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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 occassional comments by TheBookGuide.  Archived Stories.

January 2007Skip Free Registration

31.01.07.
Biblioporn

Back late, and with only time for a quick peek into the Bibliophile Bullpen, I had to pass on J's link to The Book Clasps and Book Furniture website. Although on reflection, perhaps more fetishistic than pornographic.   Add a comment


27.01.07.
No News today...
TheBookGuide is away for a few days but he and the news will return on January 31st. However, desperate news junkies can find links to 1,000's of book related stories and articles in our archives


26.01.07.
Hollywood ephemera fetches big bucks

A contract signed by John Steinbeck handing over movie rights to 20th Century Fox for his classic book, "The Grapes of Wrath," sold for $24,000. It was expected to sell for $4,000 to $6,000 ... more   Add a comment

Ancient papyrus donated to the Vatican
Benedict XVI received as a gift to the Holy See one of the most ancient manuscripts of the Gospels, an artifact that demonstrates Scripture's historical actuality. The Pope was given the 14-15 Bodmer Papyrus (P75), dated between A.D. 175 and 225, on Monday by Frank Hanna and his family, of the United States ... more   Add a comment

Exhibition traces production of manuscripts
Throughout the Middle Ages, manuscript illumination was a major art form in France, a favorite of French kings and high-ranking nobles. This exhibition of 25 manuscripts and leaves from the J. Paul Getty Museum's collection, including recent acquisitions, highlights the achievement of French painting in books from the 800s to the 1500s ... more   Add a comment

Plan to transport manuscripts worries specialists
Eleven activists of art and science have sent an open letter to the President Robert Kocharyan with an appeal to ban sending valued illustrated Armenian parchment manuscripts for exhibition in France ... more   Add a comment


25.01.07.
40th California International Antiquarian Book Fair

On February 16th over 200 rare booksellers from the US and around the world will congregate in California to participate in the country's largest rare book fair ... more   Add a comment

More U.S. schools rejecting controversial book
An autobiographical novel for children by a Japanese-American author claiming that she witnessed wartime atrocities committed by Koreans is now being rejected by an increasing number of schools in the United States as Korean-Americans challenge the authenticity of her story ... more   Add a comment

Beatnik Chicks, Poets & Peyote
Take a spoonful of mysticism, a cup of assemblage, and mix with a pinch of beat-era verse. Bake in the California sun for half a century, and you might get the flavor of ``Semina Culture: Wallace Berman and His Circle,'' a heady time-capsule of quaint left-coast ephemera completing a two-year, cross-country tour at the Grey Art Gallery on New York's Washington Square ... more   Add a comment

The world’s most dangerous bookstore
Enduring legends are borne of disbelief: Scotland has its Loch Ness Monster, the Himalays its Abominable Snowman, and Oklahoma City, not to be outdone, has the Bookman ... more  (Thanks to Lynn Wienck who posted the link on the BookFinder Insider mailing list.)   Add a comment


24.01.07.
'The used car lot of the book world'

The used book world is like a small fraternity, and the Chicago Remainder Book Expo is the yearly reunion. More than 1,100 book buyers thumb through stacks that represent millions of books sitting in warehouses. Despite the plastic name tags around their necks, there seem to be no strangers here -- even among the international book dealers from Germany, Australia and England, Russia and Ukraine ... more   Add a comment

Cortés map finds its way back to Yale
Even after E. Forbes Smiley III confessed to stealing a similar Cortés map from Harvard, Yale's map failed to surface. Stubbornly, Yale posted a picture online, and last month, a map dealer who had purchased the map from Smiley came forward and returned it ... more   Add a comment

Harry Potter charity books stolen
Thousands of Harry Potter books written for Comic Relief which had been due to be recycled have been stolen. Fantastic Beasts and Quidditch Through the Ages were written by JK Rowling to raise funds for the BBC Red Nose Day charity appeal. They were contained in red-coloured plastic satchels which police believe may now be offered for sale ... more   Add a comment


