28.02.05
Mystery writer deals in rare books. Everyone knows that writers love books,
but mystery writer John Dunning loves them more than most. He’s a famed rare book
collector who also deals in rare books - as does his fictional detective, Cliff
Janeway, the hero of his latest novel, "The Sign of the Book"...more
Add a comment. 28.02.05
Spirit of 5,000-book library enlivens ghostly hamlet of 1. Elsie Eiler is
mayor, barkeeper, sole inhabitant of Monowi, Nebraska. She also runs Rudy's Library,
a gesture to her late husband, and traffic's OK...more
Add a comment. 28.02.05
Rare Descartes first edition auctioned in France. A first edition of French
philosopher Rene Descartes' 1637 work "Discourse on Method" was sold Sunday for
EUR 78,000 (USD 103,000) at auction in Evreux northwest of Paris...more
Add a comment. 28.02.05
Literary sleuths probe medieval mystery. Husband-and-wife team suggests an
intriguing solution to the puzzle of The Voynich Manuscript...more
Add a comment. 28.02.05
Author Pullman fights to save 'inspirational' old Oxford boatyard. The author
Philip Pullman yesterday condemned the "soulless, bland and corporate" plan that
would turn a part of Oxford from which he drew inspiration into a "ditch imprisoned
between brick walls"...more
Add a comment. 27.02.05
Burns missing from list of best Scottish writing. From Whisky Galore to The
Wind in the Willows, it is the ultimate literary search: a quest to find the best
Scottish book of all time that organisers say will take six months and will include
every library and bookshop in the country...more
Add a comment. 27.02.05
A future without Booked Up. Famed American author Larry McMurtry's huge secondhand
bookshop revitalised the community of Archer City. Now locals fear what will happen
if it's to close...more
Add a comment. 27.02.05
Manuscripts 'treated as fossils'. A palaeontologist has come up with a novel
way of studying historical manuscripts, by treating them as fossils from an extinct
species...more Add
a comment. 27.02.05
Dennis the Menace lost in great museum raid. Eight thousand books worth at
least £250,000 have gone missing from the British Library since it moved to new
headquarters on London’s Euston Road. Everything from 16th-century tomes in Latin
to the first adventures of Dennis the Menace have vanished...more
Add a comment. 26.02.05
Author hailed as Scots great dies. The world of Scottish literature is mourning
the death of Robin Jenkins, a novelist often hailed as the greatest the country
has produced since the Second World War. Jenkins, who died of a stroke late on
Thursday at the age of 92, was the author of 30 novels, including The Cone- Gatherers...more
Add a comment. 26.02.05
Finn-Olaf Jones visits the Heritage Book Shop. Given that the career of many
a great author (think Fitzgerald or Faulkner) died in Los Angeles, it seems appropriate
that one of the city's finest literary institutions - the Heritage Book Shop on
Melrose Avenue, with thousands of rare books and manuscripts - is housed in a
former mortuary...more
Add a comment. 26.02.05
Vintage Posters Auction. Heritage Vintage Movie Posters (HVMP) will present
an exceptional selection of vintage war, travel, exposition circus and other posters
in their upcoming auction, to be held March 17 &18 in Dallas, Texas...more
Add a comment. 26.02.05
Warning notes from underground. James Wood on how Conrad and Dostoevsky foresaw
the roots of terrorism...more
Add a comment. 26.02.05
The tomes of Timbuktu. Starting with invasion and occupation by the Moroccan
army in 1591, and culminating with colonization by France in the 1880s and '90s,
most of the great libraries were looted or destroyed. The centers of learning
collapsed, and the majority of the evidence of Timbuktu's contributions to the
world was lost -- everything, that is, except what went underground, often literally...more
Add a comment. 25.02.05
Explosive finale for Hunter S Thompson. The son of Hunter S Thompson, the
writer and gonzo journalist who shot himself dead earlier this week, has said
that the family is looking into the possibility of firing his father's ashes from
a cannon, in accordance with his wishes...more
Add a comment. 25.02.05
Transfer to Nixon Library may be delayed. The transfer of Richard M. Nixon's
papers and tapes to his presidential library in Yorba Linda, California, may be
delayed until 2007 because President Bush's budget did not include money for it...more
Add a comment. 25.02.05
Black 'street' literature comes of age in U.S.. After years in the literary
underground, "street lit" -- a sort of hip hop black literature that is often
self published and sold on U.S. street corners -- may finally hit the big time...more
Add a comment. 25.02.05
Chabad sues Russia to recover texts. In a continuing effort to recover an
archive of manuscripts and texts left behind in the former Soviet Union in the
early 20th century, the Jewish Chabad organization is taking the Russian Federation
