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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.

March 2009 Skip Free Registration

31.03.09.
Hidden treasures in antique books

In a cramped bookstore in Istanbul, ragged bindings and haggard leather spines line the shelves. If it is not apparent from the condition of these books, it is clear from the delicate manner in which these books are handled that they are historical artifacts. The Ottoman Empire, long gone, still persists with a presence in Istanbul’s antique bookshops and in the eyes of enthusiasts ... more  Add a comment

Heritage grant set to restore Scott's home
Reading is the best way to relax and even six minutes can be enough to reduce the stress levels by more than two thirds, according to new research. And it works better and faster than other methods to calm frazzled nerves such as listening to music, going for a walk or settling down with a cup of tea, research found ... more  Add a comment

The written history of horology
If collectors of antique horological books are a rare breed, specialist auctions of historical books on the art of measuring time are even rarer. But on May 26 and 27, the Parisian auctioneer and horology expert Hervé Chayette will disperse the vast working library of the Milanese horological historian Giuseppe Brusa at the Hôtel Drouot in Paris, proving again that Drouot remains a treasure trove for the most esoteric finds ... more  Add a comment


30.03.09.
Reading 'can help reduce stress'

Reading is the best way to relax and even six minutes can be enough to reduce the stress levels by more than two thirds, according to new research. And it works better and faster than other methods to calm frazzled nerves such as listening to music, going for a walk or settling down with a cup of tea, research found ... more  Add a comment

Google makes a grab for e-books
Google has joined forces with Sony to take on the staid world of book publishing. The internet giant aims to make up to 7m books that it has scanned from the world’s libraries available for customers to download onto an electronic reading device, known as an e-reader ... more  Add a comment

TS Eliot's damning verdict on Animal Farm
It is regularly voted one of the best books of all time, a timeless piece of satire which has never gone out of print in the 64 years since it was first published. But when George Orwell sent Animal Farm to TS Eliot for consideration, the poet - then a director of Faber and Faber - rejected it as "unconvincing" ... more  Add a comment


27.03.09.
Oddest Book Title prize goes to treatise on fromage frais

He has written more than 200,000 - yes, 200,000 - books to date, but today marked a first for Professor Philip M Parker, who picked up the Diagram prize for the Oddest Book Title of the Year for his enticing The 2009-2014 World Outlook for 60-Milligram Containers of Fromage Frais ... more  Add a comment

Top team brings old books back to life
Rare and historic books currently being conserved by an international team of specialists at the University of Ulster’s Magee campus give a fascinating insight into life in the North-West hundreds of years ago. he books are part of the Church of Ireland Derry and Raphoe Diocesan Collection, which dates back to the 15th century ... more  Add a comment

Erica Wagner boxes up her well-loved books
How hard it is to part a book-lover from her books. If you came to my house - or even my office - I doubt that you would be surprised to find that nearly every available flat surface was crowded with the things. Well, fair's fair - reading's my job, after all. But even if it weren't, I promise you'd see no difference. Because once you love a book, you want to keep it with you for ever. Its mere presence on a shelf can inspire you ... more  Add a comment


26.03.09.
The Big Sleep: Raymond Chandler, 50 Years Dead

Raymond Chandler died 50 years ago this week. On March 26, 1959, at 3:50 in the afternoon, he took his last breath in the Scripps Clinic in La Jolla, having drunk himself to death, though the official cause of his demise was listed as pneumonia. He was 71 years old, an unhappy and lonely man who’d finally run out on his luck ... more  Add a comment

Rare Burns book found at museum
A rare book which belonged to Robert Burns has been discovered at a museum in South Ayrshire. The copy of "A Select Collection of Original Scottish Airs", which was co-edited by the poet, was found at the Burns Birthplace Museum in Alloway ... more  Add a comment


25.03.09.
$600,000 stolen book to be returned

A New York court ordered a book collector to return a 16th-century volume valued at $600,000 to a museum in Stuttgart, more than six decades after it was stolen by a U.S. army captain at the end of World War II ... more  Add a comment

Mark Twain rises again
The centenary of his death takes place next year but he is in the news again with the publication of a "new" short story, The Undertaker's Tale in The Strand magazine ... more  Add a comment

Gospels to return to North East
The Lindisfarne Gospels are to be returned to the north-east of England for a limited period, the British Library has confirmed ... more  Add a comment


23.03.09.
Darwin as student

Charles Darwin scholars know a little more about the scientist's days as a student due to the recent discovery of some dusty old books in a storage room at the University of Cambridge ... more  Add a comment

Stalker who loved Dickens
Charles Dickens was greeted like a modern-day rock star when he toured the United States in 1867-8: not only did he perform his work to excitable crowds and earn a fortune in the process, but according to a contemporary diarist he was also stalked by an obsessive fan ... more  Add a comment

