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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 occasional comments by TheBookGuide.  Archived Stories.

February 2009 Skip Free Registration

26.02.09.
Philip Jose Farmer, science fiction author, dies

Philip Jose Farmer, one of the most celebrated science fiction, fantasy and short story writers of the 1960s and '70s, died Wednesday. He was 91 ... more  Add a comment

Powell's: Used book buying spikes in down economy
The Portland, Ore.-based company has bought used books from customers for more than 30 years, but said Wednesday that it has never matched the volume it has seen in the past six months. Powell's estimates the number of booksellers has jumped 15 percent, a spike which occurred just after the market tumble in September 2008 ... more  Add a comment

Action Comics #1 up for auction
Seventy-one years after his first appearance, Superman continues to capture our collective imaginations. Armed with a red cape and the power to fly, he single-handedly launched the "superhero" genre. Therefore, when an unknown copy of the very rare, very first Superman comic book comes to light -- and to auction -- word spreads faster than a speeding bullet ... more  Add a comment

The slow death of handwriting
Christmas cards, shopping lists and what else? The occasions in which we write by hand are fewer and fewer, says Neil Hallows. So is the ancient art form of handwriting dying out? ... more  Add a comment


25.02.09.
The writing on the wall

A mystery author in China has foregone pen and paper to scrawl his novel across the walls of a house in beautiful characters ... more  Add a comment

$15,000 For A Harry Potter Paperback?
Heritage Auctions has an auction of a a softcover copy of the first Harry Potter book that has already hit $15,000 and the auction isn't over until March 6 ... more  Add a comment

The Bookseller of Kabul responds
An Afghan bookstore owner displeased with his portrayal in a bestseller based on him and his family has written his own book telling his angry, bewildered side of the story ... more  Add a comment


24.02.09.
By design

William Stout, owner of the eponymous architecture and design bookstore in San Francisco, was recently invited to talk about his favorite books. Allison Arieff reports ... more  Add a comment

Agatha Christie’s rural retreat opens to the public
Artefacts used by Agatha Christie to embellish some of her most gruesome murder mystery stories will go on public view for the first time this weekend as the National Trust opens the author’s rural home ... more  Add a comment

Swindon votes to cut libraries
Swindon council has voted in favour of cuts to its budget, which will lead to the closure of four local libraries. The decision came despite a report by library campaigner Tim Coates, which argued that the council could achieve its target of saving £100,000 in its library service by cutting management costs instead of by closing libraries ... more  Add a comment

Burns treasure bought by library for £30,000
A handwritten version of The Battle of Sherra-moor by Robert Burns has been bought for the nation from an American collector for more than £30,000. The National Library of Scotland has acquired the document at an auction in Washington DC for $45,000 (£31,500). It will be on display from today at a Burns symposium in the US capital's Library of Congress ... more  Add a comment


23.02.09.
Book covers: the pictures that sell thousands of words

AbeBooks's latest promotion reminds us of the great, but often forgotten contribution made by designers ... more  Add a comment

Jihad books were in library
A library service was stocking books which encouraged jihad and the murder of non-Muslims, a Government-backed report has revealed. A cost-cutting measure has been blamed for the blunder, which happened five years ago ... more  Add a comment

Did Hitler really like to be beside the seaside?
Claims that Hitler intended to make Blackpool a Nazi pleasure playground are "utter nonsense", according to the York-based bookseller whose collection of German war documents prompted the speculation ... more  Add a comment

The joy of anti-social media
Opining about books on social media is great fun, but reading is something you do alone, thank God ... more  Add a comment


20.02.09.
Eating books could seriously damage your health

US libraries and charity shops face a battle to hang on to their children's classics over fears they might be too dangerous ... more  Add a comment

British Library buys Futurists' metal manifesto
It is known as The Tin Book and was co-authored by a fascist-sympathising Italian artist who, 100 years ago today, said all libraries should be destroyed. With wonderful irony, the British Library announced yesterday that it had bought an edition of the book, an artefact that is at once rare, unusual and significant ... more  Add a comment

