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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.

April 2006Skip Free Registration

29.04.06.
Bedtime stories become just fairy tales
According to a survey, parents start out reading to small children but abandon it as they grow up, to the point where just 3% of children aged 12 say they are read to every day. Only one in 10 children aged seven to 12 say they have a daily bedtime story or reading, but there is clearly some embarrassment among parents over this. More than a third insisted they did read to their seven to 12-year-olds every day … more   Add a comment

Painting’s owner pleads: Don’t frame me
A red-faced Cambridge (USA) antique books-dealer owned up yesterday to the hideous pseudo-Picasso painting that had state officials in a maze of confusion over whether the knockoff might have belonged to fugitive mobster James "Whitey" Bulger. But before feasting his eyes on the long lost "chef d’oeuvre," Robert Marshall, 64, rang the FBI to say reports of his ties to the former Boston crime boss are as likely as the painting being a true Picasso … more   Add a comment

Book Street, India
Aili McConnon on the booksellers of Mumbai … more   Add a comment

Rare book made of cloth among 70,000 manuscripts
A rare 800-year-old book made entirely out of cloth is one among thousands of historic manuscripts housed at the Lalbhai Dalpatbhai Institute of Indology in Ahmedabad, where ancient book preserving techniques are being used … more   Add a comment


28.04.06.
Treasure at every turn
If you want to read about dentistry or the Bible, go to any bookstore or library. If you want to read about dentistry written in Greek or the Bible written in Gaelic, go to Books With a Past, in Concord … more   Add a comment

Secrets of the Booker king
Martyn Goff has run Britain's most prestigious literary prize for 34 years. As he prepares to step down, John Walsh hears all the gossip, scandal, rumours - and even the odd true story … more   Add a comment

Not novel enough
A teen novel by a Harvard student accused of plagiarizing a successful author of young adult fiction was yanked Thursday from bookstores by its publisher, Little, Brown & Co … more   Add a comment

The Morgan's treasures bedazzle in their new jewel box
It has been 2 years, 11 months, 3 weeks and 6 days since the Morgan Library closed for its expansion by Renzo Piano. Not that I've been counting; I have a life. Still, the time has not sped by. We revere the Met, we adore the Frick, but the Morgan is extra special, in a class of its own. No place looks like it, feels like it or has what it has: namely some of the most sensationally compact art treasures anywhere in this treasure-loving town … more   Add a comment


27.04.06.
Book lovers mourn changing face of Kramat Kwitang
In the old days, if you wanted to get your hands on a first edition of Syumanjaja's Aku, or copies of the works of Dickens or Camus, you would go to Kramat Kwitang in Central Jakarta. But market demand has changed. Very few people go to Kwitang now for secondhand books in good condition, they are mostly after cheap text books … more   Add a comment

Bidding for bookseller
Several Norwegian publishers are interested in trying to secure the rights to bookseller of Kabul's own story … more   Add a comment

Shock appearance by award winner
History was made at the Freedom to Write awards last week when, for the first time in the contest's history, the winner turned up. Novelist and dissident Rakhim Esenov made a surprise appearance at the New York ceremony following a week of intense diplomatic negotiations prompted by the award sponsors, writers' organisation PEN America … more   Add a comment

UCLA Library Acquires Isadora Duncan Collection
The UCLA Library has acquired the largest private collection ever assembled of rare materials by and about modern dance pioneer Isadora Duncan (1877/78-1927). Built by Los Angeles attorney Howard Holtzman over a 30-year period, the collection of some 1500 items includes manuscripts, correspondence, photographs, artwork, contracts and box office statements and ephemera … more   Add a comment


23.04.06.
No News today
...
TheBookGuide is away again but he and the news will return on April 27th.


22.04.06.
Erotic sale of the century
Images from a Christie's catalogue are usually displayed on the internet prior to a sale - but not in this case. "We do not want to attract visits of the wrong kind," says books specialist Christoph Auvermann. I can understand his caution. This week, I spent a day studying The Gérard Nordmann Library, which contains more than 1,200 items. And if there is a difference between erotic art and pornography, I have yet to find it … more   Add a comment

Collecting lust
The 46th annual New York Antiquarian Book Fair opens today. Among the shelves of rare first editions and bespectacled booksellers, writer and would-be collector Eve Claxton discovers, to her surprise, a distinct whiff of glamour … more   Add a comment

Babar turns 75 this year
How does an elephant king celebrate a milestone birthday? With a worldwide bash, of course! … more   Add a comment

Josephine Baker exhibit
"Josephine Baker: Image and Icon" makes vivid the visual impact this cabaret performer had on French culture in the 1920s and '30s. The title of the Sheldon Art Galleries exhibition, which includes more than 100 photographs, prints, drawings, posters, sculpture and works of ephemera, is well-chosen. Its theme is St. Louis native Baker's near constant self-transformation, and in three chronologically installed galleries, you can see how she exploited her distinctive image through the decades to become a style icon … more   Add a comment