23.01.07.
Treasure trove of old photos

The latest donation to Sunderland Antiquarian Society provides a snapshot in time of life in 1877 ... more   Add a comment

Literature without books
As Google sets to work making vast numbers of books available to download in their entirety, Vic Keegan considers the prospects for online books ... more   Add a comment

Supreme Court rules against bookseller
The Supreme Court of Canada ruled Friday that the government does not have to pay the legal tab for a Vancouver bookstore’s epic legal fight against Canada Customs for blocking gay and lesbian publications at the border ... more   Add a comment

Victorian comic's gag book found
The discovery of a Victorian comedian's private joke book is providing a rare insight into the gags being told to audiences 150 years ago ... more   Add a comment


22.01.07.
Could this be the final chapter in the life of the book

The world's libraries are heading for the internet, says Bryan Appleyard. If this means we lose touch with real books and treat their content as 'information', civilisation is the loser ... more   Add a comment

Bookshop's happy ending
By June, the now-bookless bookshop and its creaky floorboards will be resurrected as a library-run, library-funded bookstore and young adult information station ... more   Add a comment

Audubon brushes a rare discovery
The little tufts are paint brushes said to have been used by John James Audubon, the artist and naturalist whose name has been adopted by birdwatchers around the world and whose memory is recalled in the names of businesses, roads, public art and in other ways in the Henderson area ... more   Add a comment

£11m lifeline for Burns Museum
Burns enthusiasts said the project was "long overdue." Peter Westwood, editor of the official Burns Chronicle, said: "The old Burns Cottage Museum was getting pretty rundown and needs to be replaced with an imaginative project that links all the Burns sites together ... more   Add a comment


19.01.07.
A house built around a tower of books

When Nader Tehrani and Monica Ponce de Leon, partners at Office dA, an architecture firm in Boston, were asked to renovate a five-story town house in the Back Bay neighborhood, they faced a singular design challenge. The house belonged to Elmar Seibel, now 54, a dealer in rare books on art and architecture, and his wife, Azita Bina-Seibel, 46, a chef and restaurateur ... more   Add a comment

Harold Pinter receives top French honour
British playwright and Nobel laureate Harold Pinter, whose works include The Birthday Party and The Homecoming, was yesterday awarded the Legion d'Honneur by the French prime minister, Dominic de Villepin ... more   Add a comment

Literary prize bows to pressure over racial discrimination
The Decibel Penguin prize, an Arts Council initiative awarded to writers of "Asian, African and Caribbean background," has been forced to change its entry criteria after an intervention by the Commission for Racial Equality ... more   Add a comment

Methodist clergy oppose Bush library
A group of Methodist ministers has launched an online petition opposing the George W. Bush presidential library being built at Southern Methodist University. The petition on the Web site, www.protectSMU.com, says linking Bush's presidency with a university bearing the Methodist name is "utterly inappropriate" ... more   Add a comment


18.01.07.
Freud sketches expected to fetch £100,000 at auction

The artworks, which were created between 1982 and 2000, include three portrait sketches and a still-life study, The Egyptian Book, which are expected to sell between £7000 and £18,000 each ... more   Add a comment

Chazen curator tracks down rare Japanese print
Officials the University of Wisconsin's Elvehjem Museum of Art, now called the Chazen Museum of Art, had been asked by curators in Japan if they could borrow some of the UW museum's 2,000 woodblock prints by the Japanese artist Utagawa Hiroshige (1797-1858) for a show of his art work in his native Japan ... more   Add a comment

Library book thief was the literature professor
The mystery thief who pillaged antique books from Bonn University Library and replaced them with worthless copies turned out to be a professor of literature, a German court heard Wednesday ... more   Add a comment

The 10 most expensive books of 2006
The list for 2006 includes a surprising number of atlases -- five, including three versions of works by Ptolemy ... more  Add a comment


