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June 2009
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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 occasional comments by TheBookGuide.  Archived Stories.

July 2009 Skip Free Registration

30.07.09.
Is there a margin muse in your library book?

Marks in library books are usually moronic scrawlings or tedious displays of ego, but just occasionally you come across something fascinating ... more  Add a comment


29.07.09.
Judge rules will of Kerouac’s mother is fake

In a ruling that could have implications for the literary estate of Jack Kerouac, a Florida judge has ruled that the will of the author’s mother, Gabrielle Kerouac, was a forgery ... more  Add a comment

Library fan nears 25,000th book
An avid reader in south west Scotland is on the brink of borrowing her 25,000th book from her local libraries ... more  Add a comment

Amazing artworks created from old books
Artist Su Blackwell creates these spectacular paper models from old books and sells them for up to £5,000 each ... more  Add a comment

Medieval alphabet book stays in Britain
A unique alphabet book, offering a selection of spectacular and bizarre fonts to the luxury medieval manuscript illuminator stuck for inspiration, has been bought by the British Library after a £600,000 appeal ... more  Add a comment


28.07.09.
Harry Potter and the £20k seat of earning

A secondhand dining chair may not appear the wisest of investments unless, of course, the previous owner was JK Rowling. The chair on which the author sat while writing the first two Harry Potter novels has been re-sold for £20,000 ... more  Add a comment

The worst children's books, ever
The blood is up at The American Scene, as they single out the worst kids' writing. Who have they missed ... more  Add a comment

France's 'cookery bible' gets English edition
Je Sais Cuisiner, which has sold more than 6m copies in France, has been translated into English for the first time ... more  Add a comment

Peter Blake interview: Cut out and keep
It's fish the day that I meet the artist Sir Peter Blake. He has spent the entire day with a scalpel cutting pictures of tiny fish out of an ancient encyclopaedia, with the amazing precision of a man half his age – he's 77 – and the perverse concentration of an artist who has been known to take almost two decades over a single painting ... more  Add a comment


27.07.09.
Moon rock book 'will be one of most expensive in history'

A book released to mark the 40th anniversary of the Moon landing – complete with a piece of Moon rock in the binding – is to go on sale for hundreds of thousands of dollars ... more  Add a comment


24.07.09.
Bermondsey bookseller dies

Bermondsey bookseller and author Peter Marcan has died unexpectedly at the age of 58 ... more  Add a comment

Publishers expect to see UK Kindle this autumn
Amazon has previously said that it would launch the e-book reader internationally, but has never divulged a timeline. Following reports last week that Amazon.co.uk had secured a UK manufacturer for the device, one digital director said: "I think we are looking at October for launch." Another agreed: "Amazon is gathering a head of steam for launch" ... more  Add a comment

A Wilde discovery of letters
He may have excelled at the unexpected, but even Oscar Wilde himself would have to bow down to this delicious irony. Several of Wilde’s working drafts and personal letters were thought, by scholars, to have been lost for over half a century, until a gift to the Morgan Library and Museum in New York revealed otherwise ... more  Add a comment

LongBox aims to be iTunes for comic books
If you've ever wondered why comic books don't have a digital distribution and management platform the way music, movies, or books do, you're not alone. The good news is that one software company and one man--perhaps clad in an identity-concealing spandex costume--are here to save the day with LongBox ... more  Add a comment


22.07.09.
Every book tells a story

Amazon's deletion of novels from Kindle devices shows that buying an ebook isn't like owning a real, secondhand tome ... more  Add a comment

Keats's London home reopens
Keats House, where he wrote some of his best loved poems, has benefited from £424,000 Lottery grant ... more  Add a comment

How to find a missing masterpiece
Discoveries of unknown works by classical masters seem commonplace these days, with manuscripts by the likes of Bach, Vivaldi, Mozart and Beethoven popping up in library files and private collections with surprising frequency. Often though, amid all the excitement and bankable headlines, the artistic payoffs turn out to be minimal, or the claims greatly exaggerated ... more  Add a comment

Amazon deal to reprint rare books
Online retailer Amazon is teaming up with the University of Michigan to provide reprints of 400,000 rare, out-of-print and out-of-copyright books ... more  Add a comment

Bookshelf etiquette
James Purnell has been using his time to rearrange his bookshelves alphabetically. Bad mistake. Here's why ... more  Add a comment


