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 Home >> Shelf:Life <<

Shelf:Life - what's new in the world of old books and book collecting, links to the news stories that matter, and occassional comments by TheBookGuide.  Archived Stories.

March 2007Skip Free Registration

30.03.07.
Beatrix Potter letter on display

The Beatrix Potter Gallery in Hawkshead has put on display a recently-acquired letter which the children’s author sent to an American friend to tell her about furniture which she acquired for her Lakeland home ... more   Add a comment

James Bond author's handgun fetches £12,000
A revolver presented to 007 author Ian Fleming has been sold for £12,000 at auction. The Colt Python .357 Magnum was made for the creator of James Bond, who lived at St Margaret’s at Cliffe, by gunmaker the Colt Company and given to him in 1964 ... more   Add a comment

Book inscribed by Scott fetches £6,000
A rare first edition given to a pub landlord to settle a "substantial" drink bill made £6,000 at a London auction
... more   Add a comment

Rare book sold by mistake?
Librarians at Rocky Mountain College librarians think someone may have purchased the book, one of three volumes published in Ireland in 1719, at their book sale last spring for a buck. The complete set is worth a few thousands dollars ... more   Add a comment


29.03.07.
Pulp pleasures

For the past 19 years New York promoter Sanford Smith and his cadre of "paper art" dealers have watched Works On Paper evolve from a show that raised but a few eyebrows during its infancy ... more   Add a comment

Galileo's forgotten celestial sketches
Long-lost illustrations by Galileo of the moon's surface as he saw it through his telescope have come to light after four centuries ... more   Add a comment

‘Lost’ Rachmaninov symphony on display
The original manuscript of Rachmaninov's Second Symphony, presumed lost since its first performance in 1908, will be displayed for the first time in the British Library Treasures gallery from Wednesday 21 March ... more   Add a comment


27.03.07.
Mystery poem names alleged killer

Detectives investigating the murder of a father of two appealed today for contact from the author of a poem that supposedly names the killer ... more   Add a comment

Tolkien Jr completes Lord of Rings
The last, unfinished book by the 'Lord of the Rings' author has been completed by his son. Can a film version be far behind? ... more   Add a comment

In chains: major booksellers in a bind
Stuck between the individual appeal of the independents, and the pile 'em high power of Tesco and Amazon, Borders and Waterstone's face unique problems ... more   Add a comment

India to help restore key manuscripts
India is to send experts to Bahrain to help the country in preserving and restoring its historical manuscripts and documents ... more   Add a comment


26.03.07.
Crippen book sale

A prayer book that belonged to murderer Dr Crippen, who poisoned his wife and fled to Canada with his mistress, is to be sold at auction in Ludlow, Shropshire. It bears an inscription by Crippen ... more   Add a comment

Book that helped save Welsh language on show
A rare copy of the book credited with helping to save the Welsh language has been found in an historic private library opened to the public for the first time ... more   Add a comment

The papers chase
Manhattan rare-book dealer Glenn Horowitz, has come to dominate the rarefied market in literary archives. Like the art and real estate markets, the archive market has gone through the roof, and Horowitz, with his wealthy clients and a belief that books will gain increasingly fetishistic status in the digital age, has helped bolster it ... more   Add a comment

Dr. Martin Luther King papers to be sold
An unassuming Pendaflex file folder, still green but weathered with age and frayed around the edges, holds a treasure trove of about 25 previously unknown documents pertaining to slain civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. The papers will be offered up as one lot in a sale slated for April 15 by Gallery 63, the consignment arm of auction powerhouse Red Baron ... more   Add a comment


24.03.07.
Authors campaign to save Britain's only gay bookshop

Gay's The Word, which has been selling books in Bloomsbury, central London, since 1979, is hoping to secure its future by raising £20,000 to pay the rent, building a strong internet presence and beefing up community activities ... more   Add a comment

Are we seeing death of the book shop?
If giant retailers like Borders and HMV, who turned bookselling into a leisure experience are struggling to compete, are we witnessing the slow death of the bookshop? ... more   Add a comment

The Museum of Garden History
A perennial pleasure of London is the Museum of Garden History in and around the church of St Mary-at-Lambeth - that ancient little architectural gem beside the main gateway to Lambeth Palace which, despite its location at the heart of Anglicanism, was in peril of religious redundancy and abandonment only a few decades ago ... more   Add a comment

