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 Home >> Shelf:Life <<

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.

December 2005Skip Free Registration

30.12.05
2005: a year in books
It was the year we went utterly Potterly, a dark horse won the Booker and Hunter S Thompson was blasted into the sky. But what else happened in the world of books in 2005? Michelle Pauli rounds up the literary year
... more   Add a comment


29.12.05. Bookworm Droppings
"An anthology of Absurd Remarks made by Customers in Secondhand Bookshops", was published some years ago by Paul Watkins.
    Time may have moved on but the book trade and it's customers remain as idiosyncratic as ever and if our experiences at INPRINT are anything to go by, the remarks are just as amusing and worthy of recording.
    You can order the book and it's sequel, read a few of the gems Shaun collected, as well as Fresh Droppings submitted by our readers here, where you are also most welcome to leave your own droppings. :)
    Just to get you started here's a very Fresh Dropping, from the Saturday before Christmas.
     'Do you have Pooh Sticks by A Milne?' To my shame I just couldn't remember which of the Pooh books the story comes from, but placing both volumes on the counter, I suggested the customer leaf through them to find it. Without a word, she turned on her heal and marched out of the shop!   Add a comment


28.12.05. Matters typographical
The other day someone commented to me on what they saw as the similarity between TheBookGuide's logo and The Guardian's old masthead.
    My reply was that our logo had been an attempt to emphasise the fact that we were an internet only publication (thebookguide.co.uk - with the necessity of no spaces between the words), to celebrate the beauty of the Garamond typeface, and to highlight the most important words, by using weight and colour.
    
What the old Guardian logo and TheBookGuide's share in common is an italicised *The* in a similar typeface - but ours is a different weight and TheBookGuide is all in the same font. I was of course aware of the Guardian's typography, but hope my effort - whilst obviously referencing it - uses the language of typography to say something about ourselves. If you care about these things, you can see both, here.   Add a comment


26.12.05. Book dealer joke
A rare book dealer was looking at some old books a man was selling when she noticed an old bible. "I had one older than that," he told her. "It was printed by Guten somebody. It was falling apart, so I threw it away." The book dealer sat down. "You threw away a Gutenberg bible? Do you realize that one recently sold for over a million dollars?" The old man dismissed this. "Ah, this one wouldn't. Some guy named Martin Luther wrote in all the margins."   Add a comment


24.12.05. No news today ...
Thanks again to all who have contributed during the past year and particularly to the growing band of informants who helped make maintaining this guide a pleasure.
    I hope
everyone has an enjoyable holiday, no matter what you choose to call it. Personally, I'm going to celebrate the return of the light, by spending as much time as possible outside and away from computers and old books. :)
    The news will return on January 2nd. However, desperate news junkies can find links to 1,000's of book related stories and articles in our archives.


23.12.05
Top Ten most valuable comic books in January auction
Heritage Galleries & Auctioneers (HG&A) will offer all ten of the Top Ten Most Valuable Comic Books, as designated in the current edition of The Official Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide, in their upcoming Comic and Original Comic Art Signature Auction, to be held January 19 - 21, 2006, in Dallas, Texas
... more   Add a comment

Harry Potter keeps children out of hospital
A study by doctors into the attendance of children at hospital emergency departments has revealed that numbers dropped by almost a half on the weekends when Harry Potter books were released. The research, published today in the British Medical Journal, suggests that the boy wizard’s adventures are directly responsible for keeping accident-prone children out of hospital
... more   Add a comment

Vatican opens up secrets of forbidden books list
The Vatican has opened up to German historians the secret records associated with the Catholic Church's former Index of Forbidden Books, revealing that well-loved books of the 19th century nearly came under bans
... more   Add a comment


22.12.05
Ancient prayer book to be shown at V&A
For 300 years it has been a book without a beginning, middle or end. But thanks to scholarly detective work, a 15th century Book of Hours, written for King Louis XII of France, has been pieced back together and will go on display for the first time at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London in February
... more   Add a comment