20.07.09.
Biography of Muriel Spark will finally be published

Next month the controversial biography she tried so hard to suppress will finally be published. Written by the renowned academic Martin Stannard and 17 years in the making, Muriel Spark – The Biography is billed as a "Cinderella story" of how an only child from a working class family became a literary icon, but it will also tell the story of her tortuous relationships with lovers who turned into enemies, and with her son, Robin, whom she all but abandoned when he was a small boy ... more  Add a comment

Rugby legend's memorabilia under hammer
Rugby memorabilia belonging to Irish rugby legend Karl Mullen is to go under the hammer at a County Kilkenny auction house ... more  Add a comment


17.07.09.
Golden hare should be put on display

The golden hare that Kit Williams buried in a park 30 years ago should be put on public display, the author of the surprise publishing hit Masquerade has said ... more  Add a comment

Vatican embraces Oscar Wilde
In a week in which the Vatican made its peace with that dangerous consorter with witches Harry Potter, the Holy See has also revealed an unexpected soft spot for Oscar Wilde ... more  Add a comment


16.07.09.
Austen in sea monster mash-up

Sea monsters are the new zombies, at least according to Quirk Books, the publisher of this year's surprise hit Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. Quirk, whose remix of Jane Austen pitted the Bennet sisters against hordes of flesh-eating undead, has announced that the new title in its series will be Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters ... more  Add a comment

Rare 1502 hymnal given to UK university library
A church is donating a rare 1502 hymnal to a Manchester University library, where church members say it can receive better care. The Latin hymnal was published in London by Wynken de Worde, who was among the first to popularize printed works. ... more  Add a comment

Hidden treasures to be revealed
From the moment you set foot in St John's Old Library, tucked away in the heart of the college, it's clear the place is steeped in history. "I always like opening the library to visitors" says outreach worker Katie Birkwood, with a smile. "Whether they've come to see a specific book or just to look at the building, nobody fails to be impressed ... more  Add a comment

Books bound in human skin
Leather-bound books are always lovely. But when that leather is human skin -- that's creepy, right? But it's not unheard of -- in fact, the practice of binding books in human skin was once common enough to get its own name: Anthropodermic bibliopegy ... more  Add a comment


14.07.09.
Charles quits heritage society over book snub

Prince Charles has quit as patron of one of Britain’s leading heritage societies in a row over his views on conservation, it emerged yesterday. The heir to the throne refused to renew his patronage of the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings after the charity, the world’s oldest environmental campaigning group, took the unprecedented step of refusing to publish a foreword he had written for a handbook on the restoration of old houses ... more  Add a comment

Cornish bay that inspired Virginia Woolf's novel sold
The majestic three-mile curve of sand and dunes that gave Virginia Woolf the landcape and memories at the heart of her most famous novel, To the Lighthouse, was bought at auction by a private buyer yesterday for £80,000 ... more  Add a comment

Publishers flock to London art book fair
The London Art Book Fair will take place at the newly expanded Whitechapel Gallery, and will offer talks, events and classes and book signings by authors and artists. Highlights include a debate on the role of the art book and a bookbinding "crash course" from the Society of Bookbinders ... more  Add a comment

Photography's brightest and best at the Arles festival
From new Nan Goldin to shocking vintage images, the greatest photography festival in the world teems with work. Why isn't there anything like it in Britain, wonders Sean O'Hagan ... more  Add a comment

Rare manuscripts remain locked for want of key
The Bihar State Archives is still in search of a key of the locker of Maharaja Rameshwar Singh Archives, Darbhanga, where rare manuscripts numbering about 50,000 of the erstwhile Darbhanga Maharaj are dumped ... more  Add a comment


13.07.09.
Bestsellers from beyond the literary grave

In the middle of the economic downturn, which has hit the American book trade hard, sales have been boosted by a remarkable series of discoveries of lost or unpublished works by some of the greatest names of modern literature which may soon be coming to the UK. Authors whose newly discovered or revised works are now being published in the US include Mark Twain, Vladimir Nabokov, Graham Greene, JRR Tolkien, William Styron, Mary Shelley and Ernest Hemingway ... more  Add a comment

Part of CS Lewis/JRR Tolkien manuscript found
A professor at Texas State University–San Marcos believes he has discovered all that exists of a book that JRR Tolkien and close friend CS Lewis intended to write together ... more  Add a comment

Who says Asperger's sufferers are unemployable?
When customers step into the Broughton Street Book Shop in Edinburgh, a high-ceilinged, wood-panelled room enticingly crammed with shelves of second-hand books, the rather gangly young man behind the counter hands them a pamphlet, without making eye contact. The leaflet explains that his name is Brian Rafferty, he is the shop's proprietor and he suffers from both Asperger's syndrome – a form of autism – and cerebral palsy ... more  Add a comment