Being Frank about value of books
Following the acrimonious row about Wirral Council’s massive closure programme of libraries across the borough, Today presenter Sarah Montague asked Frank Cottrell Boyce if libraries were really that vital.
     “I don’t know what came over me – I went bonkers. I just started ranting and raving about the terrible impact of losing libraries filled with books. “I said there was no point in writing more books to get youngsters interested in reading if libraries were becoming places devoted to anti-reading matter. Eventually, I think she pulled the plug on me” ... more
 Add a comment

Words of warning: 2,500 languages under threat
"We as human beings should care about this in the same way as we should care about the loss of the world's variety of plants and animals, its biodiversity," said Christopher Moseley, editor-in-chief of the Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger. "Because each language is a uniquely structured world of thought, with its own associations, metaphors, ways of thinking, vocabulary, sound system and grammar - all working together in a marvellous architectural structure which is so fragile that it could easily be lost forever" ... more  Add a comment

Books not buildings
The recent death of Czech architect Jan Kaplický has renewed the debate about his controversial plan for a new building for the National Library in Prague. Supporters of the futuristic "Blob" design that won a 2007 competition, but which was blocked and then canceled by politicians associated with the Civic Democratic Party ... more  Add a comment


18.02.09.
Early Tolkien work to make debut

An early work by Lord of the Rings author JRR Tolkien is to be published for the first time. The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrun, a reworking in verse of old Norse epics, predates Tolkien's The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings trilogy ... more  Add a comment

Rare Winnie The Pooh books discovered
The couple took their four Winnie the Pooh books, all signed by the author’s son Christopher Robin, to a valuation day on Monday, and shocked to hear that each copy could fetch up to £4,000 at auction ... more  Add a comment

Walker Evans’ picture-postcard archive
‘Walker Evans and the Picture Postcard’ is at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York until May 25. A catalogue of the show is published by Steidl and The Metropolitan Museum of Art (£35, hardcover) ... more  Add a comment


17.02.09.
The good books

From Shakespeare to Steinbeck, literary greats have borrowed heavily from the Bible. Now, Poet Laureate Andrew Motion has raised concerns that students of English literature are struggling because they don't understand Biblical references. Is he right to worry? Test your knowledge with this quiz from the Bible Society ... more  Add a comment

Why Alfred Wainwright deserves a public monument
Highly uncomfortable in any kind of spotlight, the lyric master of the guide book is due a memorial statue ... more  Add a comment

Valmadonna Trust Library 'may fetch at least $40 million'
The so-called Bomberg Talmud -- named after its Christian publisher, Daniel Bomberg -- was printed in Hebrew and Aramaic in Venice between 1519 and 1523. It’s one of the treasures among some 13,000 books in the Valmadonna Trust Library, which Sotheby’s says may fetch at least $40 million ... more  Add a comment


16.02.09.
Lots of stories at S.F. antiquarian book fair

The worn hardback copy of "A History of Gastronomy" that Ian Kahn is holding cost $10 when it came out in 1975, and looks to be worth less than half that now. Today, the asking price at a book collectors' show is $15,000 ... more  Add a comment

Walters exhibits illuminated Bible
At a time when books can be written and distributed to millions by high-speed computer, there is no earthly reason why anyone would need to spend $5.5 million to create an illuminated manuscript of the Catholic Bible, featuring calligraphy applied by hand on calfskin parchment and other bookmaking methods dating back to the Middle Ages ... more  Add a comment


12.02.09.
Lincoln manuscript sets record in NYC

Christie's says a handwritten manuscript of an 1864 Abraham Lincoln speech has sold for $3.44 million in New York City, setting a new auction record for any American historical document ... more  Add a comment


11.02.09.
Kindle's new challenger brings E-Books to iPhones

Amazon's new E Ink-powered Kindle 2 is all the rage right now, but a Canadian bookseller is confident it can give you the same experience on your smartphone, and without the hefty pricetag ... more  Add a comment

