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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.

April 2008Skip Free Registration

29.04.08.
New, a pop-up book (shop)

Bookshop owner Andrew Ball was struck by figures that showed only 18% of Australians would ever venture into a shop such as his, so he devised a way to take such shops to the remaining 82% ... more   Add a comment

Find of Sun King's secret diaries too good to be true
It is hard to research history's bit-players - by their peripheral nature they leave little behind. But for her biography of Louis XIV's mistress author Veronica Buckley hit upon a startling, apparently unmined source: the secret diaries of the Sun King himself ... more   Add a comment

‘Inquiry report on stolen Quran unattended for years’
While the police in Srinagar are still clueless about the theft four years ago of a rare copy of the Quran bearing Mughal Emperor Aurangazeb’s seal, an official of the state archives department has claimed inaction for years over his inquiry report ... more   Add a comment


28.04.08.
Last Nabokov work to be published

The son of late Lolita author Vladimir Nabokov has defended the decision to publish the novelist's final work - against his father's last wishes ... more   Add a comment

Austen novel 'to sell for £50,000'
An inscribed presentation copy of a first edition of Emma by Jane Austen could fetch £50,000 when it goes to auction in London ... more   Add a comment

Stolen Maps Database Launched
The Missing and Stolen Maps Database, supported by the International Antiquarian Mapsellers Association (IAMA) is now live. First announced back in February, the database was designed by a large group of librarians, map collectors, dealers, and others ... more   Add a comment

The Book And Word ‘Herder’
Author and bookshop owner Larry McMurtry receives the LAPL Literary Award ... more   Add a comment


25.04.08.
50 best cult books

Cult books include some of the most cringemaking collections of bilge ever collected between hard covers. But they also include many of the key texts of modern feminism; some of the best journalism and memoirs; some of the most entrancing and original novels in the canon ... more   Add a comment

The Morgan's 'Medieval Hunt'
Sometimes, the upkeep of artwork has serendipitous side benefits. At the Morgan Library, the temporary unbinding of the manuscript "Le Livre de la Chasse" for conservation purposes has occasioned a unique treat: an installation displaying most of its 87 remarkable miniatures. Produced around 1407 by unknown scribes and illuminators, the Morgan manuscript illustrates the hunting treatise written by Gaston Phoebus for his friend and fellow hunter Philip the Bold, Duke of Burgundy ... more   Add a comment

Anonymity: A Secret History Of English Literature
The whys and wherefores of anonymous publishing throughout the history of English literature ... more   Add a comment

Historians call for Mein Kampf reprint
One of the great publishing taboos of modern Germany is beginning to buckle: historians are pressing the authorities to bring out a new edition of Adolf Hitler’s poisonously anti-Semitic manifesto, Mein Kampf ... more   Add a comment


23.04.08.
The future of books resides in their past

Google can digitize all books, but it can't replace the physical connection we get from a 14th century tome ... more   Add a comment

Self-published memoir shortlisted for prize
For the first time, a self-published author has made it onto the shortlist for the prestigious PEN/Ackerley prize for memoir and autobiography. Jane Haynes's Who Is It That Can Tell Me Who I Am? is an unflinching journal of her life a psychotherapist, revealing as much about the author as her patients ... more   Add a comment

Record prices at Swann Galleries
On April 3, Swann Auction Galleries offered a selection of fine books spanning the centuries. The auction's top lot, Athenaeus, Deipnosophistarum , first edition, Venice, 1514, attained a record $192,000 ... more   Add a comment

Will power: the original Shakespeare texts
On the Bard's 444th birthday, the actors Simon Russell Beale and Emma Fielding get their hands on a priceless First Folio ... more   Add a comment


22.04.08.
Alain Bittar

Alain Bittar says his bookshop in Geneva is a reflection of his own personality: a bridge between the Arab world and Europe ... more   Add a comment

Iran displays Sheikh Bahaei manuscripts
Malek National Museum puts on display exquisite manuscripts of works by Sheikh Bahaei, the prominent scholar of the Safavid era ... more   Add a comment

Online trailblazers set the pace to go digital
The British Library's historic newspapers archive is one of a handful of pioneering digitisation projects that is setting an example to others ... more   Add a comment

Martin Parr polarises the world of photography
Is he a sharp-witted genius whose pictures paint a satirical and revealing portrait of British life? Or a sneering misanthrope on the make? Our correspondent gets to grips with the ageing enfant terrible of contemporary photography ... more   Add a comment


21.04.08.
A vast archive of printed ephemera digitised

Approximately 65,000 items from the John Johnson Collection of Printed Ephemera, housed in the Bodleian Library, have so far been catalogued, conserved and digitized in collaboration with an electronic publisher called ProQuest ... more   Add a comment

The Mapping of Ukraine
The Mapping of Ukraine: European Cartography and Maps of Early Modern Ukraine, 1550-1799, includes 42 original maps published by European mapmakers over a 250-year period. A majority of the maps in the exhibition are from the Museum's Marie Halun Bloch Collection, which consists of 52 maps bequeathed to the Museum by the Ukrainian American writer of children's books upon her death in 1998 ... more   Add a comment