Bible is rare King James original
Tidings of great joy came to the University of Manitoba this month with the discovery that a Bible donated to one of its founding colleges more than a century ago is one of the first King James Bibles ever printed ... more   Add a comment

Priest's hunch finally uncovers Porto's hidden holy scrolls
Few people ever knew, but the medieval alleys of the Portuguese city of Porto on the Atlantic coast once provided cover for a persecuted minority at risk of being burnt at the stake ... more   Add a comment


21.12.05
Fight to removed Hemingway's name from bar
Would Ernest Hemingway - the Nobel Prize-winning author with a well known liking for a cocktail or two - really have minded having his name grace a drinking establishment? ...more   Add a comment

BookFinder.com's Top 10 out of print books of 2005
According to BookFinder.com’s research, the top 10 most sought after US out of print books of 2005 are...more   Add a comment

Famous Five tops poll
Enid Blyton, who was called "the 20th century Mother Goose", still reigns supreme this century. Yesterday adults voted her Famous Five series as their favourite books for children. The series - which started 63 years ago - beat friendly lions, hobbits, wizards and big friendly giants. It narrowly pipped Chronicles of Narnia to win first place despite the boost given to CS Lewis's stories by the current film...more   Add a comment


20.12.05
Comic books can become a serious habit
As a family practice physician, Dr. Jeffrey Rapp of Fremont provides all kinds of relief to area residents - including comic relief - because Rapp has collected comic books as far back as he can remember...more   Add a comment

Some 150 valuable books to return to Hungary
The Russian State Duma has adopted in the second reading a law which will allow the return of cultural valuables taken to the USSR from the Sarospatak library during World War II...more   Add a comment

Pile of scrap once cast a fortune
Steve Blum has been spending his days locked up alone in a silent warehouse in central New Jersey, sorting through boxes of what looks like scrap metal. But to him, the dusty shingles are buried treasure. These old dies and plates were once used to print items of great worth: bank notes, stock certificates and bond coupons, as well as postage stamps, tickets, playing cards and other types of paper ephemera...more   Add a comment


19.12.05
The History of Santa Claus
Our cultural melting pot led to many different versions of Santa eventually melding into the jolly fellow we recognize today, and thus begins the history of Santa Claus...more   Add a comment

Will 2005's books echo down the years to come?
At this time of year, it's time to take stock of what's been published, and begin a first winnowing. How many good books make it a good year for books? Do we write classics any more? Books that last? Are we drowning in a torrent of pulp? One simple benchmark might be the surviving books of 1905, at least according to The Oxford Companion to English Literature...more   Add a comment

The treasures of Timbuktu
Today, treasures are being unearthed here that are radically changing the way the world views Timbuktu, Africa and her history. They're called the "Timbuktu manuscripts" and they disprove the myth that Africa had no written history...more   Add a comment


17.12.05
Your Comics Online launches web site
"The idea is to have a community where comic collectors can discuss topics related to our favorite hobby," Stu Berryhill, co-founder of Your Comics Online and long-time comic collector, said. "We want to be a forum for information on fair grading of comic books and correct shipping procedures that will help protect against damage. Another goal of the site is to help in the reduction of any other ‘negative phenomena’ that tends to cheapen the comics we collect"...more   Add a comment

Auction provides glimpse of Kennedys
John F. Kennedy's 1951 passport sold for $54,000 and Jacqueline Kennedy's 1953 passport for $56,500 yesterday, the opening day of an auction of Kennedy memorabilia that offers a glimpse into their daily lives...more   Add a comment

Rare cricket book sells
A rare book chronicling the visit of a team of Irish cricketers to the America more than 125 years ago fetched 4,419 Eueos at Bonhams in London...more   Add a comment


16.12.05
Audubon book `Birds of America' sells for $5.6 million
A rare complete edition of John James Audubon's "The Birds of America" was auctioned Thursday for $5.6 million, ending three years of legal wrangling over a decision by a financially strapped Providence, R.I., library to dispose of its most valuable holding...more   Add a comment