17.01.07.
France Recovers Stolen Manuscript from US

France has recovered an invaluable 13th-century Hebrew manuscript of the Bible that was stolen from its National Library in Paris. ... more   Add a comment

‘Year of Vonnegut’ honors iconic author
‘Slaughterhouse-Five’ author being celebrated by Indianapolis hometown ... more   Add a comment

Reclusive author attends 'Mockingbird' play
The 80-year-old Harper Lee was invited as a special guest to be honored by education and arts officials. Lee did not address the crowd but later talked to students at a private reception. The author, who rarely speaks publicly but does occasionally meet with students, has not published a book besides 1960's "Mockingbird" ... more   Add a comment

Library visitors up despite fall in spending
Overall, there has been a 4% increase in the total number of books added to stock, despite a 2% reduction in spending. The Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, the government agency which oversees libraries in the UK, said this has been achieved through more effective spending ... more   Add a comment


16.01.07.
Harry Potter and the dwindling booksellers

A quarter of independent booksellers say that they will not stock the final Harry Potter book when it is published because they claim they cannot make a profit on it ... more   Add a comment

Hours lost result in books found
I had to sneeze. The dust dancing off a million book jackets waltzed up my nostrils, tickling that magic nerve in the center of my head, triggering a violent, head-banging sinus fit. The stack of yellowed paperbacks cradled against my chest flew from my control, onto the hardwood floor like playing cards passed out in a game of 52-pickup ... more   Add a comment

At last, Heaney takes poetry's biggest prize
Seamus Heaney has finally laid claim to one of the few poetry titles thus far to elude him. It was announced yesterday that the Nobel laureate has won the 2006 TS Eliot prize with his latest collection, District and Circle ... more   Add a comment

CIA stole Dr Zhivago from Malta
CIA and British Intelligence agents forced a passenger plane to land in Malta in 1957, to go on board and steal the manuscript of the banned Russian novel ‘Dr Zhivago’, which was subsequently published and awarded a Nobel Prize ... more   Add a comment


15.01.07.
Buyers of rare books rare in this area

Despite the world's love affair with electronic gadgets, rare book collecting is hanging on, according to international rare book dealer Charles Agvent. But there could be trouble ahead, said Agvent, who lives in Pennsylvania Dutch country ... more   Add a comment

'Illuminatus' trilogy author dead at 74
Robert Anton Wilson, co-author of the cult classic "The Illuminatus! Trilogy," a science-fiction series about a secret global society, has died. He was 74 ... more   Add a comment

Handwritten Thatcher note up for auction
A handwritten note from Lady Thatcher is set to go under the hammer, along with a signed copy of her memoirs. The note, sent in 1993, turned up at Oxfam's Nicolson Street bookshop inside a first edition of "The Downing Street Years" ... more   Add a comment

Books seized from public library
Police used a warrant at the Portales Public Library to seize magic and witchcraft books that had been checked out by a woman who is charged in the January 4th death of her 6-year-old son ... more   Add a comment


12.01.07.
William Blake's 'Tyger' notebook on show

The British Library has put on display the notebook in which William Blake wrote one of his most famous poems, "The Tyger," to mark the 250th anniversary year of the English poet and artist's birth ... more   Add a comment

'Oldest accurate map of Scotland' sold for £22,000
An ancient map of Scotland has fetched more than £22,000 at an auction in Edinburgh. The 16th century "Nicolay Rutter", which is said to be the oldest accurate chart of the country, was sold to an unnamed London dealer, whom experts said had acquired an "exciting and important piece of Scottish history" ... more   Add a comment

Regional archives vital to preserve diverse heritage
With the history of much of India's diverse cultural heritage written in regional languages, experts have emphasised the need to set up archives in different parts of the country to preserve these records ... more   Add a comment

Rare collection from out of Africa to go under the hammer
A collection of rare and out of print books on Africa is expected to raise £10,000 when it goes under the hammer ... more   Add a comment