Manga Shakespeare
A British publisher has scored a hit with manga comic book versions of Shakespeare's classic plays -- and this week unveiled plans for more ... more   Add a comment


18.04.08.
Amsterdam: literature's capital city

On April 23, World Book and Copyright Day, Amsterdam will be officially inaugurated as World Book Capital 2008. The ensuing year-long programme of events centres around an 'open book' theme, a reminder that Amsterdam's infamous tolerance doesn't just equate to legal coffeeshops and brothels - rather, it was vital in the city's development as a refuge for the written word ... more   Add a comment


17.04.08.
Online archive shows how Darwin's ideas evolved

About 90,000 pages of manuscripts, field notes, photographs and sketches connected with Charles Darwin are being placed online, where they can be viewed free. Among the gems are his first formulation of the theory of natural selection, his first written doubts that species were fixed and touching correspondence from his wife on religious faith ... more   Add a comment

Bond makes an exhibition of himself... once again
James Bond fans will be stirred, if not shaken, by the Imperial War Museum's latest exhibition. For Your Eyes Only, which opens tomorrow, shows to what extent the adventures of agent 007 were based on the life of his creator, Ian Fleming, in the writer's centenary year ... more   Add a comment

Blood On Paper: The Art Of The Book
This bold display of work ranges from Matisse to Rauschenberg to Hirst. It includes great surprises, such as the saturated totemic prints of abstract Basque sculptor Eduardo Chillida. There isn’t an overriding theme but the curators have selected works which demonstrate great craftsmanship, which is appropriately so very V&A ... more   Add a comment


16.04.08.
Irish independence proclamation sells for record price

An original version of Ireland's Proclamation of Independence, printed as part of the country's 1916 rebellion against British rule, sold for a record 360,000 euros ($570,000) at auction in Dublin ... more   Add a comment

Judge urges settlement in Harry Potter guide lawsuit
U.S. District Judge Robert Patterson Jr. said the copyright infringement case was a legal close call, involving unresolved areas of American law, and was almost certain to end in years of appeals ... more   Add a comment

BBC wins battle over Dalek book
A BBC book about Doctor Who's legendary foes the Daleks has been cleared of infringing copyright in London. The case was brought by publishers JHP, who printed four books with stories by Dalek creator Terry Nation in the 60s ... more   Add a comment


15.04.08.
In the beginning was the bestseller

Is this the world's finest bookshop? Jonathan Glancey on a new life for an old church ... more   Add a comment

'Sniffing' technology for old books
A pioneering project to chemically "sniff" books could determine a tome's state of health and help protect valuable volumes from decay, scientists have revealed ... more   Add a comment

The Archimedes Codex unpeeled
This is about an ancient book called The Archimedes Codex, bought for $2.2 million in October, 1998, at an auction in New York City by an anonymous collector who sent it to the Walters Art Museum, here to be restored, conserved, and probed for its content. It was thought to contain mathematical theses conceived by the genius of Syracuse (287-212 BC), whose name it bears, ideas not found anywhere else in the world ... more   Add a comment

Thief rips pages from rare books
A thief posed as a student to steal centuries-old documents about the origins of the Catholic church in Scotland worth thousands of pounds ... more   Add a comment


12.04.08.
Re-created library speaks volumes about Jefferson

For the past decade, a small group of rare book experts has sought to re-create Jefferson's library, scouring antiquarian book collections on two continents to acquire thousands of volumes. The entire collection of more than 6,000 volumes -- some originals and some replacements -- will go on display today at the Library of Congress, looking much as it would have 200 years ago ... more   Add a comment

Thinking about book collecting?
Well so is Kristen Ogden. Her piece over at the Kenyon Review blog, "Antiquarian Book Collector Wanna-be", gives us a worthy peek into the process ... more   Add a comment

Abebooks buys US bookseller host
Online second-hand bookseller AbeBooks.com has bought Chrislands, a US-based business that builds, hosts and maintains online bookstores. The sum paid was not disclosed. It is AbeBooks' fourth acquisition in the past four years ... more   Add a comment


10.04.08.
Lawsuit ends Arbus auction

A lawyer for the owner of a group of rare, early prints by the photographer Diane Arbus said on Wednesday that the auction house Phillips de Pury canceled the sale because of concerns about a recent lawsuit filed by a man who claims he was duped out of the prints ... more   Add a comment

Thomas biopic to headline Edinburgh film festival
The Edge of Love, a film about the life and loves of the poet Dylan Thomas, has been selected as the opening night gala for this year's Edinburgh international film festival. It is directed by John Maybury and stars Keira Knightley, Matthew Rhys and Sienna Miller ... more   Add a comment

'Middle Ages’ manuscript fetches EUR 300,000
The handwritten Book of Hours dating from around 1460 had generated a great deal of interest from foreign and domestic collectors. The manuscript was discovered during a valuation day at the auction house. The owner, who inherited the book, had found it in his attic ... more   Add a comment

