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November 2009
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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.

December 2009 Skip Free Registration

20.12.09.
No news today …

I'm simply too busy immediately before and after Christmas to do anything other than run our bookshop, so no news here until January 2nd. Until then, I hope you all have a happy Christmas and a peaceful New Year.
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18.12.09.
Jarndyce aims to broaden appeal of antiquarian books
The antiquarian market seems like a secret society, closed to anyone who isn't in the know and in possession of a limitless budget. The bookshop Jarndyce, opposite the British Museum, almost confirms this stereotype. For starters, you have to ring a bell to gain entry. Yet the shop is bustling on a weekday morning ... more  Add a comment

Dig fails to find poet Lorca's remains
Excavations in southern Spain have failed to find the remains of Spanish poet Frederico Garcia Lorca, whose 1936 killing became a symbol of a brutal civil war, a forensic report said on Friday ... more  Add a comment

Five go mad as Blyton book sells for £600
A Scottish charity shop was celebrating yesterday after selling a five shilling (25p) copy of an Enid Blyton Famous Five mystery for almost £600 ... more  Add a comment

"Through Looking-Glass" first edition sells for $115,000
A first edition of Lewis Carroll's classic book "Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There" -- dedicated to the real life Alice who inspired the story -- was sold at a U.S. auction for $115,000, auctioneers said on Thursday ... more  Add a comment


17.12.09.
Erotic books come out of the closet
Simon Finch is undoubtedly a maverick of the rare and antiquarian book world. Having started out as a book trader at university, his reputation has spread like wildfire, allowing him to break the manacles of convention and launch his own book store bearing the slogan “Aspreys is now trading opposite Simon Finch: Rare Books” ... more  Add a comment

‘Supertramp’ poet’s clock to return to Newport
As the birthplace of poet W H Davies, Newport already boasts a striking statue in his honour - but next year a clock given to him on behalf of residents will come back to the city ... more  Add a comment

Put em right on Enid Blyton
The enthusiasm with which parents are buying books featuring old-fashioned discrimination leaves a bad taste in the mouth ... more  Add a comment


16.12.09.
Rare Alice books up for auction
Several rare early editions of Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll are due to be sold at auction in the US. One of the books belonged to 10-year-old Alice Liddell, the Oxford don's inspiration for Alice, and is expected to fetch up to £90,000 ... more  Add a comment

Dickens toothpick fetches $9,000 in New York auction
An ivory and gold toothpick once owned by Charles Dickens has sold at auction in New York City for $9,150 (£5,625) ... more  Add a comment

Temple of tomes is no tomb
Edinburgh began its collection of books before it officially became a university. Clement Little, a 16th-century advocate, was a keen supporter of an educational establishment for Scotland's capital to rival the already existing Glasgow, St Andrews and Aberdeen universities. He donated his book collection in 1580, two years before Edinburgh was inaugurated as a university ... more  Add a comment

Plaintive paper works that promise a fairy-tale ending
For most people, fairy-tales stay firmly put on the page. But for artist Su Blackwell, who creates whimsical, intricate paper-cut sculptures from second-hand books, the magical, mythical folkloric creatures spill over into everyday life ... more  Add a comment


14.12.09.
Harold Pinter’s library book returned after 59 years
In 1950 Harold Pinter borrowed a first edition book by Samuel Beckett from the Central Library in Bermondsey. There was a 59-year pause before the library saw it again. Pinter had no intention of returning Murphy — describing the prolonged loan as an act that he had “never regretted” — but now the antiquarian bookseller that sold Pinter’s library has returned the book so that he can buy it back off Southwark Council for £2,000 and reunite it with the rest of the collection ... more  Add a comment

War is declared in the world of ebooks
Random House US's letter to literary agents claiming the digital rights to its backlist has stirred up a hornet's nest ... more  Add a comment

Left Bank Books to live on?
Left Bank Books, may not close at all. Unlike similar bookstores that have recently closed — the Oscar Wilde Bookshop is the latest example — Mr. Herzinger said that he now planned to sign a five-year lease in the coming weeks to move to a larger space in the neighborhood, just a few blocks away. “There’s pride involved,” he said between sips of a cappuccino at a nearby coffee shop. “I’m proud of that shop” ... more  Add a comment

Miniature Gospel of Mark codex a forgery
The McCrone Group, Inc. today announced their microanalytical examination of an illustrated miniature manuscript (or codex) of the Gospel of Mark, termed the "Archaic Mark," helped identify the manuscript as a forgery ... more  Add a comment