11.01.07.
Nixon library's Elvis exhibit has fans all shook up

A photo of a cloaked and bejeweled Elvis Presley solemnly shaking hands with a grim-faced President Nixon remains the No. 1 requested document from the National Archives, nearly four decades after the secret meeting took place on Dec. 21, 1970. Now, on what would be Elvis's 72nd birthday, the Richard Nixon Presidential Library & Birthplace is giving the curious public a good, long look at the relics of the coming together of The King and The President - and it's got Elvis fans all shook up ... more   Add a comment

Beatles' "Guitar Gently Weeps" lyric sheet for sale
The original handwritten lyrics to Beatles classic "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" will go on sale in the United States on Monday and are expected to fetch up to 400,000 pounds ($780,000) ... more   Add a comment

eBay book trader facing theft accusation
The publisher HarperCollins is suing an internet trader for £80,000, alleging he has sold thousands of books stolen from its distribution centre. Stewart Young insists he buys goods legitimately to sell for a profit on eBay, and he is asking a judge to throw out the damages action against him. (Thanks to Clive Keeble for the link) ... more   Add a comment

Mass reading project tackles the legacy of slavery
More than 50,000 free copies of Andrea Levy's novel, Small Island, will be distributed today in four British cities in a bid to encourage reading, discussion and possibly argument ... more   Add a comment


10.01.07.
Only in America ...

Always a pleasure to give J Godsey's idiosyncratic Bibliophile Bullpen blog a plug. Today she has stories about a British historian arrested for Jaywalking, and a woman suspected of stealing a book being shot at by a security guard. Oh, and there's also the naked bookshop owner ... more   Add a comment

Nostalgia feeds fascination with culinary tomes
More than 1,000 copies of out-of-print, second-hand and hard-to-find cookbooks, some bearing publishing dates as far back as the early 1830s, sit on the shelves of the Ben Franklin Bookstore. ... more   Add a comment

Costa Book Awards: winners revealed
Two books that were repeatedly turned down by publishers and a taboo-breaking children's novel about incest have won top honours in one of Britain's most prestigious literary awards - the Costa (formerly the Whitbread) Book Awards ... more   Add a comment

A £4,000 book for the designer coffee table
The publishing business has got a fashion label - and its name is Gloria. The two-year-old publisher is about as niche as they come. Its first book, a 12kg tome on the footballing icon Pele, came out last summer and its plans are for just one title a year ... more   Add a comment


09.01.07.
Driff ... "nearly steals the book"

Driff was a book dealer -- a specialist bookfinder and trade "runner" -- who found fame when he self-published an obsessively thorough guide to Britain’s secondhand bookshops. It was a comic tour de force, and in its day extremely useful, before the shops themselves began to disappear en masse. With his loud voice and louder clothing, Driff was a hard man to miss, until the day came when he was seen no more.
    There were Lucan-style sightings, along with rumours of Eastern Europe and India and even far-flung bits of London, but -- particularly since he was a troubled character who had been selling tickets to his own suicide, and collecting books on death -- many people suspected the worst. He is, however, triumphantly alive; this book contains the proof ... more 
(Thanks to Nigel Burwood for the link.)  Add a comment

Months to go, but Harry's last outing still outsells them all
The seventh and final instalment in the Harry Potter series may not have been published yet, but fans are so desperate to find out what happens to the boy wizard that the book has already outsold all the other best-sellers on Amazon's book chart put together ... more   Add a comment

Sobol Award canceled due to lack of interest
The Sobol Award, a controversial new literary contest that offered agentless writers a $100,000 first prize and a contract with Simon & Schuster for the top three winners, has been canceled ... more   Add a comment

Emory acquires Ted Hughes' love letters
Love letters written by Sylvia Plath's husband to his mistress have been acquired by Emory University's Robert W. Woodruff Library ... more   Add a comment


