| 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. September
2004 30.09.04.
City goes extra Mile in literary title push. From Stevenson and Scott
to Rowling and Rankin, the Royal Mile and its environs are alive with literary
history. Now the team promoting Edinburgh as the first UNESCO World City of Literature
wants to capitalise on this rich heritage by making a comprehensive writers’ tour
a centrepiece of their bid...more 30.09.04.
NZ Police claim success against book thieves. Christchurch police say
they have smashed a theft ring which stole rare books from libraries and collections
around the country. Detective Senior Sergeant John Rae said today police raided
16 Christchurch properties yesterday and arrested seven people believed to be
part of an extensive group of rare-book thieves...more 29.09.04.
'Lost' Hemingway manuscript not one-of-a-kind. The supposedly lost manuscript
- a lighthearted account of a 1924 bullfight - has been known among scholars for
years and two typed copies have been held at the Hemingway Collection at the John
F. Kennedy Library and Museum in Boston since 1982, according to The Kansas City
Star, where the author once worked...more 29.09.04.
Why do we still fall for Mr Darcy? Women's favourite fictional icon
is a dominant patriarchal male. No wonder modern men are confused...more 29.09.04.
Auction is highlight of 40th Michigan Antiquarian Book Show. A relatively
new addition to the show is a Saturday night auction that Ray Walsh says will
be especially interesting, featuring 300 lots of books and ephemera...more 28.09.04.
Library book '100 years overdue'. A borrowed book has been returned to
an Inverness library nearly 100 years overdue incurring a £5,000 fine...more 28.09.04.
Greenpeace steps up 'forest friendly' campaign. Greenpeace has enlisted
bestselling author Isabel Allende in the latest phase of its drive to urge British
publishers to use paper from sustainable sources...more 28.09.04.
Besotted Bardot fan auctions star memorabilia. More than 200 people packed
a Paris auction house on Tuesday for the sale of thousands of objects tracing
the career of French screen siren Brigitte Bardot, whose 70th birthday coincided
with the event...more 28.09.04.
Rare Aesop book put up for sale. A 15th Century copy of fables by Aesop,
the mythical pre-Christian story-teller, is to go under the hammer at a Wiltshire
auction house...more 28.09.04.
Lost Hemingway story under wraps. New York - A newly discovered handwritten
letter and short story by Ernest Hemingway will be auctioned in December, but
custodians of his estate have not granted permission for the works to be published...more 27.09.04.
Profs gather on Petrarch's anniversary. Professors from universities around
the world gathered at Yale this weekend to commemorate the 700th anniversary of
the 14th century poet Petrarch's birth and discuss his work and legacy...more 27.09.04.
Reformer’s Bible is a saleroom success. Five centuries ago, it was a book
to die for. Translating books and manuscripts from one language to another these
days is not considered a dangerous occupation. But back in the 16th century it
was a job that could end up with the unfortunate translator paying with his life...more 26.09.04.
Under cover in Booktown. Driving into Wigtown on a Saturday afternoon is
like driving into a well tended ghost town. It’s mid afternoon, sunny, and there
is nobody around. Well almost nobody. Under a tree in the ‘piazza’ is a television
crew fronted by foreign correspondent Alan Little. It is the only sign that this
town is hosting an international book festival and playing host to names ranging
from Jeremy Bowen to Sheena McDonald and Monty Don to Libby Purves. Even Booker
Prize nominee David Mitchell is in town. So where is everyone?...more 26.09.04.
Book dealer offers hot jazz, black culture. Durham USA -- An appreciative
quiet drapes the patrons seated inside The Know Bookstore's restaurant as jazz
pianist Yusef Salim completes a reflective, intensely personal solo...more 26.09.04.
Pushcart bookseller does a trade in respect. Business is brisk most afternoons
at Lloyd Hart's pushcart outside Macy's in Downtown Crossing. Young girls come
by with their H&M and DSW shopping bags, while white-haired veteran customers
stop in looking for selections for their book clubs...more 25.09.04.
'Bonjour Tristesse' author Sagan dead. Francoise Sagan, author of the best-selling
novel "Bonjour Tristesse" about seduction and infidelity among the idle rich,
died yesterday. She was 69...more 25.09.04
- 02.10.04 Banned Books Week. Banned Books Week: Celebrating the
Freedom to Read is observed during the last week of September each year. Co-sponsored
by the American Library Association, American Booksellers Association, and several
other publishing and book-related organizations, this annual event reminds Americans
not to take the precious democratic freedom, freedom of speech, for granted...more
Add a comment.
25.09.04.
Kids' author in the bad books. Not for the first time, Andy Griffiths,
master of the bum-and-fart books beloved by Australian children, is in trouble
with parents, teachers, librarians and even some booksellers who think his latest
effort, The Bad Book, goes too far...more 24.09.04.
