone who got it from Marge or her estate.] Here are a few scans from my copy.


 

The other book I own which once belonged to Louise Brooks is Best Stories to Tell Children by Sara Cone Bryant. It is inscribed on the first free end-paper "To Louise Brooks from Momma Xmas 1912". This book was given to Brooks when she was just 6 years old. It too is a first edition, having been first published in 1912 and priced at $1.25.) I can imagine little Louise reading the book, or having it read to her.

Out of curiosity, I did a little research on the author. Sara Cone Bryant was a once well known American lecturer, teacher, and writer. She wrote children's books in the early 20th century. She also supported and took a leadership role in women's suffrage. (That latter fact, I feel, is interesting in view of the fact that Brooks' mother was the person who likely found this book at a local Cherryvale store. I wonder if Louise's mother, Myra, knew of Sara Cone Bryant. To learn more about this author, check out her Wikipedia page. And to check out or even read the book itself, check out its Internet Archive record.

[For those wondering, this book was recently gifted to me by the Estate of Louise Brooks after it having sat in a Wichita, Kansas attic for decades.] Here are a few scans.


 

THE LEGAL STUFF: The Louise Brooks Society™ blog is authored by Thomas Gladysz, Director of the Louise Brooks Society  (www.pandorasbox.com). Original content copyright © 2026. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. 

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