University of Wisconsin-Madison Libraries Magazine Fall 2016 | Page 22

A Journey Both Comedic and Divine Long-lost Volume Returned to Memorial via Little Free Library After 84 Years By Julie Arensdorf There’s nothing terribly unusual about finding a copy of Dante Alighieri’s The Divine Comedy in a library. A particular tome, though, has an interesting tale to tell—one that spans decades. In December of 2015, library school student and self-proclaimed “book nerd” Elle Rogers contacted Memorial Library reference librarian Laurie Wermter, via our chat service, to alert us that a copy of The Divine Comedy belonging to the University of Wisconsin–Madison Libraries had been mistakenly returned to her Little Free Library. Given that the Little Free Library movement was begun here in Wisconsin, that didn’t seem surprising—until Rogers revealed that she lived in New Hampshire. Elle Rogers created the Little Free Library outside her home in Dover, NH, to make her “neighborhood more neighborly,” according to a 2012 interview with her published in the Foster’s Daily Democrat. After all, love of books and libraries runs in Rogers’ family: “When my paternal grandmother died, my father made sure to have a bench with her name on it donated to her library. When my maternal grandmother died [in 2011] at 100, she had a book buried with her!” So, it’s no wonder that this east coast bibliophile wished to return the book to its rightful home. But how did the book end up in New Hampshire? This, dear readers, is where the plot thickens. Judging from the circulation cards tucked in a pocket on the book’s back cover, this copy of The Divine Comedy was last checked 22 | LIBRARIES Fall 2016 out on February 10, 1931 to an A. Serwer. A careful perusal of the UW–Madison yearbook The Badger (which has been carefully digitized by University of Wisconsin Digital Collections), revealed that the only student with that last name at the time was an Arnold Serwer. The Badger yearbook staff distinguished Serwer as one of the University’s “Interesting Students: Not due to what they’ve done so much as to the fact that they’re the kind of people that you like to know.” A “prolific writer of satire, humor, and ironical prose,” Serwer was also noted to have been active in writing scripts for Haresfoot, the student drama club. He graduated from UW–Madison with an undergraduate degree in journalism in 1933. After his time at UW–Madison, Arnold Serwer worked as a legislative reporter for the Wisconsin State Journal and served in the Army Reserves Air Corps during World War II. He also worked as a correspondent for the Reports Division of the War Relocation Authority (WRA), documenting terrorism incidents committed against returning Japanese-American soldiers. After living in New York City for a time, Serwer moved back to Madison with his family in 1962 and became heavily involved in both local and national politics. In fact, an August 10, 1979 article in the Capital Times, entitled “State Loses a Conscience,” lamented Arnold and Dora Serwer’s impending relocation from Madison to Reston, VA, to be near their son David, proclaiming that they “constituted the strength of a regiment to the progressive causes.” Throughout the decades, Serwer worked on the campaigns of Harold Stafford, Eugene McCarthy, George McGovern, and Morris Udall and was a strong supporter of Adlai Stevenson. While ordinarily a rather quiet person, in 1968 Serwer was put in the remarkable position of leading a crowd of delegates and demonstrators seven miles through the streets of Chicago at the Democratic National Convention, negotiating with police, city officials, and the National Guard after they attempted to block the demonstrators from continuing on. In an August 31, 1968, interview published in the Capital Times, Serwer, who was serving as a McCarthy delegate, recalled, “The women were crying and some of the hotheads were getting restless. If we had all left them some would have tried to go on and been beaten, some would have sat down and been beaten anyway.” Serwer’s actions were credited with preventing further violence and ensuring the safe passage of the demonstrators and delegates to the gates of the convention. In addition to his political involvement, Serwer was also exceptionally active as a journalist, serving as the associate editor of The Progressive during the tumultuous years of 1967 to 1976 and as editor of The Wisconsin Democrat. Serwer possessed a witty sense of humor, as demonstrated in this March 22, 1963, letter to the editor of the Capital Times: “I have had trouble with my last name, mostly when they teased me about it in school. Later, I courted my wife-to-be under the pretense that my name was ‘Bruce Galloway,’ breaking the news to her the day before we went for the license. It has University of Wisconsin–Madison | 23