| Shelf:Life
- what's new in
the world of books and book collecting, links to the news
stories that matter, and occassional comments by TheBookGuide. Archived
Stories. November
2004 30.11.04
Kanda's secondhand bookstores adapt to digital age. Japan's best-known secondhand
bookstores bazaar - in Tokyo's Jimbocho district - is thriving despite a loss
of interest in the printed word that has hit book sales in many areas, because
it has adapted to the digital age...more
Add a comment. 30.11.04
Rare American Color-Plate Books Featured in Exhibition. Fort Worth - One of
the country’s finest private collections of rare illustrated books is the subject
of a special exhibition opening at the Amon Carter Museum January 29, 2005. Stamped
with a National Character: Nineteenth-Century American Color-Plate Books will
feature more than 120 items that trace the development of color illustration in
19th-century America, from its tentative beginnings when hand-colored engraving
was most prevalent to the invention of photomechanical reproduction processes...more
Add a comment. 30.11.04
Capote manuscript on block. New York - A manuscript of Truman Capote's unpublished
first novel has been found in a box of papers and will be auctioned Friday at
Sotheby's...more Add
a comment. 29.11.04
Lost texts find new life. Timbuktu, Mali - There was a time, centuries ago,
when the Sahara was arguably one of the best places on earth to buy a book. From
West Africa's Atlantic coast across the sandy expanses to the White Nile in the
east, camels laden with chests full of books and manuscripts trekked from one
oasis to the next...more
Add a comment. 29.11.04
Race for Australia up for sale. Like the race to the moon, or to the poles,
the fierce competition between England and France to claim Australia was one of
history's most momentous. Rare documents and maps going under the hammer at Sotheby's
in Melbourne tonight highlight just how close Australia was to being claimed by
the French...more Add
a comment. 28.11.04
Estate sale buy yields a delicious treasure. Galveston - You never know what
you may find at an estate sale. That’s something book dealer Louise Nichols of
Yesterday’s Books learned with time. But even after 18 years in the business,
she still gets surprises...more
Add a comment. 27.11.04
History has Dylan Thomas dying from drink. But now, a new theory. Dylan Thomas,
the great lost Welsh poet of his century, was killed not by his heavy drinking
but by the mistakes and oversights of his physician, according to new evidence
in a biography to be published on Monday...more
Add a comment. 27.11.04
House of rare books. Shanghai - The heads of two generations of a local family
collected and preserved part of China's precious literary heritage in their city
garden villa, writes Michelle Qiao...more
Add a comment. 27.11.04
Bibliophiles find rare books on footpaths. Islamabad - Bibliophiles need not
go far or spend much to obtain the books they want because both ordinary and rare
books are available on the footpaths of Rawalpindi and Islamabad...more
Add a comment. 26.11.04
Hobbit fetches £6,000 at auction. A first edition of the Hobbit by JRR Tolkien
- published in 1937 - has sold for £6,000 at an auction in Norfolk...more
Add a comment. 26.11.04
'They are my books'. Toronto -- 'They don't belong to Harbourfront. They are
my books." So declared Greg Gatenby during a testy press conference at his Toronto
home yesterday morning, hoping to end the questions surrounding his announcement
that he was selling his book collection, about 28,000 volumes worth an estimated
$2-million, amassed in part during his time as director of the Harbourfront Centre's
literary programming...more
Add a comment. 26.11.04
Arthur Hailey, author of Airport, dies. Arthur Hailey, the British-born author
whose novels about ordinary people facing extraordinary ordeals sold millions
of copies in airports around the world, died in his home in the Bahamas yesterday.