09.07.09.
Lost Greene novel to be serialised in crime magazine

The long lost Graham Greene novel that was unearthed in a Texas archive late last year is to be serialised in an American crime magazine from next week ... more  Add a comment

Market-busting 90%-95% sell-through at Bloomsbury
In its first No Reserve Bibliophile Sale Bloomsbury-NY blew the roof off the house with an astonishing 90%-95% lot sell-through rate. The rare book auction market has not seen lot sell-through figures like that in more than twenty years ... more  Add a comment

Millet Manuscript Library online
The old Millet Manuscript Library in Istanbul's Fatih district is bringing its rare resources to light. Thousands of manuscripts and other resources at the library will be offered to the international community within the scope of a project jointly carried out by the Istanbul-based Suna and Inan Kiraç Foundation ... more  Add a comment


07.07.09.
Forty-year wait for new thesaurus

The world's largest thesaurus is due to be published this autumn, Oxford University Press has said. The project began in 1965 and will include almost the entire vocabulary of the English language ... more  Add a comment

Erotica publisher Black Lace withdraws from market
Erotic fiction authors are in mourning after it emerged yesterday that Britain's leading publisher of erotica for women, Black Lace, would not be publishing any new titles next year ... more  Add a comment

Bound for success
13 pictures from The Bound for Success exhibition at the Bodleian Library in Oxford ... more  Add a comment


06.07.09.
World's oldest Bible published online

The world's oldest surviving Bible, which has been scattered around the globe for more than a century, has been published in full online ... more  Add a comment

Bookbinding on show
Arnold Schwarzenegger may think it nonsensical that Californian schoolchildren still use traditional hard-bound books when so much information is available in electronic form, but this week two exhibitions opened to celebrate the art of exactly that. An Artful Craft, at the Bodleian Library in Oxford, features some exquisite examples of bindings from two of the finest collections made during the last century: Albert Ehrman’s Broxbourne Library and Sir Paul Getty’s Wormsley Library. Bound for Success, also at the Bodleian, showcases not the craft’s past but its equally fascinating future ... more  Add a comment

Deflation comes to the rare book market
The recession is, in my view, not the cause of this downward pressure but rather the most recent (and dramatic) catalyst for change to a business that has been struggling with change for the last fifteen years since the Internet's transparent, free-market blessing to the collector became a curse for sellers ... more  Add a comment


03.07.09.
Borders kick-starts UK's reluctant e-book revolution

Electronic books have been predicted to change the way we read forever, and hasten the death of the printing press. But the revolution is taking a long time in coming. Until recently in the United Kingdom, people wanting to buy an electronic book-reading device had little choice of machines. This week, the bookseller Borders launches its own e-book reader, which promises to ignite competition at last ... more  Add a comment

Salinger wins Catcher in the Rye copyright case
A federal judge in New York has indefinitely banned publication in the U.S. of a novel based on J.D. Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye because of its substantial similarities to the 1951 classic ... more  Add a comment

Authors lobby government for statutory school libraries
A high-profile group of children's authors, publishers, teachers and librarians is calling on the government to make school libraries statutory. Signatories to a petition to Number 10 include Philip Pullman, Horrid Henry creator Francesca Simon and former children's laureate Michael Rosen, as well as the general secretary of the National Union of Teachers Christine Blower, Dave Prentis, general secretary of Unison, top children's publishers and the directors of a raft of youth library associations ... more  Add a comment


02.07.09.
Declaration of Independence found gathering dust in UK

An original first print of the United States Declaration of Independence has been discovered gathering dust in Britain after nearly 250 years. The poster size proclamation, which is in perfect condition and is said to be worth £5million, is one of only 26 surviving initial copies of the document that changed the course of history ... more  Add a comment

All the world's books to go online
The Open Library, a new information-sharing project, aims to create a single web page for every book that has ever been written ... more  Add a comment

How Richard and Judy changed what we read
Richard and Judy are quitting the daytime TV sofa after 21 years. But their exit is not just television's loss - the book world will also mourn the departure of a couple who changed Britons' reading habits ... more  Add a comment

1889 Baseball poster sells for $115,000
Have you ever been at a garage sale, noticed an old, rolled up item, and decided not to unroll and look at it? After reading this article, you'll probably unroll the next one ... more  Add a comment

Biggles flys on
Jeremy Briggs reviews both the very first and the very latest Biggles graphic novels to be published in the UK. Cruise of the Condor was a hot read when I was a kid in 1955, and Spitfire Parade is hot off the press.  Add a comment

 
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