The complete guide to Book Towns
It all started at Hay-on-Wye, and now literary festivals are putting little towns in pretty settings on the map, luring bibliophiles and browsers alike, writes Hilary Macaskill ... more   Add a comment


23.03.07.
Austen 'too ugly' for book cover

Novelist Jane Austen has been given a makeover for the cover of a book about her life after publishers decided an original image of her was unattractive ... more   Add a comment

Slave ship log book sells at auction
The log book, from the slave schooner Juverna, was bought by The National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, London, for £5,520. It had been expected fetch nearer £2,500 when it was offered for sale by Bonhams at a London auction ... more   Add a comment

Book of Mormon sells for $180,000
Some person or organization in Salt Lake City purchased a rare LDS hymnal at auction on Thursday for $180,000 -- several times the expected price, and the same price was paid by another buyer in the northeastern United States for a first edition Book of Mormon at a rare documents auction in New York City ... more   Add a comment

Artists' ephemera is a load of old rubbish
It is not surprising - only a little dispiriting - that a pile of junk Francis Bacon chucked out 30 years ago could earn the man who salvaged it from a skip half a million pounds ... more   Add a comment


22.03.07.
Book giant in threat to quit UK

Borders Bookshop today warned it may pull out of Britain. The shock news, which threatens 2000 jobs across the UK, could see the sale of one of the most prestigious locations in Glasgow city centre ... more   Add a comment

Charts found in bookshop cast doubt on Australia's discoverer
When James Cook thought he had discovered Australia and claimed it for the crown in the 18th century, he was late to the party. Another English explorer had been decades ahead in sighting the great southern land, while Dutch explorers had been charting the continent even earlier ... more   Add a comment

Insurance company buys rare Czech manuscript
The Uniqa insurance company of Austria has bought a rare illuminated and gilded manuscript from 1585 with a Latin text of the Legend about St Wenceslas, the Czech holy patron, which is an important piece of Czech literary history, Martina Vaculinova, head of the National Museum's department of manuscripts and old prints, has told CTK ... more   Add a comment


20.03.07.
Rare finds make stacks of cash for book scouts

Carefully and lovingly displayed in the Rare Book Room at Powell's Books in Portland is an original edition of the Lewis and Clark journals. At $285,000, it's the crown jewel in a room full of gems. Many other used bookstores around the country have similar treasures. But where do they come from and who finds them? ... more   Add a comment

The secret horror story of Stephen King Jnr
For 10 years, Joe Hill was just another struggling, unpublished writer coming up with one book project after another only to have them rejected. Now, though, he has a bestseller on his hands - an efficient horror thriller entitled Heart Shaped Box - and a secret to reveal. He is, in fact, the son of Stephen King, the master of American popular horror fiction ... more   Add a comment

Slave ship log book up for auction
Slave ship log book up for auction International auction house Bonhams is timing the sale of a slave ship log to mark the 200th anniversary of legislation banning the then British Empire's participation in the slave trade with Africa. But critics say its Wednesday auction of the rare 19th century journal from a British slave ship is enabling its owners to profit from slavery ... more   Add a comment


19.03.07.
Eating through the ages

Boiled cow's udder, anyone? Or a ragout of pig's ear? Norman Miller leafs through chef Anton Mosimann's extraordinary library of antiquarian cookbooks ... more   Add a comment

Mrs Beeton
Kathryn Hughes reveals the home truths about the first domestic goddess ... more   Add a comment

Stolen Hebrew manuscript returned
A 13th century Bible, referred to as Hébreu 23, had been stolen from the Bibliotheque nationale de France's collection in 2000, allegedly by a former curator, Michel Garel ... more   Add a comment

Centenary celebrations at library
The National Library of Wales is celebrating its centenary by staging its largest-ever exhibition of its collections ... more   Add a comment


16.03.07.
Intern Sold Civil War Items on eBay

An intern with the National Archives stole about 165 Civil War documents - including the War Department's announcement of President Lincoln's death - and sold most of them on eBay, prosecutors charged Thursday ... more   Add a comment