Batwoman, the red-headed lesbian, is unleashed at last
Holy sexuality, Batman! Two months after his untimely death, the creators of Gotham City's crime-fighting superhero, Bruce Wayne, have finally unveiled his politically-correct replacement: a ginger-haired, lesbian socialite called Batwoman ... more  Add a comment

Rare trove of Hebrew books displayed in NYC
A rare trove of 11,000 Hebrew books and manuscripts went on display at Sotheby's this week as the auction house seeks to find a buyer for what is considered the greatest collection of Judaica in private hands ... more  Add a comment

Kindle 2 ‘violates copyright’, claims Authors Guild
The text-to-speech feature on Amazon's Kindle 2 ebook reader could violate copyright law, according to the Authors Guild, which represents writers and novelists in the United States ... more  Add a comment

A digital window on the medieval world
Thousands of medieval manuscripts have been digitized by libraries around the world. The trick has been finding them. Matthew Fisher, an assistant professor of English at the University of California at Los Angeles, thought up a solution: the Catalogue of Digitized Medieval Manuscripts, a centralized online archive of holdings around the world ... more  Add a comment


10.02.09.
The Kindle 2

The Kindle 2 is thin, fast, and far better than reading from a computer screen but does Amazon's new eBook beat a real book? Tom Leonard beats the crowds in New York to have a look ... more  Add a comment

Shakespeare theft accused in court

Self-confessed "dilettante" Raymond Scott, 51, arrived at North Durham Magistrates' Court in Consett in a silver Ford stretch limo, accompanied by a chauffeur and his "researcher" Claire Smith.
    Scott consistently cuts a colourful figure, donning a range of outfits during his public appearances. For his latest appearance, he arrived dressed in all white as Boss Hogg from the 1980s TV series The Dukes of Hazzard in tribute to the heavy snow that covered the outside of the court ... more
  Add a comment

Books vie for odd prize
The Large Sieve and its Applications, F**k It, and Baboon Metaphysics are just three of the titles that have made it on to the 18-strong longlist for the Diagram Prize, The Bookseller's hugely popular odd titles award ... more  Add a comment

Sofa tested for Pushkin's blood
Scientists are attempting to verify if the blood stains on a sofa which are reputed to be around two centuries old come from Russian literary hero Alexander Pushkin, according to Russian reports ... more  Add a comment

Forensics to look for DNA in Copernicus manuscript
Polish forensic scientists in Kraków have applied to the Jagiellonian University to carry out an examination of a manuscript by astronomer Nicolas Copernicus, hoping to bring up enough genetic material to compare with the skeleton discovered in Frombork, accepted to be that of the great man ... more  Add a comment


09.02.09.
Are real books nearing the end of their shelf life?

Last week, I sent three questions to a selection of insiders from the world of books (publishers, literary agents, editors and booksellers). Promising anonymity, I asked: 1. Do you have a Sony Reader (or Amazon Kindle)? 2. If so, how do you rate it? And 3. Is your library becoming digital? ... more  Add a comment

The man in Darwin's shadow
Did Alfred Russel Wallace think up evolution first? ... more  Add a comment

The Lost Libraries of Timbuktu
Documents found in Mali's fabled metropolis are helping to rewrite African history and remind us that the world's finest university was once located there ... more  Add a comment


06.02.09.
2 Afghans face death over translation of Quran

No one knows who brought the book to the mosque, or at least no one dares say. The pocket-size translation of the Quran has already landed six men in prison in Afghanistan and left two of them begging judges to spare their lives. They're accused of modifying the Quran and their fate could be decided Sunday in court ... more  Add a comment

Google eyes Kindle with Mobile Book service
Google has launched a mobile version of its Book Search application, in a move which could prove particularly uncomfortable for Amazon and Sony. The free application gives Android and iPhone users access to over 1.5 million out of copyright texts from authors including Austen, Dickens and Shakespeare ... more  Add a comment