to the International Court of Law...more
Add a comment. 24.02.05
Early computing book auction report. New York - Documents from the early days
of computing catalogued as "The Origins of Cyberspace" brought in more than $700,000
at auction, though nearly half the items didn't find a buyer...more
Add a comment. 24.02.05
Collectors Book Market launches. "Unlike current fixed price bookselling sites
and large auction venues, Collectors Book Market (CBM) is focused on providing
the specific features that collectible book buyers and sellers value," said Peter
Thomas, the site's originator and technical director. "These include much better
search and browse options, seller accountability, and clear references for first
edition and signed books offered for sale"...more
Add a comment. 24.02.05
Shelley letters saved from car boot sale. Letters written by the poet Percy
Bysshe Shelley, detailing his bitter opposition to Christianity have been discovered
hidden in a trunk in the suburban semi-detached home of two elderly brothers...more
Add a comment. 24.02.05
Turkish Manuscripts website launched. The collection includes the history
of Islamic manuscripts, their birth and development, and important Arabic collections
in the Islamic world, there are also a broad range of Turkish written documents
including the birth and development of Turkish writing, and information about
other libraries that have manuscripts, methodology, and different types of writing
techniques have also been included on the web site...more
Add a comment. 23.02.05
Hunter S. Thompson sales soar. Sales of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
and other favourites by Hunter S. Thompson have soared since the "gonzo" journalist
killed himself Sunday...more
Add a comment. 23.02.05 Sorting
out the treasures and the trash. This collector was both chastened and encouraged
after a weekend in San Francisco that offered two contrasting views of whether
anything is still worth saving. The first was WonderCon, a sprawling comics show
at the Moscone Center. The second was the elegant California International Antiquarian
Book Fair, a reunion of 235 rare-book dealers a mile away at the Concourse Exhibition
Center...more Add
a comment. 23.02.05 Poet’s
Home becomes a Welsh Hotel. A Regency villa in North Wales which was once
home to the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley has been transformed into a small country
house hotel, opening on March 21. As well as Shelley, who lived at Plas Tan-yr-Allt
from 1812-13 but fled after being shot at - the episode is an intriguing mystery
to this day - the house’s hospitality attracted other literary visitors...more
Add a comment. 23.02.05 400,000
books at library sale. Friends of Oklahoma's Metropolitan Library are about
to hold their 26th annual book sale, which over the past 26 years has resulted
in more than $1.8 million dollars in grants for the Metropolitan Library System...more
Add a comment. 22.02.05 Exiled
Cuban writer Cabrera Infante dies in London. Cuban writer Guillermo Cabrera
Infante, who wrote about Cuba's steamy cabaret society and became a staunch critic
of Cuban communism, died on Monday in London where he lived in exile for 40 years...more
Add a comment. 22.02.05
Superheroes leap into Arab comic books. Cairo - He's a mild-mannered philosophy
professor who wears button-down shirts, lives in a drab, anonymous apartment and
pronounces maxims such as "There is no glory without virtue" and "Free will pushes
toward creativity." But beneath the meek and pedantic exterior lies a buff, masked
fighter in tights who is endowed with supernatural strength and a mission to "fight
evil until the end of time"...more
Add a comment. 21.02.05 New
stamp on what happened to Jane Eyre. In a brave move, the Royal Mail has chosen
to mark the 150th anniversary of Brontë's death by selecting an unorthodox image
of the book's eponymous heroine for a special commemorative stamp issue due out
on Thursday. A startling portrayal of the governess looking middle-aged and almost
mannish will appear on the first-class stamp...more
Add a comment. 21.02.05 Coptic
manuscripts unearthed in Egyptian tomb. Polish experts excavating in the southern
Egyptian city of Luxor have discovered three ancient Coptic manuscripts in a pharaonic
tomb. They are thought to be the single most important
Coptic discovery since 1945, when a pair of Bedouins stumbled onto the Coptic
codices in Nag Hammadi in Egypt's western desert...more
Add a comment. 21.02.05 Hunter
S Thompson commits suicide. Hunter S Thompson, the American counterculture
writer, has been found dead at his home in Colorado...more
Add a comment. 20.02.05 A
brazen plot doomed to fail. Sarah Vos takes a detailed look at the Transylvania
book heist and concludes that the thieves were as good as caught, the moment they
walked through Christie's door...more
Add a comment. 20.02.05 Tony
Bliss goes shopping at the California International Antiquarian Book Fair.