South Korean publisher pulls comic book
A South Korean publisher agreed Thursday to withdraw a best-selling children's book from stores after meeting with an anti-Semitism watchdog group that accused the author of spreading messages echoing Nazi propaganda ... more   Add a comment

Librarian implicated in $1m book heist
New Zealand's Massey University has been ripped off by one of its librarians who has been implicated in the activities of a national group believed to have netted more than $1 million from stolen rare books ... more   Add a comment

Boston exhibition looks at the roots of the novel
Stories of criminals, ghosts, shipwrecks and pirates swirled through the busy streets of 18th-century London. Competing writers spun outlandish stories and selling the tales was part of the street commerce, like hawking a criminal's last confession before execution.
    A new exhibit at the Boston Public Library gives a glimpse of that lively world, where the modern novel had its roots ... more   Add a comment


15.03.07.
Stacking books

Remember talk of the paperless world? Such memories must ring hollow at the Bodleian. Just when communications are going ever more online, the place is now so full of paper that tens of thousands of books are being sent off to Cheshire and Wiltshire in a bid to avoid blocking the passages to stacks in Oxford ... more   Add a comment

Life & death of a bookseller
A car bomb detonated last week on Mutanabi Street, leaving a scene that has grown familiar in Baghdad, a collage of chaotic images, disturbing in their brutality, grotesque in their repetition. At least 26 people were killed. Hayawi the bookseller was one of them ... more   Add a comment

Lost voices of Victorian working class
Labourers expressed fight for social justice in thousands of lines of verse ... more   Add a comment

Rare manuscripts found in al-Jaami’a al-Kabeer
A Yemeni-Italian team doing archaeological and historical research in Yemen found more than 150 ancient rare manuscripts beneath a minaret of al-Jaami’a al-Kabeer, the Grand Mosque, on March 10 ... more   Add a comment


13.03.07.
Gay bookshop in crisis

After 28 years of trading, Gay’s The Word bookshop is facing possible closure in the next few months. A combination of pressures including the Internet, rising rents, and the availability of some LGBT books in mainstream bookshops have all played their part ... more   Add a comment

Snap-happy Shanghai students skimp on book costs
Bookshop owners in Shanghai are snapping at an influx of camera-wielding pirates taking photos of pages to avoid paying for pricey books, local media reported on Monday ... more   Add a comment

Wife's diaries shed light on Darwin
The diaries of Charles Darwin's wife have been published online, giving an unparalleled insight into the day-to-day life of the world's greatest naturalist ... more   Add a comment

East St. Louis library books are abandoned again
Library officials admit that they erred in leaving the materials behind when they moved to a new site in January 2001. The library board hired a consulting firm to determine what books would go into the new library but made no plans to find a home for those they did not want, which included city directories and other records that help track the city's history from the late 19th and early 20th centuries ... more   Add a comment


12.03.07.
Drawing out artist R. Crumb

Robert Crumb isn't a cartoonist. He's an escape artist. "Wait a minute," says Crumb in his New York hotel room before the first question of this telephone interview is even asked. "I think I hear people having sex in the room next door" ... more   Add a comment

slave's tale surfaces
A previously unknown black slave narrative has been acquired by the University of Virginia Library, adding to its hefty collection of autobiographical accounts of slave life ... more   Add a comment

Gabriel Garcia Marquez mediates peace effort
Nobel Prize-winning author Gabriel Garcia Marquez is mediating efforts to reach a peace agreement with leftist rebels of the National Liberation Army (ELN), Colombian President Alvaro Uribe said Monday ... more   Add a comment

Harry Potter book 'often unread'
The fourth Harry Potter novel and David Beckham's autobiography are among the books least likely to be finished by Britons, according to a survey ... more   Add a comment

History, Digitized (and Abridged)
As more museums and archives become digital domains, and as electronic resources become the main tool for gathering information, items left behind in nondigital form, scholars and archivists say, are in danger of disappearing from the collective cultural memory, potentially leaving our historical fabric riddled with holes ... more   Add a comment


10.03.07.
Green Nazis is favorite for odd book prize

How Green Were the Nazis? and The Stray Shopping Carts of Eastern North America are just two of the titles competing for an unusual book prize ... more   Add a comment