11.12.09.
BBC and British Library to broaden access to archives
The BBC and British Library today signed off on a joint project to give public digital access to their huge combined archives. The Library contains more than 150m items, plus 1m hours of BBC TV and radio footage dating back as far as 1922 ... more  Add a comment

Why the best children's books are conservative
Yesterday’s news that Thomas the Tank Engine has been branded misogynist and Right-wing by a Canadian academic was very much not a surprise ... more  Add a comment


10.12.09.
Scotland's oldest book goes on display

Scotland's oldest book, a medieval Celtic psalter with vivid illustrations in green, red, purple and gold, will be put on public display today for the first time in 1,000 years ... more  Add a comment

Rare words 'author's fingerprint'
Analyses of classic authors' works provide a way to "linguistically fingerprint" them, researchers say ... more  Add a comment

Book of Hours: Incomparable value
Margaret Hodge raises prospect of libraries expanding role beyond lending books in major reconsideration of policy ... more  Add a comment

E-readers not a 'must-have' Xmas present
With just two weeks until Christmas it is unlikely people will be receiving e-readers in their stocking this year, according to research ... more  Add a comment

Exhibition
The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, The Folio Society Gallery, British Library, London, December 14 2009 – February 21 2010. It documents the poem's origins in 11th century Persia, its translation in the Victorian era and its subsequent rise to international acclaim ... more  Add a comment


09.12.09.
Book returned to Ohio library after 60 years

The biography "Napoleon" by Emil Ludwig recently arrived at Toledo's main library, with a brief note that read: "I removed this book from your stacks in 1949 and did not check it out. I apologize. It's an excellent book and in good condition" ... more  Add a comment

Rare book trading cards on Santa's top shelf
ABAA modern firsts specialists, Between the Covers (BTC), in association with Biblioctopus, has created 228 trading cards of the classic, most desirable rare books and packaged them into three sets of seventy-six cards each. Like baseball cards, the upper panel features a great portrait, the rear panel providing vital stats: Place, Date, Edition, Binding, Condition, and selling Price, along with a brief description ... more  Add a comment

Travel book sails to record $758,000 at Bloomsbury
A world record for a travel book was set when Samuel de Champlain’s Les Voyages du Sieur de Champlain Xaintongeois ... Paris: Chez Jean Berjon, 1613, sold for double the high estimate at $758,000, inclusive of the premium. The renowned Siebert copy of this landmark of French Americana and New World Exploration is a work whose importance is perhaps only surpassed by its scarcity. It is a first edition in complete and unsophisticated condition and is a pioneering work in ethnography and the first accurate mapping of the New England coast. The book was purchased by London book dealer Peter Harrington ... more  Add a comment

The first of the megabooksellers
James Lackington's Dome of the Muses set the template for a great bookshop two centuries ago ... more  Add a comment

WWII veteran to return Hitler's art book
Sixty-four years after John Pistone brought the album home to Ohio, the 87-year-old has learned its full significance: It's part of a series compiled for Hitler featuring art he wanted for his "Fuhrermuseum," a planned museum in Linz, Austria, Hitler's hometown ... more  Add a comment


08.12.09.
What were your worst books of the decade?

It's all very well to make lists of the decade's best books, but surely the worst books would give future generations a truer glimpse of the noughties. Let's name and shame ... more  Add a comment

An historic find, surrounded by controversy
Korea: Discovery of an ancient Hangul manuscript triggers lawsuits and a police investigation ... more  Add a comment

Artist’s work ‘too negative’ for University library
An exhibition to mark the reopening of one of Scotland’s most important libraries will feature a magnificent medieval Psalter, dubbed Scotland’s Book of Kells — but it will go ahead without a new, rather more minimalist work commissioned from Douglas Gordon, the Turner Prize-winning artist ... more  Add a comment

Egypt demands British Museum return Rosetta Stone
Egypt’s most senior antiquities official will visit Britain tomorrow to push on with a campaign to have the Rosetta Stone returned from the British Museum to its native country ... more  Add a comment


04.12.09.
China's International Antiquarian Book Fair
China's entry into the International League of Antiquarian Booksellers (ILAB) in October is opening new worlds of literature and thought to readers on the Chinese mainland and in the West, says Paul Feain, an Australian bookseller who has come here for the International Antiquarian Book Fair which opens today ... more  Add a comment