Book-stealing: want to buy a hot read?
As the annual list of Britain's most borrowed library books is revealed, we compile another Top Ten: the books most often stolen from shops ... more  Add a comment

"Ancient" Syriac bible found in Cyprus
Authorities in northern Cyprus believe they have found an ancient version of the Bible written in Syriac, a dialect of the native language of Jesus. The manuscript was found in a police raid on suspected antiquity smugglers. Turkish Cypriot police testified in a court hearing they believe the manuscript could be about 2,000 years old ... more  Add a comment

Blaze threatens historic records at College of Arms
Heraldry records of Britain's most eminent families were today under threat after a fire broke out at the 17th-century building storing them ... more  Add a comment


05.02.09.
Bookdealer jailed for plundering Rothschild library

David Slade who stole rare volumes valued at more that £230,000 from the Rothschild family after being hired to catalogue its private collection was jailed roday for two years and four months ... more  Add a comment

Darwin's home opens with special anniversary show
Next week a new display will open at Down House, where Charles Darwin lived and worked for 40 years. It will feature rare original objects, including manuscripts and notebooks written by him during his epic voyage on HMS Beagle ... more  Add a comment

‘This isn’t all about money’
It is tempting to describe the output of Kraken Opus as the ultimate in coffee table books – but you would need a heavily reinforced coffee table. These enormous books are limited editions on subjects such as Manchester United (the venture’s first publication), the fashion designer Dame Vivienne Westwood and the Super Bowl. The cheap ones retail for thousands of pounds each. The expensive ones ... more  Add a comment

Brittany's Booktown
Bienvenue à Bécherel, Brittany's booktown, with 750 residents, one bakery and 15 booksellers. Most of the bookshops in town operate out of stately granite buildings that once housed the residences and weaving ateliers of wealthy linen merchants. The shops are located within minutes of each other in the center's lower and upper squares and short side streets ... more  Add a comment


04.02.09.
Bookseller stole £230,000 from Rothschilds

A bookseller from Bristol has pleaded guilty to stealing rare books worth more than £230,000 from one of the world's most powerful financiers. David Slade, a former president of the UK's Antiquarian Booksellers Association (ABA), admitted taking 68 books from Sir Evelyn de Rothschild over a seven year period ... more  Add a comment

Amazon's Kindle iPod of the book world
Online retailer Amazon.com could see revenue related to its "Kindle" e-book reader reach beyond $1.2 billion by 2010 -- over 4 percent of Amazon's revenue for the same year, Citigroup said. "The Kindle has become the iPod of the book world," analyst Mark Mahaney said ... more  Add a comment

Potter author made French knight
Harry Potter author JK Rowling has been made a knight of the Legion of Honour, France's highest civilian award ... more  Add a comment

Persian manuscripts to travel world
Iran's Documents and National Library Organization is to exhibit pictures from exquisite manuscripts in ten countries around the world ... more  Add a comment

£40,000 Spider-Man comic to to be donated
The BBC presenter Jonathan Ross will donate one of the world's rarest comics - a £40,000 Spider-Man cartoon strip - to Comic Relief ... more  Add a comment


03.02.09.
E-Book interest 'doubles'

Interest in e-books has sharply increased during the past year, with internet searches doubling in 12 months, according to research agency Hitwise ... more  Add a comment

Schools becoming 'anti-reading' zones
Children's love of books is being killed off by schools turning libraries into literature-free "learning resource centres", according to an awarding-winning author ... more  Add a comment

Book world's silence helps tome raiders
Known as the "Tome Raider", he also goes by the aliases Mr Santoro or David Fletcher. A notorious gentleman thief in the rarefied world of antiquarian books, he has slipped through the hands of the police, is wanted and at large ... more  Add a comment

How the fanzine refused to die
Blogs are the cheapest, fastest and easiest way to get your music writing out there – but that hasn't stopped a new generation of writers picking up the stapler and putting out a fanzine ... more  Add a comment

 
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