Checking his mental shopping list, Tony Bliss moved swiftly from booth to booth
Saturday at the California International Antiquarian Book Fair. As
the rare-books curator at UC Berkeley's Bancroft Library, Bliss already had spent
hours greasing the wheels of commerce, sitting with dealers from around the world,
peeking into glass-enclosed cases for the next great addition to the Bancroft's
renowned collections...more
Add a comment. 20.02.05 Campaign
to preserve writer's home. Australian National Trust president Barry O'Keefe
and activist Jack Mundey, Author Thomas Keneally and Kate Fitzpatrick spearheaded
the push yesterday to save Patrick White's house from private sale and see it
established as a centre dedicated to White's work and supporting other writers...more
Add a comment. 19.02.05 Legendary
photo curator is celebrated in new book. For nearly 30 years, John Szarkowski
was the pope of American photography. From 1962 to 1991, he reigned at the Museum
of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York City, where he was the curator of photography.
His 160 exhibitions, his many books and his restrained
taste -- a predilection for crisp street shots, classic landscapes and unmanipulated
images -- defined the field and exerted enormous influence on aspiring photographers...more
Add a comment. 19.02.05 Happy
ending for fired book shop 'blogger'. Sacked bookshop worker Joe Gordon has
been headhunted by an independent bookseller attracted by the weblog entries that
cost him his last job. Now comic book chain Forbidden
Planet has headhunted him - for a managerial role dealing with the online side
of the business and book and graphic novel selection...more
Add a comment. 19.02.05 Google
online book plan sparks French war of words. France's national library has
raised a "war cry" over plans by Google to put books from some of the world's
great libraries on the Internet and wants to ensure the project does not lead
a domination of American ideas...more
Add a comment. 19.02.05 Banned
Korean books on display. Books banned during the Japanese colonial period
are being exhibited at Samseong Museum of Publishing in Seoul...more
Add a comment. 19.02.05 Philosopher's
rare 'other book' goes on sale. Proofs of children's spelling dictionary by
Wittgenstein could fetch £75,000. The proofs, which are being sold by Bernard
Quaritch, the London antiquarian bookshop, have been taken to the US where a director
of the firm, Ian Smith, is displaying them at the San Francisco book fair...more
Add a comment. 19.02.05 Vancouver
bookstore loses latest battle with Customs. A gay bookstore has lost its bid
for legal costs in the latest round of a two-decade fight involving Canada Customs'
seizure of books it classified as obscene. In a decision
released Friday, Justice Allan Thackray of the B.C. Court of Appeal reversed a
July 2004 ruling that would have given Little Sisters Book and Art Emporium an
unspecified sum to wage its book battle against the government agency. Little
Sisters argued it couldn't afford another court fight with Customs, which has
seized several books at the United States border since 1985...more
Add a comment. 19.02.05 Britons
vie to be world's No 1 author. Dame Muriel Spark, Ian McEwan and Doris Lessing
are the three Britons on the shortlist for the Man Booker International Award
for the world’s best living writer, it was announced yesterday...more
Add a comment. 18.02.05 The
large print giveth... US publishers attempt to arrest falling readership
by making books bigger. "Many people over the ripe old age of 40 are starting
to have trouble reading, and reading mass market books has become very difficult,"
Jane Friedman, president and chief executive officer of HarperCollins told the
Associated Press....more
Add a comment. 18.02.05 Guardian
Hay festival turns to film. The Guardian Hay Festival this summer is to offer
film events as well as the usual banquets of literature, comedy, cabaret, politics,
art, music and children's entertainment...more
Add a comment. 17.02.05 P
Diddy sued for £160,000 memoir he never wrote. Writer's block is not the only
malaise to have struck hip-hop impresario Sean "P Diddy" Combs in the seven years
since one of New York's biggest publishing houses struck a deal with him to write
an autobiography. Accountant's block seems to have followed quickly...more
Add a comment. 17.02.05 Iranian
manuscripts in Britain. More than 12,000 manuscripts, 30,000 volumes of printed