He was 84 ...more Add
a comment. 26.11.04
17th century British porn to be auctioned. London - The world's first known
piece of printed pornography, described as the "quintessence of debauchery", is
expected to reach up to 35,000 pounds when it is auctioned next month...more
Add a comment. 25.11.04
Rare book thief pleads guilty. A Christchurch man has pleaded guilty to 64
charges in relation to the theft of rare New Zealand books from university libraries...more
Add a comment. 25.11.04
A chance meeting, a rare find. The box arrived at the Boston Public Library
yesterday in a brown UPS truck, its contents a priceless treasure once owned by
John Adams. Wrapped inside cardboard and bubble wrap,
the 206-year-old three-volume set of books, "The life of Catherine II, Empress
of Russia," is a long-missing piece of history that local curators are calling
"the one that got away." It will be housed in the library's John Adams presidential
collection...more Add
a comment. 25.11.04
Google launches new academic service. Google, the internet search engine,
has launched a trial vesion of a new academic service called Google Scholar. Intended
as an essential research tool for academics and students, it has been developed
in collaboration with scientific and academic publishers. It will offer material
not usually accessible via normal search engines because it is locked behind subscription
barriers...more Add
a comment. 25.11.04
Cash crisis hits 'city of literature' project. Six weeks after Edinburgh was
named the world’s first "city of literature", the project appears dangerously
close to running out of money...more
Add a comment. 24.11.04
Peter Pan collection to aid children's hospital. A poignant photograph of
a sturdy Edwardian boy, who would provide the inspiration for Peter Pan but would
die himself in an apparent suicide pact at 20, will be a star item in the auction
of archives of remarkable Peter Pan material...more
Add a comment. 24.11.04
Ebay faces global customer revolt. A global movement of disgruntled eBay customers
has decided to rebel against the internet auction site, claiming that the company
has failed to address users' concerns on security, fraud and service. Forgeries
are regularly offered on eBay. Last summer the publication of the fifth Harry
Potter book drew much interest and the number of "signed copies" of J. K. Rowling's
books offered on eBay soared. The amount of obvious
forgeries bought by unsuspecting fans astounded James Allen, owner of Red Snapper
Books, a rare book dealer. "Of the fifty or sixty items you expected to see at
any one time, perhaps two or three were genuine," he said...more
Add a comment. 24.11.04
Book hurler escapes prison. Judge orders probation for man who hurled book
that injured two cyclists...more
Add a comment. 23.11.04
Hobbit's birthplace wins official protection. It's not a deep, dark cave inhabited
by Gollum, nor a hall of stone belonging to a Dwarf-lord -- it's just an ordinary
house in the heart of suburbia. But authorities will defend it to the hilt as
the historical birthplace of literary blockbusters "Lord of the Rings" and "The
Hobbit"...more Add
a comment. 23.11.04
Sedbergh Book Town Forum 28th November. The meeting is to finalise those booksellers
who wish to join the Dales & Lakes Book Centre and become founders of the Book
Town. There will also be information about properties for sale and to let, both
commercial and residential. Before this you are invited to tour the town and to
look at the premises of the Dales & Lakes Book Centre. Further details from Carole
Nelson. Add
a comment. 23.11.04
Rare Abraham Lincoln collectables go under the hammer. An extremely rare lighthouse
book first published in France in 1864 by the French Lighthouse Service has been
acquired by the Museum of Lighthouse History in Wells, Maine...more
Add a comment. 23.11.04
Rare lighthouse book goes to museum. An extremely rare lighthouse book first
published in France in 1864 by the French Lighthouse Service has been acquired
by the Museum of Lighthouse History in Wells, Maine...more
Add a comment. 22.11.04
Protester climbs down from roof of adult bookshop. Other than a few women
who made obscene gestures as they drove by, a week on the roof of an adult bookstore
was mostly a positive experience, Ray Morris said Friday as he prepared to come
down from his perch the next morning...more
Add a comment. 22.11.04
Collector has read thousands of books. Pages are constantly turning at Violet
Buss' home in Free Soil. Buss loves to read and has the collection of books that
proves it. A big collection of books. "Last time I counted, a few years ago, I
had 12,000," she said. "Right now, I know my collection must be near 20,000"...more
Add a comment. 22.11.04
Funeral for Desecrated Torah Scroll. The Chief Rabbinate of Jerusalem is to
hold a burial ceremony today for a Torah scroll that was stolen and desecrated
last week. In Jewish tradition, holy books and Torah scrolls that can no longer
be used are buried, with similar ceremony as that of a funeral for a person...more
Add a comment. 22.11.04
Letter by Lincoln's assassin sells for $68,000. A letter written and signed
by President Abraham Lincoln's assassin two months before the 1865 slaying sold
at auction yesterday for a record price...more
Add a comment. 21.11.04
'It's incredibly moving to have the piece of paper that Leonardo drew and wrote
upon himself'. The Honourable Lady Roberts whisks the black shroud off a display
of drawings in the velvety silence of the Royal Library at Windsor Castle, revealing
a tall stand on which a breathtaking collection of Old Masters can be viewed.