'Terrorised' writers lament state's assault on free speech
Ertugrul Kurkcu has been hauled before the judges for saying the wrong thing so many times that he has almost lost count. "Six or seven trials, always acquitted, but I did get a 10-month jail sentence from a military court for translating a Human Rights Watch report," says the veteran leftwing Turkish dissident...more   Add a comment

Ulysses first edition makes 100,000 Euros
A copy of James Joyce masterpiece, Ulysses, today sold for 107,000 Euros at an auction in London. The first edition fetched over twice its guide price at Sotheby’s sale of English Literature & History Books in New Bond Street...more   Add a comment

Edith Wharton's books finally arrive in Massachusetts after 100 years
During Edith Wharton's well-travelled life, the American writer crossed the Atlantic an impressive 66 times. Now, after many months of negotiations, her extensive library is to cross the Atlantic again, to the US from Britain...more   Add a comment


15.12.05
Playing with the past
A presentation of collected children’s games and pastimes, dating primarily from the 19th century, is on show at the Bodleian Library, Oxford University until April 29 2006...more   Add a comment

Library's 'Birds of America' to be auctioned today
After nearly three years of infighting and courtroom skirmishes, the Providence Athenaeum on Thursday will auction off its most valuable holding -- John James Audubon's celebrated "The Birds of America"...more   Add a comment

Bookstore's closing "the end of an era"
Imagine just about anything that could be printed on paper: posters, postcards, pamphlets, letters, manuscripts, invitations - and box after box after box of books. That's what David Ishii was virtually swimming through Wednesday as he worked to dismantle the small bookstore he opened in Pioneer Square, Seattle, in 1972...more   Add a comment


14.12.05
Map room restored
The room's bronze-handled doors were shuttered nine months ago. But Thursday, after a $5 million restoration, the largest map collection in any public library in the world will reopen in its Beaux-Arts jewelry box at the New York Public Library, a room noted for its spectacular corner view of Fifth Avenue and 42nd Street...more   Add a comment

Iran has largest collection of handwritten books
Iran has the largest collection of handwritten books in the world, declared the Director General of Handwritten Books Department of Iran National Library Habibollah Azimi...more   Add a comment

Dyslexic writer savours Nestle victory
An author with severe dyslexia, who did not learn to read until she was 14, has beaten Philip Pullman to this year's Nestle children's book prize. Sally Gardner's fantasy adventure, I, Coriander, was chosen by a panel of schoolchildren as the best book in the nine-to-11 years category...more   Add a comment


13.12.05
Memoir: Books, Baguettes & Bedbugs by Jeremy Mercer
On the left bank of the Seine, set back a few yards from the river and with a perfect view of the Ile de la Cité, is one of Paris’s stranger institutions. It is a small, ramshackle second-hand bookshop, specialising in English books, a favourite with tourists, an unofficial guesthouse and site for literary happenings of varying quality. For more than 50 years, the shop, now known as Shakespeare and Company, has attracted to it men and women, mostly young and usually idealistic, whose greatest dream is to be a writer...more   Add a comment

Stolen books can stay lost for years, even decades
Ken Sanders, past chairman of the Antiquarian Booksellers Association of America's Security Committee, says book theft and fraud are on the rise across the country. When he began his tenure as chairman six years ago, he issued a couple of dozen book-theft and fraud alerts each year. In April, when he stepped down, he was issuing more than 100 alerts a year...more   Add a comment

Lennon's exercise book for sale
John Lennon's old school exercise book, complete with an illustration of a walrus, is expected to fetch up to £90,000 at Sotheby`s auction in London, on Thursday...more   Add a comment

Libraries tightening security as thefts rise
It's been a bad year for thefts from cultural institutions, libraries in particular. Thursday -- just two days after the four defendants were sentenced to seven years in federal prison for stealing from Transylvania -- news broke of another theft of historical artifacts from a Kentucky institution. This time the thief was a 70-year-old retired executive who pinched more than 53 documents and other objects from the Filson Historical Society in Louisville...more   Add a comment


12.12.05
Book-lover earns ownership of bookshop
Last month, Stan Katz deeded the store over to Bob Wayne. The shop is now called Bob's I Love Books. "He earned it by sweat equity, and that's the best kind of equity there is," Katz said...more   Add a comment