All that's old is new again
Publication on Demand is allowing everyday readers to access rare books they could not normally afford ... more  Add a comment

Art v books: a critical double standard
We don't rubbish the Booker shortlist, or demand that it should be banned – yet we do when it comes to the Turner prize. Why? ... more  Add a comment

Books as investment
I have a catalogue of the great bookseller G. F. Sims with me on the road. It is from 1971 and could give an insight on books as an investment. If you imagined that you had bought a dozen or so books from this catalogue and were now selling them nearly 40 years later, what kind of return would you be getting on your initial outlay? Bear in mind that we have the benefit of hindsight and also that even if one had got on the phone at 8.00 on the morning of the catalogue's first day the books may not have been available ... more  Add a comment


03.12.09.
New ILAB website makes unofficial debut
The International League of Antiquarian Booksellers (ILAB)’s website redesign is now live on the Internet ... more  Add a comment

Rare 1st Poe book could fetch record at NY auction
When a teenage Edgar Allan Poe moved to Boston to find work in 1827, he was eager to launch his literary career, re-establish his roots in the city of his birth and distance himself from his foster father in Richmond, Va. The result was his first book, "Tamerlane and Other Poems," virtually unnoticed when published but now one of the world's rarest and most sought-after texts ... more  Add a comment

Mysterious Voynich manuscript is genuine, scientists find
An mysterious unintelligible manuscript that has puzzled researchers for decades has been dated to the 15th century and found to be genuine, according to US studies that were presented Thursday by Austrian broadcaster ORF ... more  Add a comment


02.12.09.
Archaeologists to dig up Shakespeare’s rubbish
A team of archaeologists began digging on the site of Shakespeare’s last home yesterday in a search for clues that might reveal more about his life ... more  Add a comment

How to cook porpoise, and other 600-year-old recipies
Even the most adventurous celebrity chef would probably draw the line at cooking porpoise, but according to a 600-year-old cookbook it was once on the menu for Richard II ... more  Add a comment

Old books near last chapter
Today there are only about 50 stores around the (Korean) nation that sell old and rare books, and the number continues to dwindle ... more  Add a comment

Anyone else bored with books of the year?
They might have served a useful function once, but these annual lists have been made irrelevant by the blogosphere ... more  Add a comment

Cathedral city could show Gospels
There are hopes that the city of Durham could play host to a three-month visit by the Lindisfarne Gospels ... more  Add a comment

Sale of George Washington letter could set record
A signed four-page letter from George Washington to his nephew is expected to break sales records in one of two manuscript auctions at Christie's in New York this week ... more  Add a comment

Saving Africa's precious written heritage
A drizzle of dust and sand falls over Ahmed Saloum Boularaf's fingers as he gently lifts the ancient, camel-skin bound manuscripts from a wooden box and puts them on a desk in his makeshift library in a mud-brick house close to the centre of Timbuktu. "Termites, rain and mice," he said in an accusing voice, brushing a few flecks of 15th Century parchment from his jacket ... more  Add a comment


01.12.09.
Why shouldn't libraries sell books, asks minister
Margaret Hodge raises prospect of libraries expanding role beyond lending books in major reconsideration of policy ... more  Add a comment

US author Littell wins Bad Sex in fiction prize
A cringe-inducing passage which compares a sexual encounter to battle with an one-eyed mythological monster was awarded Britain's Bad Sex in Fiction Prize ... more  Add a comment

Sir Arnold Wesker's house for sale
Playwright Sir Arnold Wesker is moving on from his Welsh hills hideaway, reports Bernice Davison ... more  Add a comment

Anne of Green Gables expected to set auction record
One of the books most coveted by collectors of Canadian literary history — a first edition copy of Anne of Green Gables — is to be sold at auction next week in New York for what could be a record price ... more  Add a comment

No country for old typewriters
Cormac McCarthy has written more than a dozen novels, several screenplays, two plays, two short stories, countless drafts, letters and more — and nearly every one of them was tapped out on a portable Olivetti manual typewriter he bought in a Knoxville, Tenn., pawnshop around 1963 for $50. Christie’s, which plans to auction the machine on Friday, estimated that it would fetch between $15,000 and $20,000 ... more  Add a comment

Baudelaire poems fetch record price
An original signed copy of Charles Baudelaire's brooding romantic poems "Les Fleurs de Mal" sold for a record 775,000 euros at an auction in Paris on Tuesday ... more  Add a comment

 
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