Ian Rankin: The king of tartan noir. Ian Rankin's Inspector Rebus novels
have won him legions of fans and a place on the tourist trail. He tells Lesley
Mcdowell why crime fiction matters...more 24.09.04.
Woman Inherits Shakespeare Folio 'Worth Millions'. A housewife has inherited
a rare Shakespeare book from a long-lost cousin which could fetch millions at
auction. Mother-of-three Anne Humphries was bequeathed the rare collection of
Shakespeare plays from a relative she did not know even existed...more 23.09.04.
From Romans to rock stars: the biography of our nation. Twelve years and
55,000 entries later, the herculean task of updating the 'Oxford Dictionary of
National Biography' has finally been completed...more 22.09.04.
Loss grows in German library fire. About 50,000 books were irreparably
damaged by the fire which swept through the top floor of the Duchess Anna Amalia
library in Weimar earlier this month, twice as many as previously thought...more TheBookGuide's
mum has been taken ill in darkest Wales, so he's away looking after her. He and
the news will hopefully be back latter this week. 19.09.04.
Novel products in aisle nine. The literary world may not like it, but where
the City is concerned selling books is no different to selling cornflakes. Publishing
is subject to the same economic trends as any other industry, and like many great
British brands the biggest publishing houses are now mostly in the hands of foreign
conglomerates...more 18.09.04.
Toni Morrison's 'Good' Ghosts. Toni Morrison's life -- like her writing
-- is populated by ghosts -- some bad, some benign and others, pure inspiration.
In an interview with NPR's Renee Montagne, she talks about the "good" ghosts and
childhood memories that have inspired her writing...more 17.09.04.
A pussycat with blood on her claws. Kitty Kelley has made some powerful
enemies with her sensational, warts-and-all biographies of America's biggest celebrities.
Now, she is lifting the lid on the Bush dynasty -- but has she gone too far this
time, asks Michael Shelden...more 17.09.04.
Wigtown Book Festival. The Wigtown Book Festival begins today and runs
until September 26 with a cast of personalities and literary figures far too large
to list here...more 17.09.04.
A pussycat with blood on her claws. Kitty Kelley has made some powerful
enemies with her sensational, warts-and-all biographies of America's biggest celebrities.
Now, she is lifting the lid on the Bush dynasty -- but has she gone too far this
time, asks Michael Shelden...more 17.09.04.
Lebanon bans The Da Vinci Code. Lebanon has banned Dan Brown's bestselling
novel The Da Vinci Code after Catholic leaders said it was offensive to Christianity...more 17.09.04.
Three arrested with rare manuscript in Delhi. Three men charged with attempt
to sell a stolen antique Tibetan manuscript have been arrested by the Central
Bureau of Investigation in West Bengal, officials said in New Delhi on Thursday...more 17
.09.04 Why only links? Recently a number of people have asked why I don't
copy and post whole news items, rather than just links. They say that they don't
like the (occasional) need to sign up and / or, spyware, cookies - or are just
lazy. There are basically two reasons why I don't
do this. Firstly, this is copyright material and belongs to the author or publisher,
and secondly, free content providers need the traffic to their sites. As
a provider of free content myself, I expect users to respect my copyright, and
I naturally extend this courtesy to others. As a site
owner I'm also acutely aware of the importance of visitor numbers and the impact
it can have on revenue. Simply visiting a site seems to me a very reasonable "price"
to pay for free content, and without it, many of these sites can't survive. Sign
ups, accepting cookies and the possibility of spyware downloads, are decisions
that you, the visitor, should weigh against your desire to read the rest of the
story. I try to give enough of an overview of the
article's content to enable readers to make this decision, and hopefully some
of you do. 16.09.04.
Skyrocketing demand for used textbooks creates boom for online booksellers.
Abebooks.com today announced that textbook sales for the month of August were
nearly 400% higher than in August 2003...more 15.09.04.
Fund aims to buy 14th-century psalter. Last month, the government placed
a temporary ban on exporting the psalter in hopes of finding a British buyer,
and the National Art Collections Fund has launched a fund-raising drive to help
a Cambridge museum obtain it...more 15.09.04.
British Library Puts Shakespeare Quartos Online. For hundreds of years,
only scholars and museum curators have had access to the "Quartos," the earliest
printed editions of Shakespeare's plays. But now the British Library has just
put 93 Quartos on the Internet...more 15.09.04.
UK Children shun books for TV . Children in the UK are not reading enough
at home, favouring television and computer games instead, according to new research...more 15.09.04.
Judy Blume to Receive National Book Award. Judy Blume, whose candid children's
books have attracted millions of readers and a wave of censors, has been named
this year's winner of an honorary National Book Award for contributions to American
letters...more 14.09.04.
John de Falbe reviews "The Bookshop at 10 Curzon Street". Heywood Hill
started up his bookshop in Mayfair in 1936. Between 1943 (when he was called up)
and 1945, it was run by Nancy Mitford...more TheBookGuide
is away for a few days but he and the news will return on 15.09.04 08.09.04.
