When I caught a whiff of strawberry jam at the new American Writers Museum in Chicago, I thought my mind was playing tricks on me because I had skipped breakfast.
I soon discovered the scent emanated from an installation called "The Surprise Bookshelf." Along a wall, plaques bear the names of books and their authors. Visitors open the plaques to find a literary revelation about the book that may include text, sounds and, yes, smells. Turn the plaque for M.F.K. Fisher's book, "The Gastronomical Me" (1943), and there's a nostalgic passage about the author's childhood memories of her grandmother making strawberry jam, accompanied by a sweet, enticing aroma that made me long for a scone.
The museum is the brainchild of Irish-born literature enthusiast Malcolm O'Hagan. Eight years ago he returned to the United States from one of his many visits to the Dublin Writers Museum eager to compare it to an equivalent museum in America, but he couldn't find the place — because it didn't exist.
O'Hagan was shocked. How could a nation with such a rich literary tradition have no counterpart institution to celebrate the collective accomplishments of its great writers, he wondered.
The retired manufacturing executive, who lives near Washington, D.C., made it his mission to change that and formed a nonprofit dedicated to the project. His dream is now a reality.
On May 16, the American Writers Museum opened on the second floor of a Michigan Avenue office building, just a block from Millennium Park. It is surprisingly ambitious.
Thirteen permanent exhibits unfold in six galleries, all designed to explore writers' influences on history, culture and national identity. They span a wide range of genres: fiction, nonfiction, plays, children's literature, even cookbooks and sports writing. Playwright Tennessee Williams, cookbook author Julia Child and advice columnist Ann Landers are all represented.
Some visitors are surprised that there are so few books, but this was never meant to be an athenaeum filled with dusty manuscripts that would only excite literary scholars. On the contrary, the 11,000-square-foot space is educational, but entertaining, packed with high-tech, multimedia installations that offer fun, interactive experiences.