Women more avid readers
A study of reading habits showed almost half of women are 'page turners' who finish a book soon after starting it compared to only 26 per cent of men ... more  Add a comment

Sylvia Plath's son kills himself
The son of poets Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath has killed himself, 46 years after his mother gassed herself while he slept, according to a report today ... more  Add a comment


19.03.09.
World's third largest Quran sells

The manuscript which is 80cm by 120cm was displayed in the Antiquarian Book Fair which is being hosted for the first time at the event. The Quran, which was produced in 1890 in Indonesia, came about as a result of a request from wealthy people in Arabia. Indonesian calligraphers were known at that time for their high quality artwork, Ebergard B. Talke, a German antiquarian who was selling the Quran told Gulf News ... more  Add a comment

£57m library will showcase mediaeval manuscripts
The north-east’s oldest and most valuable books will be given a secure home in a custom-built conservation studio, thanks to a multimillion-pound gift. Aberdeen University’s new £57million library, due to open to students and the public in 2011, will include a specialist centre to safeguard and showcase mediaeval books and manuscripts ... more  Add a comment

Islamic manuscripts online
Princeton University has placed a new digital library of 200 Islamic manuscripts online for scholars to consult and study ... more  Add a comment


18.03.09.
British Library mislays 9,000 books

More than 9,000 books are missing from the British Library, including Renaissance treatises on theology and alchemy, a medieval text on astronomy, first editions of 19th- and 20th-century novels, and a luxury edition of Mein Kampf produced in 1939 to celebrate Hitler's 50th birthday. The library believes almost all have not been stolen but rather mislaid among its 650km of shelves and 150m items – although some have not been seen in well over half a century ... more  Add a comment

The Bodleian's books get a new home
Millions of books from Oxford's Bodleian Library, one of the largest and most famous in the world, will soon be on the move – from the dreaming spires of Oxford to the rather more pragmatic surroundings of an industrial estate on the outskirts of Swindon ... more  Add a comment

Academic 'discovers' six works by William Shakespeare
Dr John Casson claims to have unearthed Shakespeare's first published poem, the Phaeton sonnet, his first comedy, Mucedorus, and his first tragedies, Locrine and Arden of Faversham ... more  Add a comment

1st Superman comic book sells for $317,200
A rare copy of the first comic book featuring Superman has sold for $317,200 in an Internet auction. The previous owner had bought it for less than a buck ... more  Add a comment

Arbus photos suit is settled
Bayo Ogunsanya, a collector and private dealer of African-Americana and other items, said that on February 17 his lawsuit against Robert C. "Bob" Langmuir of Pennsylvania reached an out-of-court settlement. Ogunsanya filed the suit in April 2008 in federal district court in Brooklyn, New York, where he lives. He did so after learning that photos he had sold to Langmuir for $3500 in 2003 were works by Diane Arbus. The Arbus material was part of a much larger group of photos, notebooks, pamphlets, handbills, and other ephemera that Ogunsanya had bought the previous year at a sale of unclaimed items from a Bronx storage facility ... more  Add a comment


13.03.09.
Classic gags discovered in ancient Roman joke book

Celebrated classics professor Mary Beard has brought to light a volume more than 1,600 years old, which she says shows the Romans not to be the "pompous, bridge-building toga wearers" they're often seen as, but rather a race ready to laugh at themselves ... more  Add a comment

Paper chase at Papermania Plus
Once you get used to the idea that you would never, in one mere weekend, have time to peruse even 10% of all the amazing items tucked into the boxes, bins, piles, albums, loose-leaf notebooks, folders, and other containers of the approximately 160 dealers who do this show every January and August—let alone examine every item they have selected for display in glass cases or on pegboards—you can start to relax a little, if you try ... more  Add a comment


11.03.09.
Priceless 15th-century scrolls unveiled

Priceless scrolls that are believed to date back to the 15th century were unveiled in Aberdeen yesterday in celebration of a Jewish festival ... more  Add a comment

Tributes pour in for popular 'Book Lady'
She raised some £34,000 by selling secondhand books for as little as 10p each during some 17 years. Her presence at car boot sales starting at the former Bognor Regis bus station site, at the Arun Leisure Centre in Felpham, Chichester railway station car park and, until last March, at Ford, will be fondly remembered by many visitors ... more  Add a comment


10.03.09.
America turns to prophet of self-interest as crash hits

Sales of Ayn Rand's 1957 book Atlas Shrugged - a hymn in praise of radical individualism, extreme self-interest and laissez-faire capitalism - are surging as the crisis deepens, according to TitleZ, a service that tracks sales trends on Amazon ... more  Add a comment

Rare manuscript books go on show in Norwich
For a century they have been kept in private but now, for the first time, the Norfolk public has the chance to see an exhibition of rare manuscripts books - put together by an industrialist who never received any formal schooling ... more  Add a comment