Dandy comic sold for record price. A rare edition of The Dandy comic book
has been sold for a record £20,350 according to the auctioneers who handled the
sale...more 08.09.04.
Reasons abound for literature's decline. Although I am a professor emeritus
of English, I must include myself among those who do not read "literature" very
often at this time. I have started reading many imaginative works in recent years,
but finished few of them...more 06.09.04.
Walking in a modern Wonderland. Off with his head? A new version of Lewis
Carroll's classic tale Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by first-time author Frank
Beddor has already got several critics up in arms even before it has been published...more 06.09.04.
The Bookseller of Jeddah. Walking down the crowded shopping center, the
street is full of buyers, chain stores selling make-up, perfumes, clothes and
food. An unfamiliar sight will meet your eye -- a small pickup truck parked near
one of the stores, which is full of books displayed for all to see...more 06.09.04.
Specialist sets sail for new territories. It's in the opulent surroundings
of Mayfair that London's rare books trade has its heart, with a dozen leading
dealers and most of the main auction houses within easy walking distance of one
another. This is a small, intense, gossipy world, yet it generates business worth
tens of millions of pounds every year...more 05.09.04.
Half of UK children 'do not read books at home'. Almost half of Britain’s
children do not read any books outside school hours, figures showed today. The
survey of 1,000 seven to 14-year-olds also revealed their two least favourite
activities were writing poems and writing stories...more 05.09.04.
The power of old things. Letters written by George Washington and Thomas
Jefferson, thousands of sci-fi volumes and the first jazz recording ever made
-- such are the treasures that fill Bill Meneray's world. After all, he is director
of the Special Collections Library at Tulane University...more 05.09.04.
Old-time cookbooks big draw at New York store. Old cookbooks never die
-- in fact, they are not often willingly surrendered. One woman even took her
beloved Betty Crocker book to the grave. Cookbook connoisseur Bonnie Slotnick
has heard many of these tales, whispered or recalled with laughter, about women
so attached to their cookbooks that they end up practically being "dragged out
of dying hands"...more 05.09.04.
'Book Exchange is top-shelf with fans. Durham USA -- The Book Exchange
bills itself as "The South's Greatest Bookstore" but the old two-story building
looks more like a warehouse than a repository for thousands of books and all kinds
of information...more 04.09.04.
'Soul of Germany' is devastated by library blaze. Cultural experts were
surveying the extent of the disaster last night after it emerged that some literary
treasures had been rescued due largely to the bravery and quick-wittedness of
library staff...more 04.09.04.
Sneak look at new Harry Potter. JK Rowling has given fans of her Harry
Potter books a brief, but tantalising taste of the next in the series chronicling
the boy wizard's adventures...more 03.09.04.
Bookseller still stokes a frenzy about alternative culture. In one
corner of downtown Portland, sitting just in the shadow of Powell's Books, a quirky,
independent bookshop survives. This month, Reading Frenzy celebrates its first
full decade in business...more 03.09.04.
Italo Calvino's Love Letters Trigger Court Battle. The passionate
and previously secret love letters of Italian novelist Italo Calvino took center
stage in a court battle Friday as his widow and heirs sued the nation's leading
newspaper for publishing extracts...more 03.09.04.
Indian children burn books in anti-terror law protest. Guwahati, India
(Reuters) - School children have burnt textbooks and women set up roadblocks in
the Indian state of Manipur at the start of a three-day strike against an unpopular
anti-terror law...more 03.09.04.
German fire destroys 30,000 rare books. Weimar, Germany (Reuters)
- A fire in one of Germany's most historic libraries has destroyed up to 30,000
rare books. "The destruction of many thousands of books, particularly from the
16th to 18th centuries, is an irreplaceable loss to the city's UNESCO World Heritage
legacy," the eastern city's mayor, Volkhardt Germer, said on Friday of the fire
at the Anna Amalia library...more 02.09.04.
Stolen library books sold on the Internet. A literary scam has
been uncovered eagle-eyed librarians in Stockholm and Uppsala. According to Wednesday's
Dagens Nyheter a man used the Internet to sell rare books - which he had stolen
from at least three different libraries...more 02.09.04.
Fact, fiction and poetry line up for new-writing award. Ten books
of "maturity and accomplishment" - ranging in theme from the story of Noah's ark
retold with one-line postmodern jokes, to the Russian Jewish enclaves of modern
Toronto - vie with each other in the opening stage of the Guardian First Book
award today...more 01.09.04.
Obituary: Donald Justice. Anybody who reads the poetry of Donald
Justice, who has died aged 78, feels an urge to recite him to those in earshot;
at each turn, new vistas open up...more
01.09.04.
Separating fact from fiction in Afghanistan. In Asne Seierstad's
'The Bookseller of Kabul', Shah M was portrayed as a domestic tyrant who abandoned
his wife. Now he plans to set the record straight...more
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