08.01.07.
Library book returned after 47 years

In a tale that resembles a classic episode of "Seinfeld," Robert Nuranen last week handed his local librarian a book he'd checked out for a ninth-grade assignment -- along with a $171.32 check for 47 years' worth of late fees ... more   Add a comment

Disgraced author aims to defend Judas
Author Jeffrey Archer, who was cast out of Britain's Conservative Party after being jailed on perjury charges, is coming to the defense of another noted black sheep -- Judas Iscariot ... more   Add a comment

'On the Road' manuscript on display in Denver
The scroll, which is typically displayed for free at public libraries, has visited eight cities, including Rome. It was the most well-attended attraction in the San Francisco Public Library's history ... more   Add a comment

Novel idea to give away free books
A total of 25,000 free copies of Robert Louis Stevenson's Kidnapped are to be distributed throughout Edinburgh next month. The books will be handed out free to everyone from coffee shops to schools and libraries in a bid to get as many people as possible reading the same book at the same time ... more   Add a comment


06.01.07.
Borrowing books

One of the great social inventions of the past few centuries has been the public lending library. Although conventional wisdom assigns this innovation to the creative genius of Benjamin Franklin, the idea undoubtedly has much earlier antecedents ... more   Add a comment

Historic sea map set for auction
A historic map of Scotland is to be auctioned in Edinburgh. The Nicolay Rutter is said to be the oldest accurate chart of the country. It was made from a voyage King James V took around Scotland in 1540 ... more   Add a comment

329-year-old cook book discovered
A cookery book written by the country's first celebrity chef 329 years ago is up for sale. "How to Boil a Pike in City Fashion" and "A la Mode Ways of Dressing the Head of Any Beast" are among some of the other culinary tips dished out by 17th century cook Robert May ... more   Add a comment


05.01.07.
Currier & Ives - American idealists

The Museum of Fine Arts in Springfield will present the panel discussion "Currier & Ives: Visions of America" Sunday at 2 p.m. in the museum's Davis Auditorium. The panelists will discuss how the ideals of liberty and justice were experienced by African-Americans, women, American Indians and the working class during the 19th century and how those experiences compared with the American mythology reflected in Currier & Ives prints ... more   Add a comment

Miss Potter
Beatrix Potter has enchanted generations of children with the characters she brought to life in the pages of her stories, yet she kept her own life very much away from the public glare.     The film, Miss Potter has been coined as a light romance, but it is far deeper and more substantial than that. It is a comment on an oppressive society, where to succeed, a woman has to be exceptionally out of the norm ... more   Add a comment

Comic Book Collectors; Nerdy Geeks or Shrewd Investors?
When one says, yeah, I collect comic books, what is the general public response? Oh no, a slightly off the wall geek. Here is someone who has lost touch with reality. Or someone that is in his or her own little world ... more   Add a comment

Floating book fair arrives in Libya
The floating book fair has 600,000 titles in various disciplines including dictionaries, medical sciences, social sciences, computer, children books and stories.
    It aims at promoting cultural exchanges to underline contacts among peoples and emphasize the principle of volunteer work and work for others and develop the spirit of providence among world youth ... more   Add a comment


04.01.07.
OED asks for the full monty

Did you go dogging before 1993? If the answer is yes, the Oxford English Dictionary would like to hear from you ... more   Add a comment

Chapter and verse on vegetarianism
Jim Whitten's book collection started when he met vegetarian scholar Rynn Berry in New York ... more   Add a comment

Congressman to be sworn in with rare Quran
First Muslim elected to Congress to use Quran once owned by Thomas Jefferson ... more   Add a comment

Rare British India documents surface
Documents and papers shown to the BBC by a relation of the commander of British troops during the 1897 siege of Malakand - in what is now Pakistan's North West Frontier Province - provide a fascinating new insight into the struggle for South Asia ... more   Add a comment


03.01.07.
Timbuktu Manuscripts

Tens of thousands of manuscripts dating back to 13th century west Africa have been found in Timbuktu, Mali. Michael Gomez, chair of New York University's history department, talks with Farai Chideya about efforts to gather and preserve the artifacts ... more   Add a comment