Sci-fi author Robert Sheckley dead at 77
Prolific science fiction author Robert Sheckley has died from complications of a brain aneurysm, The New York Times reported Saturday. Sheckly was considered one of science fiction's seminal humorists, the newspaper said. He wrote more than 15 novels and around 400 short stories. The count may actually be higher, however, since he often wrote stories under pseudonyms. His work has been translated into 10 languages and is extremely popular in Eastern Europe...more   Add a comment

In the book market, the first word counts
This holiday season, some lucky person will receive a first-edition set of all six "Harry Potter" books by J.K. Rowling. The set, which is featured in the Christmas catalogue of Peter Harrington Antiquarian Booksellers, comes with a whopping £28,500 price tag; it has already been reserved, the bookseller said...more   Add a comment

Kashmir quake survivors burned books
When night fell after the October 8 quake dozens of survivors stormed the shattered state-run Khursheed National Library. In that one night alone, an estimated 10 000 books and thousands of newspapers went up in smoke, and the looting and burning of literary treasures continued for the next three days until the army moved in and stopped the practice. By then, half of the library's books had been turned into ashes...more   Add a comment


09.12.05
They call it carnage
A good book in John Milton's day was the precious lifeblood of a master spirit. Today the accolade goes to a bookshop. Truly the medium is the message. It is a bookshop that "embalms and treasures up a life beyond life". A bookshop is the place of cultural worship, the high street's hallowed ground. When Borders sold the first double-shot latte with chocolate or cinnamon in a bookshop, it was like swearing in church. People are soft in the head about bookshops...more   Add a comment

Stolen script for 'Casablanca' recovered
United States detectives have recovered original manuscripts from Casablanca, Citizen Kane and My Fair Lady while investigating a series of burglaries in the Los Angeles area. US detective sergeant Bobby Hughes of the San Bernardino county sheriff's station in Victorville said the thieves "didn't know how to get rid of (the stolen goods) because the stuff was so hot it's not like you can sell this on eBay. That's why they held onto it for so long"...more   Add a comment

Princeton's rare Islamic texts collection go online
In a marriage of new technology and old documents, a vast treasure trove of information about life in the early Islamic world is about to go online, enabling Muslims, scholars and the merely curious to peer into a window on the faith's rich historyn...more   Add a comment


08.12.05
Book gang sentenced
They admitted stealing millions of dollars in rare books and art from Transylvania University. On Tuesday night, a federal judge sentenced the four college friends from Lexington to the minimum sentence of seven years and three months each in prison...more   Add a comment

Rare volumes returned
Two volumes of rare copies of a sports newspaper missing for more than a year from the University of Illinois library were found on a table there after officials appealed for their return, the library said Wednesday.
    Library officials say someone obviously decided to return the missing volumes of Collyer's Eye, an old baseball tabloid credited with helping to expose the gambling scandal involving members of the Chicago White Sox during the 1919 World Series...more   Add a comment

Motion Picture Arts Gallery moves
The legendary Motion Picture Arts Gallery announces that it has recently moved its headquarters from its original Manhattan location to 90 Oak Street in East Rutherford, New Jersey...more   Add a comment

Stan Berenstain
The American writer and illustrator Stan Berenstain, who has died of lymphoma aged 82, was one half of the husband and wife partnership that produced more than 250 titles about Papa, Mama, Brother and Sister - the lovable Berenstain Bear family...more   Add a comment


06.12.05
How to keep a gorilla, and other stories
As ape-obsessed publishers disgorge an avalanche of Kong-related dross, Iain Sharp tells the true history of gorilla lit...more   Add a comment

A slave poet's $253,000 letter
Phillis Wheatley first set foot in this country as a child of the auction block. Born in West Africa, she was kidnapped in 1761 and transported to Boston by way of a slave ship. After arriving she was sold to John Wheatley. Last month, under extremely different circumstances, she returned to the block again. This time the item up for sale was a letter written and signed by Wheatley on Feb. 14, 1776...more   Add a comment