NLS damaged by water again
The National Library of Scotland on George IV Bridge was forced to close temporarily on 26 February after flooding threatened the building and its collections ... more  Add a comment

What drives people to steal precious books
Every so often a high-profile example of book theft makes the news. The crime in question does not concern hard-up students helping themselves to textbooks in Foyles. Rather it details cases of premeditated, often audacious, theft of beautiful and rare books ... more  Add a comment

NY arrest in Dead Sea Scrolls row
The son of an expert on the Dead Sea Scrolls has been arrested in New York, accused of trying to discredit one of his father's academic rivals ... more  Add a comment


09.03.09.
Can Bonham Carter bring Blyton back from the dead?

Here we go again - another famous dead person, another BBC4 drama biopic. Will the corporation's new film about Enid Blyton, starring Helena Bonham Carter, do the business or have you had enough of the BBC rummaging in the dirty linen of yet another celebrated, badly impersonated British personality? ... more  Add a comment

History book is pulped amid great mystery
"I am afraid I have agreed not to say a word about it," the amiable television presenter tells Mandrake. Pan Macmillan has issued an "urgent" stock recall notice in which it said that shops needed to return all unsold copies immediately for unspecified "legal reasons" ... more  Add a comment

Down and out in Paris
For half a century, a crowded bookshop on the Left Bank has offered food and a bed to penniless authors - the only rule is that they read a book a day. Jeanette Winterson revisits Shakespeare and Company ... more  Add a comment

New evidence of Poe's mint julep shame
Rare book dealer David Grayling says investors are turning to the bookshelves for security during the economic crisis ... more  Add a comment


06.03.09.
Invest in books to keep your money safe

Rare book dealer David Grayling says investors are turning to the bookshelves for security during the economic crisis ... more  Add a comment

Long-lost manuscript available to historians
A historic manuscript that had been missing for more than 100 years is now on show to the public after being donated to the Derbyshire records office. The survey of manors in the county dates back to the 16th century and disappeared when it was loaned to a historian from Wirksworth in 1905 ... more  Add a comment

Royal pages go on display at Bodleian
Books once owned by four medieval and Tudor queens went on display at the Bodleian Library in Oxford to celebrate World Book Day ... more  Add a comment


05.03.09.
Trashy book amnesty

We like to pretend to have read great literature to sound clever. But what about those well-thumbed novels we HAVE read, but are less keen to mention? Time to 'fess up ... more  Add a comment

Book sale is halted
Books, sketches and watercolours from the historic Le Marchant Library were shipped to the UK to be auctioned at Gorringes’ Lewes auction house ... more  Add a comment

The city without a memory
The German city of Cologne woke up yesterday without a memory. As police used tracker dogs to try to unearth suvivors beneath the collapsed archives building, engineers were trying to work out how the 1971 institution – once regarded as a state-of-the-art documentation centre, copied across the world – could have simply collapsed, as if hit by a missile ... more  Add a comment


04.03.09.
Bawdy Burns poem published again

A bawdy poem by Robert Burns is to be reprinted to raise money for charity and mark the year of Homecoming. The Fornicator's Court, which was probably written in 1786, was found in Sir Walter Scott's private library at Abbotsford in the Scottish Borders ... more  Add a comment

GRI launches new online cataloging initiative
The Getty Research Institute (GRI) announces the launch of Uncovering Archives and Rare Photographs: Two Models for Creating Accession-level Finding Aids Using Archivists’ Toolkit, a cataloging project that will allow scholars across disciplines to access GRI archives and rare photographs previously out of reach ... more  Add a comment


03.03.09.
Author's home draws 'green' crowd

Nearly 1,000 people visited the home of novelist Agatha Christie, which was opened to the public for the first time on Saturday ... more  Add a comment

Artist gives away vast library of sex, drugs and classics
One of the world’s most dedicated bibliophiles is planning to give away a multi-million-dollar collection of 20th-century literary treasures, many of which have never been displayed in public ... more  Add a comment

Books disappearing from schools
Schools are "tearing up" books to teach children about literature using basic worksheets, according to leading author, Michael Rosen ... more  Add a comment

Self portrait discovered hidden in manuscript
Italian researchers believe they have unearthed a previously unknown self-portrait by Leonardo da Vinci drawn when the artist was a young man ... more  Add a comment

Book lending falls by half as libraries 'dumb down'
Book borrowing from libraries has dropped by half in less than 15 years, it was revealed yesterday. Records show increasing numbers of people are going to their local library to surf the net or send e-mails ... more  Add a comment

Sotheby's in 'Da Vinci code' storm
In a saga that could have come from the pages of The Da Vinci Code, it involves the Roman Catholic Church and claims that two Sotheby's staff helped illegally to export three mediaeval documents which had been stolen in Italy and brought to London some 30 years ago ... more  Add a comment

 
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