21.04.06.
Cradle of Italian printing feted
Italy's cradle of modern printing, a hilltown near Rome, will be celebrating its history at a two-day conference this weekend. The event, attended by a host of international scholars, will seek to answer fundamental questions such as why two German understudies of Gutenberg chose Subiaco south of Rome as their base when they left Germany … more   Add a comment

21.04.06.
Cradle of Italian printing feted
Italy's cradle of modern printing, a hilltown near Rome, will be celebrating its history at a two-day conference this weekend. The event, attended by a host of international scholars, will seek to answer fundamental questions such as why two German understudies of Gutenberg chose Subiaco south of Rome as their base when they left Germany … more   Add a comment

Century-old book spreads lies, fear, hatred
When the secret police of czarist Russia published "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion," a slim volume (still available from many major booksellers) professing to reveal a Jewish master plan to rule the world, they unleashed a monster that refuses to die. … more   Add a comment

Posters sell well?
Film posters up for auction near Swindon had mixed success when they went under the hammer. Among them was a film poster of the Beatles film Help! It sold for £480 and was the most successful out of all the movie memorabilia … more   Add a comment

Bookseller will sue Seierstad
The real bookseller of Kabul is going to Norway to sue publisher Cappelen and international bestselling author Åsne Seierstad for what he feels has been a damaging invasion of his privacy … more   Add a comment


20.04.06.
County Mayo to reap the benefit of Jackie’s legacy
Jackie Clarke was well-known in his native Ballina as a collector of Irish artifacts. But no-one ever guessed the full extent of his outstanding library … more   Add a comment

Early editions of Book of Mormon found
Four early editions of the Book of Mormon stolen in two separate thefts have been recovered, police said … more   Add a comment

Rowling digs deep in memory of mother
The author JK Rowling has made a "major" donation to fund research into multiple sclerosis, the disease from which her late mother suffered, it was announced yesterday … more   Add a comment

Lennon book sells for £126,500
A John Lennon schoolbook containing a drawing of a walrus was sold at auction last night for more than £125,000. The picture by the late Beatle is an illustration of Lewis Carroll's poem, The Walrus And The Carpenter … more   Add a comment


15.04.06
No News today...
TheBookGuide is away for a few days but he and the news will return on April 20th. However, desperate news junkies can find links to 1,000's of book related stories and articles in our archives.


14.04.06.
Judas Gospel figure has tainted past
In its unveiling of the Gospel of Judas last week, the National Geographic Society credited Swiss antiquities dealer Frieda Nussberger Tchacos with "rescuing" the ancient manuscript, described as one of the most important archeological finds of the last century. But National Geographic made no mention of a suspended sentence Tchacos received in Italy four years ago for possession of looted antiquities, nor her alleged involvement for years in antiquities trafficking … more   Add a comment

V&A exhibition cracks the real Da Vinci code
The Victoria and Albert Museum insisted yesterday that its new exhibition had nothing to do with the Da Vinci Code phenomenon, but the coincidence will certainly push up the visitor numbers. It is to hold a major exhibition of Leonardo da Vinci drawings this autumn - the first in London for almost two decades … more   Add a comment

Kandinsky notes get English debut
Letters from Russian-born 19th Century artist Wassily Kandinsky to two of his patrons are to be published in English for the first time later this year. The publication coincides with an exhibition of more than 55 of Kandinsky's paintings at the Tate Modern in London … more   Add a comment

Revolutionary atlas at book fair
Sometimes rare-book dealers love books so much that they will act against their best commercial interest. Take William Reese of New Haven, one of 195 international dealers at the New York Antiquarian Book Fair, which opens Thursday night with a benefit for the New York Public Library and runs through April 23 at the Seventh Regiment Armory, 643 Park Avenue, at 67th Street … more   Add a comment


13.04.06.
Salute to Beckett on 100th anniversary of writer's birth
Cities around the world will today host events to commemorate the 100th anniversary of Samuel Beckett’s birthday. Beckett, who wrote most of his major work in French, was born in Foxrock, Co Dublin on April 13, 1906. Dublin will today join London, Paris, New York and Tokyo in organising centenary celebrations to honour the eccentric writer … more   Add a comment

Rare books stolen from Pioneer Museum
A dozen rare books, including two first-edition copies of the Book of Mormon, have been stolen from the museum operated by the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers, police said Wednesday. The museum told police the value of the materials tops $100,000 but Salt Lake City rare book dealer Ken Sanders said he believes their worth could be considerably more, because several of the manuscripts bear inscriptions from early church leaders … more   Add a comment