Statue of Ukrainian poet stolen from Canadian park
The theft of a two-tonne statue in an Oakville park marks the end of an era for Toronto's Ukrainian community. The bronze statue of Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko was reported missing on Saturday after serving as a prominent landmark for more than half a century ... more   Add a comment

New IOBA Standard
Always worth a read, the latest issue of the Independent Online Booksellers Association journal is now available ... more   Add a comment

King crowned top of guilty reads
Stephen King has beaten JK Rowling to the title of the UK's favourite literary guilty pleasure, according to a survey carried out on behalf of the Costa Book Awards ... more   Add a comment


02.01.07.
Restoring author Ken Kesey's bus

Dreams of getting author Ken Kesey's original psychedelic bus, Furthur, back on the road again have hit a pothole. The Kesey family is looking for a new sponsor to finance restoration work and a TV documentary after breaking things off with Hollywood restaurant owner David Houston, who had hoped to raise $100,000 to restore the bus made famous in Tom Wolfe's 1968 book, The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test ... more   Add a comment

Christmas came early for sports memorabilia auctioneers
Recent sports memorabilia auction results are proving baseball cards are far from dead. Several major auction houses held events just before the holiday shopping season and brought in millions of dollars for some rare and high grade cards, game-used equipment and other collectibles ... more   Add a comment

Child labourers bound in despair
Ten-year old Tara Mia arrived in Dhaka from Nagarpur in Tangail 15 days ago to work as a trainee in one of the bookbinding shops in Banglabazar. He starts work at 7 in the morning and continues until 10:00pm. Apart from three meal breaks he has no time to spare. Tara Mia has never been to school ... more   Add a comment

2.5m digital books on one £25,000 machine
A machine that electronically stores 2.5 million books that can then be printed and bound in less than seven minutes is about to be launched. It prints in any language and has an upper limit of 550 pages. The 'Espresso' will be launched first in several US libraries. The company behind the project - On Demand Books - predicts that, within five years, it will be able to reproduce every book ever published ... more   Add a comment


01.01.07.
UK mail service readies extra trucks for Potter book

Britain's mail service is conferring with retailers and renting out hundreds of extra trucks in anticipation of the launch of the seventh -- and final -- installment of J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter series ... more   Add a comment

Auction sites flooded with Ford memorabilia
While Grand Rapids and the American nation prepares for a solemn, dignified remembrance of former President Gerald R. Ford over the next few days, on the Internet auction sites, it's anything goes ... more   Add a comment

Second act for books
Altering books -- taking a used book and turning it into a piece of art by cutting, slicing, stamping and painting -- has a growing following in the craft and art worlds. Craft enthusiasts looking for a new challenge, and professional artists looking to experiment with mixed media, are recycling old and unwanted books into new art ... more   Add a comment

No telling what might pop out of these books
Today, you can find pop-up books on everything from the alphabet to Alfred Hitchcock, from Bible stories to bondage, from Kwanzaa to Kama Sutra, from Smurfs to Stonehenge ... more   Add a comment

Ancient chess strategy guide found
A study of the game of chess by Renaissance mathematician Luca Pacioli has been discovered in northern Italy after it was feared lost ... more   Add a comment

300 year old book shows way to new medicine
A few years ago, Eric Buenz came across a 17th-century book on herbal medicine. And he wondered if its ancient folk wisdom could withstand a little scientific scrutiny. So Buenz, then a graduate student at the Mayo Clinic, and a colleague decided to test a tree extract that the book claimed could cure diarrhea. What they found was that the potion, made from the nuts of the atun tree, works a lot like an antibiotic, killing various types of bacteria ... more   Add a comment

On the trail of pilfered history
With the market in stolen historical documents hotter than ever, federal investigators launch an operation to retrieve what belongs to the US government ... more   Add a comment

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