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Just My Type

A Book About Fonts
Just My Type: A Book About Fonts. Gotham Bks: Penguin Group (USA). Sept. 2011. 356p. ISBN 9781592406524. $26.
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OrangeReviewStarTypefaces have been around since about 1450, but most of us remained oblivious to their specifics until computers let us play with them. Here, Garfield not only relates the history of typefaces but examines their aesthetic and psychological power, considering what, for instance, our favorite typefaces say about us and how Gotham helped Barack Obama win the presidency. A surprise best seller in the UK that's been edited for U.S. consumption. Watch.
The digital age took what was essentially an antiquarian hobby—the study and identification of typefaces and fonts—and turned it into a flourishing present-day avocation. What font do you select when typing at your keyboard? And which do you prefer for your e-reading? Baskerville? Verdana? How much do you know of the magical history behind your choices? Here is a wonderful update for those whose fondness for matters typographical predates the digital age, as well as those whose eyes need awakening to this particular enchantment. Although billed by its publisher as "fully revised for its U.S. release," it comes to us largely intact from the UK with a few domestic references added. Garfield (Mauve: How One Man Invented a Color That Changed the World) has a light touch and moves effortlessly among various aspects of typography past and present, not only from design perspectives but from accessible social, historical, and legal angles as well. There's a fascinating discussion of the ampersand, references to rock album covers with title fonts that stir the emotions, and a sobering clarification about copyright. Throughout, Garfield offers "fontbreaks" in which he focuses on the provenance of a particular typeface. An added pleasure: the book's own text switches fonts to briefly reflect the typeface under discussion.
VERDICT Highly recommended to all, whether or not you feel predisposed to like this kind of thing! Eye-opening and mind-expanding!—Margaret Heilbrun, Library Journal
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