Rare gardening book to fetch £350
A box of old books handed in to a charity shop turned out to contain a 100-year-old book by the Lake District's most famous gardener … more   Add a comment

US drops library gag order in Patriot Act dispute
The government has backed down in at least one battle over the Patriot Act by dropping a gag order imposed on a library that refuses to reveal a reader's borrowing habits. The library, thought to be Connecticut, is resisting an FBI request to produce the records of one of its patrons because the agency refuses to identify the threat posed by the person … more   Add a comment


11.04.06.
Spectacular manuscript and collectibles auction
Ableauctions.com, through their subsidiary iCollector, announced yesterday that it will host the Goldberg Manuscript and Collectibles Auction April 15, 2006. Highlighting this auction will be an American flag signed by the last nine Presidents, from John F. Kennedy through George W. Bush, and the famous stunt gun used by Al Pacino in the movie "Scarface". Other items of interest are a Howard Hughes archive, a World War II Victory Proclamation signed by Harry Truman, an original map from the 1979 Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty, letters and documents signed by scientists such as Albert Einstein, Sigmund Freud, and Marie Curie … more   Add a comment

Why Nigeria’s Literature is the best in Africa
Left to the Western world, they would continue to insist that the black race has no history, culture tradition, literature, philosophy, religion and arts. Even when the whites tend to believe that Africans have all these, they describe them as crude, barbaric, raw, and inferior to that of their race, which they see as refined … more   Add a comment

Remembering the look, the sound, the grit of a revolution
"Black Panther Rank and File" at San Francisco's Yerba Buena Center for the Arts celebrates the founding of the Black Panther Party 40 years ago. Reading or listening to the rhetoric of the '60s Panthers can make a visitor cringe. Not merely because it sounds dated or naive, though some of it does, but because today we so seldom hear in public speech the plain-spoken anger over injustice that it voices … more   Add a comment

The house that Harry built
Once, Bloomsbury was a small, well-respected, independent publisher. Now, thanks to JK Rowling's phenomenal success, it has more money than it knows how to spend. But are the Potter millions distorting the British book trade? And does the publisher risk losing its soul? Matt Seaton reports … more   Add a comment


10.04.06.
Mystery photographs part of Ruskin collection
A set of more than 100 photographs that The Daily Telegraph revealed had fetched £75,000 at a provincial auction after being valued at £80 are almost certainly long-lost Daguerreotypes of Venice taken by the critic, artist and social reformer John Ruskin … more   Add a comment

Citizen Kane? Don't bother to show it
For more than 30 years Britain’s most influential reviewer supplied his opinions of new releases to cinema-owners who subscribed to the service from the McCarthy agency, of London. The anonymous notices governed what cinema audiences would - and would not - see.
    Edward Maggs, the antiquarian dealer, is to offer the collection for £12,500 at this year’s Antiquarian Book Fair at Olympia in June. But he may well have sold it beforehand, to judge by the interest expressed yesterday by the British Film Institute … more   Add a comment

Police plea on macabre book find
Police are trying to locate the owner of a 300-year-old ledger, bound in human skin, found in a Leeds road … more   Add a comment

Library handed 'rare' Dracula books
A rare collection of Dracula-related books is to be handed over to Dublin City Library, it emerged yesterday. It includes copies of books on vampires and Transylvanian history likely to have been used by Dublin-born author Bram Stoker for his classic horror novel, foreign translations of Dracula, and first editions of some of Stoker’s other books … more   Add a comment


08.04.06.
Tribe gets copies of classic books
Two Sacramento residents have donated to the Cherokee Nation historic books, including one written over a century ago. The classics were given away "with the hope that the younger generation of Cherokees will read and study them so that they can know and appreciate our great heritage," said Robert and Lois Whisenhunt … more   Add a comment

Is it really the Gospel truth?
The Gospel of Judas, whose crumbling fragments were found in an Egyptian cave by illiterate peasants in the 1970s - and whose exact contents were finally revealed at a press conference in Washington - is one of the most exciting archaeological discoveries for decades.
    It is also one of the most disturbing for Christians, more than a billion of whom are preparing to celebrate an Easter resurrection that, according to this second-century document, never happened … more   Add a comment

'Stuff of dreams' for book lovers
"This is the first time I've been to a bookstore that I actually had to search for," said David Armstrong, a visitor from Colorado who heard of the shop in Benson, Arizona … more   Add a comment

Two UK bookshops open
Yesterday saw the opening of Brownhills Books in the West Midlands. And on Monday, Orange Skies Books will be the latest bookshop to open in Sedburgh … more   Add a comment

Brown wins Da Vinci Code case
A high court judge yesterday rejected claims that Dan Brown's bestselling novel The Da Vinci Code breached the copyright of an earlier book … more   Add a comment