This, whispers Her Ladyship, is where Her Majesty the Queen brings her most distinguished
dinner guests for their postprandial entertainment...more
Add a comment. 20.11.04
The power of pictures. On the front page of The Plain Dealer's world exclusive
on Nov. 20, 1969, 35 years ago today, the caption under a large black-and-white
photo read: "A clump of bodies on a road in South Vietnam"...more
Add a comment. 20.11.04
Painted treasures of the Moghul rulers. Few stories are quite as strange in
mankind's cultural history as the birth of an art school that blended the principles
of Iranian painting with motifs borrowed from Northern Europe.
As a further complication, this improbable marriage took place in India, ruled
by the emperors of Turcic-Mongol ancestry, "the Moghuls." Recounting
it is a tricky business. Several manuscripts that would serve as landmarks if
they were intact were dismembered in the West - their painted pages sold piecemeal...more
Add a comment. 20.11.04
Autographed copy of famed Christmas poem to be auctioned. An autographed copy
of the classic poem that begins with the familiar line "'Twas the night before
Christmas" will be auctioned at Sotheby's this holiday season. The
handwritten manuscript, signed by author Clement Clarke Moore, is one of just
four known autographed copies. It is expected to sell for between $200,000 and
$300,000 when auctioned on Dec. 3...more
Add a comment. 20.11.04
Blackwell's up for sale? Struggling against Amazon.com and the growing use
of the internet, Blackwell’s yesterday said it had commissioned City accountants
BDO Stoy Harvard to conduct a review of its retail arm to be completed in early
2005...more Add
a comment. 20.11.04
'The Amazing Adventures of a Man Who Rescued a Million Yiddish Books'. When
Aaron Lansky was studying Yiddish literature in Montreal, finding books was a
problem. One lucky student might find the assigned text in the library. But others
would have to go to the old Jewish neighborhoods, knock on doors, and ask to borrow
from someone's private library...more
Add a comment. 20.11.04
US Critics throw the book at national award panel. Who says people don't care
about books? For the second year in a row, controversy has swirled around the
National Book Awards. Last year literary lions were
scandalized when horror novelist Stephen King received the medal for outstanding
contribution to American letters. This year
eyebrows rose among some critics, authors, and publishers over the five finalists
in fiction...more Add
a comment. 19.11.04
National Trust attempts to stop auction of Patrick White's house. The house
where White lived for a quarter of a century is today being placed on the New
South Wales Heritage Register, to save it from any future development, but it's
still due to go under the auction hammer next Wednesday night...more
Add a comment. 19.11.04
£860,000 boost to save ancient psalter. The campaign to keep a magnificent
illuminated medieval manuscript in Britain received a huge boost yesterday when
the National Heritage Memorial Fund agreed to give £860,000 towards purchasing
the Macclesfield Psalter...more
Add a comment. 18.11.04
Literary awards are killing literature. Literary awards like the Booker and
the French Goncourt Prize are destroying literature in the post-modern world where
the concept of high culture was fast disappearing, Nobel laureate literateur Sir
V S Naipaul said today...more
Add a comment. 18.11.04
UCLA Library Acquires Papers of Television Pioneer. The UCLA Library has acquired
the papers of Harry Crane (1914–99), creator of "The Honeymooners" and a prolific
writer of radio, television and film comedy. The collection encompasses scripts,
correspondence, photographs, topical humor publications and awards spanning his
career from the 1940s through the 1990s...more
Add a comment. 18.11.04
Forget fines - overdue library books could lead to jail time. Frustrated librarians
want to begin a crackdown on chronic offenders that could lead to criminal charges
and up to 90 days in jail...more
Add a comment. 18.11.04
Clinton due to open his library. Former US president Bill Clinton is to open
his futuristic glass-and-steel presidential library on Thursday...more
Add a comment. 18.11.04
Bookseller to turn a page in store's life. After 30 years as the proprietor
of Fort Lauderdale's premier used-book store, Rob Hittel realized a few months
ago it was at last time to devise a business model. Being a book lover no longer
seemed enough. Since the late 1990s, pressure from chain stores and the Internet
had gradually eroded his sales...more
Add a comment. 17.11.04
ChooseBooks sold.