Rock memorabilia market booms
The rock memorabilia market is exploding. It's no longer unusual for the most serious collectors to shell out well over $100,000 for top items. These collectors were rock fans in the Sixties and Seventies, and now they have a lot of money," says John Collins, managing director of U.K. rock auction house Cooper Owen. "They're buying their history"...more   Add a comment

National history devoured by mould and bugs
Millions of rare artifacts in museums and libraries across the United States are slowly disintegrating because of improper storage, according to a survey said to be the largest ever look at the condition of such collections...more   Add a comment


05.12.05
Howard Gotlieb, an archivist with persistence
Howard B. Gotlieb, a Boston University archivist who cajoled, charmed, wheedled and - most effectively, he said - groveled to snare the papers of notables like the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Bette Davis, not to mention Fred Astaire's dancing shoes, died Thursday at a Boston hospital. He was 79...more   Add a comment

Veiled ode to George Bush deleted from Pakistani textbooks
At first sight it is little more than a poetic polemic about the virtues of an effective leader. But a poem has been removed from school textbooks in Pakistan after it became clear that the first letter of each line spelt out "President George W Bush"...more   Add a comment

Battle of Lake George documents sell for $68,000
"A Prospective-Plan of the Battle near Lake George, on the Eighth Day of September, 1755, with an Explanation thereof: Containing A full, tho' short, History of the important Affair. By Samuel Blodget, Officially at the Camp, when the Battle was fought." That was the full name of a historical pamphlet detailing the 1755 Battle of Lake George, which sold at a Sotheby's auction on Thursday for $13,000...more   Add a comment


02.12.05
Food critic Coren wins British bad sex award
It was the shower hose that clinched it. A passage from his debut novel, Winkler, describing a male character's genitalia as "leaping around like a shower dropped in an empty bath" won the 13th annual Literary Review award for Bad Sex in Fiction for food-critic-turned-novelist Giles Coren last night...more   Add a comment

Beethoven manuscript fetches £1.1m
The lost autograph manuscript of one of Ludwig van Beethoven's most revolutionary works, which had been missing for 115 years, fetched £1.1m at auction at Sotheby's yesterday...more   Add a comment

Ludwig and Rabbie: A partnership that ended in tears
When an Edinburgh publisher tried to unite one of the world's great composers with an internationally acclaimed poet, he hoped to make his fortune. But the failure of the resulting Beethoven manuscript to sell at auction yesterday is a reminder of how badly things went wrong...more   Add a comment


01.12.05
Book stolen from Danish Royal Library sold at auction
An unidentified foreign buyer won the bid for a 500-year-old copy of Thomas More's book "Utopia" stolen from the Danish Royal Library, news reports said Wednesday. The 1516 book was sold for 1.3 million kroner (205,000 dollars) at Copenhagen auction house Bruun Rasmussen...more   Add a comment

Strange odyssey of a poet's diary
Swiped, B.L. Kennedy says, by a junkie in the mid-1990s, the diary somehow found its way to a respected San Francisco rare book auction house. It is now for sale on Abebooks and Biblio, for $10,000...more   Add a comment

Mental illness link to art and sex
From Lord Byron to Dylan Thomas and beyond, the famous philanderers of the art world may have had a touch of mental illness to thank for their behaviour, psychologists report...more   Add a comment

One of earliest Buddhist manuscripts acquired
A project that is fundamentally changing the way scholars look at the ancient world and the teachings of the Buddha has received a major addition. A birch bark manuscript from a Buddhist monastery, believed to have been written in the first or second century A.D., was recently acquired by the University of Washington Libraries and will become a key component of the Early Buddhist Manuscripts Project...more   Add a comment

Modern tools to unlock Ancient Texts
Tools for ancient texts have been successfully created that will open up rare texts and manuscripts locked away in museums, libraries and archives, and promote new kinds of scholarship while also preserving large swathes of European history and culture for the future...more   Add a comment

Archived Stories

01.11.05 - 30.11.05
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15.11.04 - 30.11.04
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