books and 9,000 copies of different Iranian publications are kept in the British
Library...more Add
a comment. 17.02.05 Illuminating
Faith. A major exhibition of Middle Eastern artefacts is on show at Birmingham
Museum and Art Gallery until June 19 2005. Illuminating Faith is a fascinating
collection of illustrated manuscripts, textiles, dress, ceramics and metalwork
from the Middle East dating from the 9th to the 19th centuries...more
Add a comment. 17.02.05
Bangor librarians face internet threat. Bangor University is proposing to
sack eight of its 12 librarians because students can find the information they
need on the internet. Bangor, which is part of the University
of Wales, has become the focus of a national campaign to save the "Bangor eight"
as unions fear the cuts could be replicated in university libraries elsewhere...more
Add a comment. 16.02.05 Rare
Ian Fleming items up for auction. The highlight of the Continental and English
Literature and Modern First Editions sale at Bloomsbury Auctions on 24th February
2005 is the sale of the second major group of books and letters from Ian Fleming
to come onto the market in the last year...more
Add a comment. 16.02.05 The
plunder of Iraq's treasures. One million books, 10 million documents and 14,000
archaeological artifacts have been lost in the US-led invasion and subsequent
occupation of Iraq - the biggest cultural disaster since the descendants of Genghis
Khan destroyed Baghdad in 1258, Venezuelan writer Fernando Baez told Inter Press
Service...more Add
a comment. 16.02.05 Pass
it on by postcard. World Book Day campaign aims to capitalise on the power
of word of mouth to promote reading...more
Add a comment. 16.02.05 Neighbours
want to pay to move Hemingway house. Neighbours in the small town of Ketchum
fear that plans to open the Hemingway house to the public will bring scores of
tourists who will disrupt their peace and clog up their drives. They
want to buy the property - which could have a price tag of more than $500,000
(£265,000) - from the conservancy that owns it, and move it down the road...more
Add a comment. 16.02.05 Suspects
in rare books theft released. A US federal judge ordered that four 20-year-olds
accused of stealing rare books and manuscripts, including a first edition of Charles
Darwin's On the Origin of Species, be released from jail until their case goes
to trial. None of the men was required to post bail...more
Add a comment. 15.02.05 Fine
Books 50. Fine Books & Collections magazine has released its annual ranking
of the top-selling rare books and manuscripts of 2004 at auction houses worldwide.
The results: known as the "Fine Books 50," will be featured in the March/April
2005 edition of the magazine. The full list of 296
books and manuscripts that sold for more than $100,000 will be available on the
magazine's web site
on March 1, 2005...more
Add a comment. 15.02.05 Scholars
examine the humorous side of the Bible. Humour and wordplay in the Bible?
Theology and Christian literature scholars gathering in Turin say the Old and
New Testaments are riddled with humorous references and they are holding a three-day
congress aiming to set the record straight...more
Add a comment. 15.02.05 Foyles
to open new London store. Foyles, Britain's most famous bookshop, is planning
to open new stores in cities across the world as part of its first expansion drive
since the 1930s...more
Add a comment. 15.02.05 'Book
man' Harold (Hal) P. Peterson dies at 69. As the librarian at the Minneapolis
Institute of Arts from 1973 until his retirement in 2001, Peterson expanded the
museum's collection of art reference books from 6,000 to 60,000 volumes and installed
the first computerized cataloging system for them...more
Add a comment. 15.02.05 Ancient
scrolls being digitised in UAE. More than 100,000 ancient Indian manuscripts
and 15 million historic documents in Urdu, Persian and Arabic and 5 million English
manuscripts are being digitised by the Juma Al Majid Centre for Culture and Heritage
in Dubai...more Add
a comment. 15.02.05 Bernard
Stone dies aged 84. A revered figure in London literary life, the writer and
publisher Bernard Stone held court for more than 30 years at his famous Turrett
Bookshop. The avant-garde bookshop, which he founded in the 1960s in Kensington
Church Walk, was a magnet for writers and booklovers, drawn as much by Stone’s
genial hospitality as by the extraordinary range of 20th-century works he stocked...more
Add a comment.
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