It was announced today that on November 16th ChooseBooks was acquired by mediatins
AG, an independent German multimedia corporation and a parent company of ZVAB.com,
Antiquarian Book Listing service, a European market leader with a dominant position
in Central Europe. According to Choosebooks, it's
all good news, but it remains to be seen how much their business model and fees
will change under new ownership. 17.11.04
Harry Potter cast support book auction for charity. Cast members from the
Harry Potter movies are lending their support to LEPRA, a leading UK medical charity
which supports fighting Leprosy, HIV, and AIDS world-wide. Potter
stars Daniel Radcliffe, Alan Rickman, Robbie Coltrane, Emma Thompson and Zoë Wanamaker
as well as Harry Potter narrator Stephen Fry all donated signed books for "The
Big Book Auction," which begins today on eBay and ends on November 27th...more
Add a comment. 17.11.04
Celebrities back appeal to save historic book. TV star Michael Palin and historian
Dr David Starkey are backing a national public appeal to save the Macclesfield
Psalter. "Python" Michael Palin said: "The Macclesfield Psalter is one of the
richest and most beautiful examples of an early English illustrated book. It is
a rare and very special insight into our medieval cultural life, and if anything
deserves to stay in its country of its origin, this is it"...more
Add a comment. 17.11.04
British Library goes wireless. The British Library claims to have built the
largest indoor wireless network in the London. The network, which will cover 11
reading room, the Library auditorium, its café and restaurant as well as the famous
indoor Piazza will be available to 3,000 visitors a day...more
Add a comment. 17.11.04
Executive urged to help fund city of literature. An MSP has criticised the
Scottish Executive for failing to allocate funds for the development of the World
City of Literature status of Edinburgh...more
Add a comment. 16.11.04
Music in Bookshops. I've read a number of negative comments about music in
bookshops recently, so I shall confess my gilt here. We play all sorts of music
at Inprint, and I encourage the staff to bring in their own choice. On any one
day you could hear western classical, blues, jazz, reggae, hip hop, trip hop,
r&b, soul, world, folk... This is partly because of
my own broad interest in the history and development of popular music, and partly
because we sell books on the subject. The music often prompts comment, some of
it negative, but it does lead to book sales and business for the independent record
store up the road. Hancock's in Cheltenham used to
play an endless stream of (in my view) rather bland classical stuff, which lead
Driff to comment that it was ' like being at a classical concert in a library'.
I found it a bit debilitating.
Add a comment. 16.11.04
At this bookstore, browsers can read the arms on the man. Some people go to
Pazzo Books to buy secondhand books, some for a quiet place to read, and some
to check out Brian Nealon's arms...more
Add a comment. 16.11.04
EBay to ban 'Racially Derogatory' search terms. The Internet auction giant
eBay plans to implement a "pop-up" notification when "racially derogatory" search
terms are entered on the website...more
Add a comment. 16.11.04
Comic book jazzes up music history. Following last year's runaway success
of "Jazz It Up!" a comic book that draws up the century old history of jazz in
chronological order, is "Jazz It Up! Vol. Two." The sequel of the two part series
takes readers on a deeper journey into the world of jazz by introducing the more
complex sub-genres and paying tribute to jazz greats...more
Add a comment.
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