Islamic manuscript sells for record price
A Koran dated to the middle of the seventh century was sold for nearly 2.5 million pounds (3.1 million euros, 4.9 million dollars) on Tuesday, a world record price for an Islamic manuscript at auction ... more   Add a comment


08.04.08.
First book of African American poetry donated

John LaPine, owner of Printers Row Fine & Rare Books in Chicago, will present a copy of the first book of poetry published by an African American to David Carlson, dean of Library Affairs, at noon Friday, April 11, in a brief ceremony at Morris Library ... more   Add a comment

Rare religious book to go on display
A "unique" religious book dating from the 15th century has been purchased by the National Trust for public display in Cheshire. The trust said it had bought the sole surviving copy of the Sarum Missal, a popular version of the Mass used in pre-Reformation England, printed for William Caxton in Paris in 1487 ... more   Add a comment

Collectors relish rare bookstore offerings
A common response among visitors to Bauman Rare Books in the Shoppes at the Palazzo is that they have never seen another store like it. That's not surprising since there are only two other Bauman stores in the United States and the retailer's collection of rare and antiquarian books and documents is among the finest in the world ... more   Add a comment

Taking women off the shelf
It was a kind of magic for Rachel Cooke when she first picked up a Virago Modern Classic. Suddenly a whole world of fabulous, neglected women writers - from Stevie Smith to Antonia White - opened up before her. On the eve of the series' 30th anniversary, she traces how the imprint changed the publishing landscape for ever ... more   Add a comment


04.04.08.
The caped crusader

For comic-book fans, Fredric Wertham is the biggest villain of all time, a real-life bad guy worse than the Joker, Lex Luthor, and Magneto combined. In the late 1940s and early 1950s, Wertham was the intellectual spearhead of the anti-comics crusade, arguing in many articles and his 1954 best-seller, Seduction of the Innocent, that comic books stultified the imagination of normal kids (giving them a taste for blood and gore that would prevent them from ever appreciating literature and fine art) and severely damaged the socially vulnerable, contributing to juvenile delinquency ... more   Add a comment

Pope receives handwritten Bible
Pope Benedict XVI was presented Friday with one of the limited editions of the St. John's Bible, the first known handwritten Bible commissioned by a Benedictine monastery since the invention of the printing press over 500 years ago ... more   Add a comment

The US Ephemera Society show delights the crowds
The popular event has become the pinnacle of paper shows, with dealers traveling from England and Europe to display their stock. It is also an interesting and exciting walk through history ... more   Add a comment

Scotland's oldest printed book on show
The earliest dated printed book in Scotland goes on display in the Capital today 500 years after it was made. John Lydgate's The Complaint of the Black Knight was printed by Chepman and Myllar on April 4, 1508, at their press in the city's Southgate, which is now the Cowgate ... more   Add a comment


03.04.08.
Dickens's `Oliver Twist' Sells for a Record $229,000

A first edition of ``Oliver Twist,'' Charles Dickens's tale of a scrappy young orphan making his way among a band of thieves in 19th-century London, sold for $229,000 at Christie's International in New York yesterday, a record for the British novelist ... more   Add a comment

Decline of the picture book
The children's book fair in Bologna this week was full of the bubble and squeak that such events elicit. But a serious sub-theme lurked: how to revive picture books, those lavishly illustrated creations that teach children to love books long before they can read them ... more   Add a comment

Lincoln letter sets auction record
Abraham Lincoln's heartfelt reply to a group of youngsters who asked him to free America's "little slave children" has sold for $3.4 million ... more   Add a comment

Missing library books total £57,000
More than 8,000 items are missing from libraries in West Sussex. The latest stocktake revealed that 7,402 books, 157 audiobooks and 600 music items have disappeared from shelves ... more   Add a comment

Man Arrested for map thefts
James Lyman Brubaker of Great Falls, Montana, who used the E-Bay name “Montana Silver” on the website eBay, is alleged to have stolen numerous original maps and lithographs from Western Washington University library ... more   Add a comment


01.04.08.
Cambridge University treasures make trip down under

A spectacular collection of illuminated manuscripts from the University of Cambridge has gone on display in Australia. The newly-opened exhibition, at the Victoria State Public Library in Melbourne, features precious examples from the University Library, Fitzwilliam Museum, Trinity College and Corpus Christi College ... more   Add a comment

Cat burglar strikes library
The Newman Library was robbed of some of its most precious and prized books over the weekend by the so-called "Book Bandit." The stealthy, ninja-like crook pilfers rare books housed in college campus libraries and has struck 15 colleges across the nation so far ... more   Add a comment

The Mystery of the Copper Scroll
The Copper Scroll describes a hidden cache of gold and silver buried in more than 60 locations throughout Israel. The monetary value is close to $3 billion, but the historical value - is priceless ... more   Add a comment

Gray's Anatomy celebrates 150th anniversary
A vital work on every doctor's bookshelf, an essential prop in any respectable medical drama (it has even given its name to one), the text has spawned countless imitations, while its title has become a household word. Its success is celebrated in an exhibition that opens next week, and its intriguing history unravelled in a book to be published this September ... more   Add a comment

 

 
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