Public outcry forces Hamas to rescind book ban
The Hamas-run Palestinian Education Ministry on Saturday rescinded a controversial decision to pull an anthology of Palestinian folk tales from school libraries and destroy copies, reportedly over mild sexual innuendo, following a widespread public outcry ... more   Add a comment

David Masson
David Masson, who has died aged 91, will be most remembered for his collection of brilliant and influential science-fiction short stories, The Caltraps of Time (1968). They had been first published individually in the British SF magazine New Worlds, which during the 1960s had a radical policy of rethinking science fiction's standard generic material ... more   Add a comment

Stolen Civil War documents returned
Two rare Civil War documents stolen from a public library exhibit last summer were anonymously returned Friday. Shelia Bumgarner, the librarian who curated the exhibit, said they were in her mailbox Friday, and they aren't damaged ... more   Add a comment


09.03.07.
Teacher accused of stealing and selling school books

Jodi Kress, 31, of Colchester, was charged with first-degree larceny when she turned herself in last Friday, police said. Kress is accused of stealing more than 600 books from Hanmer and Charles Wright elementary schools where she worked as a special education teacher ... more   Add a comment

Confessions of a Book Abuser
While the ideas expressed in even the vilest of books are worthy of protection, I find it difficult to respect books as objects, and see no harm whatsoever in abusing them ... more Via Bibliophile Bullpen   Add a comment

Old religious text goes missing from library
Police in the United States are investigating the loss of a valuable ancient manuscript which is a small piece in a huge historical puzzle. Despite being worth almost $1 million, the religious text was held by a small library in Ohio. But no one noticed it was missing until an Australian expert, Dr Don Barker, asked to see it, as Brendan Trembath reports ... more   Add a comment


08.03.07.
Library to sell rare Bible

A rare first edition King James Bible that languished for decades in a small storage room on the second floor of the downtown library is now at Sotheby's in Manhattan, where it just might fetch hundreds of thousands of dollars at auction in June ... more   Add a comment

Wham! bang! Marvel kills off Captain America
As a symbol of waning imperial power, it is unmistakeable. Captain America, the stars-and-stripes wearing, blond and blue-eyed "pinnacle of human physical perfection", is dead. The Marvel comics superhero, aka Steve Rogers, is gunned down by a sniper in the latest instalment of the comic ... more   Add a comment

Major European library backs Google Book Search
Google's controversial book scanning project has received a major boost, with the announcement that the largely German-language Bavarian State Library will participate in the Google Book Search project to scan and digitally capture the world's greatest literary works ... more   Add a comment

Microsoft vs. Google: More at Stake Than Books
Microsoft attorney Thomas Rubin on Tuesday accused Google of taking a "cavalier approach to copyright" and of using its Book Search project to make money off other people's copyrighted creations. His comments have stirred up a debate over the importance of free-market competition versus what is ethical when accessing information ... more   Add a comment


06.03.07.
Historic books saved from dump

Antiquarian book dealer Jim Swindall has turned the pages of literature back 100 years - to bring a rare three-volume set about the O'Neills of Ulster, destined for the rubbish tip, back home to Ireland ... more   Add a comment

Ride your pony
Bookride, Nigel Burwood's blog has changed it's URL to http://www.bookride.com/. His daily examination of truly scarce books, both well known and extremely obscure, is one of the few book related blogs I read with any regularity. However, I must confess to an occasional twinge in the wallet when I read about books that, in my ignorance, I have sold for just a few pounds ... :)   Add a comment

Bomber targets book mart
For ages, the Mutanabi book mart was a feeding ground for Iraq's intellectuals, serving up a rich menu of history and philosophy texts, novels and biographies, atlases and manuscripts to the Middle East's most voracious readers. Somehow it survived the war, but Monday it proved yet another rich target for a suicide bomber, who left 30 dead and 60 wounded ... more   Add a comment

Hamas orders book pulled from schools
The Hamas-run Education Ministry has ordered an anthology of Palestinian folk tales pulled from school libraries and destroyed because of sexually explicit language, officials said yesterday, in what critics charged was the most direct attempt by the Islamic militants to impose their beliefs on Palestinian society ... more   Add a comment


05.03.07.
Hats off to a 50-year-old Cat

Dr Seuss's anarchic cat revolutionised children's books - and his widow, Audrey Geisel, remains a stern guardian of his legacy ... more   Add a comment