07.04.06.
'Da Vinci' plagiarism suit spurs book sales
A judge in London is due to decide today whether Dan Brown plagiarized the plot of his best-selling The Da Vinci Code from two other writers. Judging by book sales, readers may not care. More than 500,000 copies of Brown's thriller were sold in the first week after its paperback release on March 28, Random House Inc.'s Anchor Books said Wednesday … more   Add a comment

Baghdad bookshop burnt
Khalid Bookshop was the first target for the new insurgents’ strategy; it is the oldest bookshop at Rabi Street, west of Baghdad, it was set on fire around 9 pm on Monday, no casualties but every thing in the book shop was burned … more   Add a comment

Unputdownable?
Bangalore's near-legendary Premier bookstore faces closure. Book-lovers are distraught … more   Add a comment

Library guards stand up to gangs
Doormen are being employed to guard libraries in Fallowfield after staff and visitors complained that they were being intimidated by gangs of young yobs … more   Add a comment


06.04.06.
Rarity speaks volumes
If you're looking for something to collect, with an eye for investment, some depth and variety, think books. One of the most traditional of collecting fields, books attract people for all kinds of reasons, but for a seasoned collector the information contained in a book can sometimes be the least reason to buy it … more   Add a comment

DiMaggio auction preview
Among the highlights of the Joe DiMaggio Collection to be auctioned at the Marriott Marquis Hotel in New York City on May 19-20, is a Marilyn Monroe autographed photograph to Joe DiMaggio. The sepia tone 8x10 matted and framed image of Marilyn reclining on a satin chair is signed across the front in bold blue ink, "I love you Joe, Marilyn" … more   Add a comment

Stealing beats borrowing
Selfishness is trumping sharing as £150m worth of books are filched from local libraries every year … more   Add a comment

Tome raiders
A project to connect all Australian libraries and their collections of 40 million items on the internet will allow readers to find books, copy them or even buy them from online stores … more   Add a comment


04.04.06.
Sony e-book reader headed to Borders book stores
At CES last January, officials from Sony told TG Daily that the company's digital book reader device, based on E Ink's thin, very-high-definition "electronic ink" display, would be available in the US this spring.
    Yesterday morning, Sony took the next step in delivering on that promise, announcing a marketing deal to sell its Sony Reader portable electronic book device through Borders book stores in the US, though Sony did not reveal many other details … more   Add a comment

Heritage presents a Daring Mystery!
"This was one of Timely’s earliest efforts," said Ed Jaster, Vice-President of Dallas-based Heritage Auction Galleries, "following their maiden title, Marvel Comics, by only a few scant months. While it doesn’t hold as lofty a place in comics’ history as some of its Timely brethren, Daring Mystery #1 has a lot to recommend it, not the least of which is a stunning cover by the legendary Alex Schomburg featuring bondage, hooded bad guys and action galore!" … more   Add a comment

Arab literary giant Mohammad al-Maghout dies
Syrian writer Mohammad al-Maghout, whose poems and plays fiercely criticized Arab regimes, died on Monday aged 72, the official news agency SANA said. "Syria and the Arab world lost a giant today," the agency said, adding that Maghout had died after a long illness … more   Add a comment

Edible book festival a delicious success
"On your marks! Get set! Get a plate! Graze!" announced Edward Hoyenski, assistant to the curator in the Rare Book Room to kick off the taste competition. The competition was part of NT’s seventh annual Edible Books Festival Monday in Willis Library’s Rare Book Room … more   Add a comment


03.04.06.
US cook wins blogging book prize
An American cook's adventures in the kitchen have won the first literary prize for bloggers turned authors. Julie Powell's tales of French cooking beat the intimate diary of a prostitute and a guide to the UK's best "greasy spoon" cafes to take the Blooker Prize … more   Add a comment

Egyptian techniques to save China's ancient books
China will borrow Egyptian techniques used to preserve the murals in the pyramids to save China's ancient books. "China's ancient books may be destroyed by acidification within a hundred years if repair techniques are not improved," said Zhang Zhiqing, director of the rare book department of the National Library of China … more   Add a comment

Traders slam scheme to charge for pavement displays
Paul Wallace, manager of David’s Bookshop in Eastcheap, Letchworth, said: "We’ve put trolleys of books outside our shop for 40 years." He explained that cheaper books are generally on display outside and if the council introduced the charge the practice would no longer be financially viable … more   Add a comment

Letters show Brecht's talent for offending
A series of letters discovered in a Swiss cellar reveal how Bertolt Brecht, Germany's famously uncompromising playwright, fell out with some of the 20th century's most glittering literary figures, including the novelist Christopher Isherwood … more   Add a comment

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