QUOTE(RandyE @ May 11 2008, 04:05 PM) [snapback]607796[/snapback]
Neil Gaiman uses a fountain pen - he talks about it in the audio version of Stardust, at the end in an interview. He said that when he decided to write the story he knew that the only way he could do it justice was with a fountain pen and good paper. Sadly, he did not say what his pen of choice was, but I do know that he responds to to fan email from his website...
- R
Gaiman mentions he uses a Lamy 2000 and a "regular" Lamy here:
http://journal.neilgaiman.com/2003/12/mani...e-shirts-in.asp"I'm writing my novel with two different fountain pens (a Lamy 2000, and a regular Lamy) filled with two different coloured inks (a greenish one and a reddish one), and I'm alternating pens each day, which means I can see at a glance how much writing I've actually done that day, or that week. More than five pages in the same colour of ink must have been a good day. The Lamy 2000 days are my favourites because the regular lamy, although a good pen for signing in, is less happy writing a novel, and handwriting like mine needs all the help it can get. "
They had public entry at the 2006 Nebula Awards and I got be in the audience for a panel called "Tools of the Trade: Fountain Pen Neepery" with Joe Haldeman, Ellen Klages and Diana Gabaldon. At the time I hadn't discovered FPN and continued my harrowing journey into fountain pen addiction. All I had was a Waterman Phileas with about a zillion miles on it and a loose, claspless cap. Diana Gabaldon had a Phileas fan had given her, but she only used it for editing. Haldeman and Klages talked about a calligraphy shop in Venice with fine paper-- and I couldn't get close enough to them to find out where!
Ellen Klages also said she bought out the last huge lot of Big Chief Tablets that Wal-Mart had in a warehouse. She sells them to Connie Willis.
As to Howard, Howard Payne University in Brownwood might be a good place to start. They had a collection of his papers. The town of Cross Plains has a Howard Museum, but I don't know how much would be left. Howard was the only son and the family line ended with him. I suppose probate in the county courthouse would show where his father left possessions; Howard's pen might be among them.
Alternatively, what pens could you find in that part of Texas in the 20s and 30s?