Bethlehem's 261 year old bookshop
''How to be a Samurai Warrior,'' ''Judaism for Dummies,'' ''Things You Can Do While You're Naked'': Bishop Augustus Spangenberg, who helped create the Moravian Book Shop in 1745, would have been scandalized to see the titles on display at the store 261 years later ... more   Add a comment

Independent bookstore owner tells secrets of survival
One of the headliners at the educational sessions being presented in conjunction with the Spring Book Show at Atlanta’s World Congress Center on March 23-25 is the co-owner of an independent bookstore that’s been in business for more than 30 years. While many independent bookstore operators have been driven out of business by competition from bookstore chains and big-box discount stores moving into their market, her store has prospered and grown ... more   Add a comment

Largest library closure in U.S. looms
Federal funding dries up, leaving 15 branches in Oregon county on brink ... more   Add a comment


03.03.07.
Bookshop director orders removal anti-Semitic book

The director of a bookshop chain in Belgium has given instructions to remove a new version of the anti-Semitic "Protocols of Zion" from the shelves ... more   Add a comment

Literary legend learning to type at 92

In a rare public appearance, the revered travel writer Patrick Leigh Fermor has revealed that he is only now - aged 92 - learning to type, in order to finish the trilogy that has been at the centre of his writing life for more than 30 years ... more   Add a comment

Saudi book fair under religious attack

Saudi Arabia's semi-official Al Watan daily said Thursday the religious police tried to remove exhibited books on love and different religions at the Riyadh International Book Fair that opened Tuesday ... more   Add a comment

Rare books under the hammer

The sale at Duke's of Dorchester is thought to be the largest book auction outside of London for many years and features the sale of two major collections ... more   Add a comment


02.03.07.
Pride and Prejudice is top read

Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice has been voted the book the nation can't live without. A survey to mark World Book Day puts Lord of the Rings by JRR Tolkien in second place, followed by Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre ... more   Add a comment

MI5 suspected Auden of aiding Cambridge spies' escape
The poet WH Auden repeatedly evaded British intelligence's attempts to find out whether he was involved in the dramatic disappearance of the Cambridge spies Guy Burgess and Donald Maclean in 1951, according to secret files made public today ... more   Add a comment

Dublin Anarchist Book Fair
Saturday, March 3rd will see Dublin’s Second Anarchist Book Fair, a free, public event packed to the brim with radical bookstalls, meetings and social events. Last year, the event was held in the Meath Street Area and proved a great success. This year, due to the increased demand for stalls and meetings, we’ve moved to a larger venue, in the Teachers Club, 36 Parnell Square, in Dublin’s North Inner City ... more   Add a comment

Leading woman novelist condemned for ‘insulting Islam’
Barely a week after an Egyptian blogger was sentenced to four years for inciting hatred towards Islam, the distinguished novelist Nawal El Saadawi faces similar threats from the country’s religious establishment ... more   Add a comment


01.03.07.
Publishers try to stave off Google and Amazon

Two major publishers have launched services that let non-Amazonians "search inside the book." Random House and HarperCollins Publishers have both launched similar Web services that make it easy for bookstores, blogs, and social networking sites to display book snippets, hoping that the move will build buzz for new titles ... more   Add a comment

First edition book of Mormon up for auction
A very rare first edition copy of the Book of Mormon is up for auction. It's signed by early LDS apostle Orson Pratt, and is still encased in its original binding ... more   Add a comment

Divisive books reviewed
Livingston County Prosecutor David Morse expects to decide by next week whether three challenged books used in Howell High School classrooms meet the legal definition of obscenity ... more   Add a comment

Books as art
Consider this: Space Other is currently displaying books by Martin Kippenberger, Max Ernst, Marcel Duchamp and Andy Warhol. Visitors can walk in, put on some gloves and touch, carefully, pieces of art by some of the 20th Century’s most influential and important artists. How many art fans — other than significant gallery owners, big-money collectors and major museum curators — get to experience the objects of their desire in such an up-close and personal way? ... more   Add a comment

London Magazine risks retirement
The London Magazine, one of the oldest publications in the world, is threatened with closure amid claims that the Arts Council of England is to withdraw its funding ... more   Add a comment

Archived Stories

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January 2007
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