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Book News - TheBookGuide's selection of book related news stories from around the world.

March 2004

31.03.04. Book role auction nudges £20,000
An auction giving members of the public the chance to bid to appear in a book by a best-selling British author has raised almost £20,000...more

31.03.04. Hollett & Son close their Sedbergh shop
We are taking this action now to disassociate our business from the proposed branding of Sedbergh as a Book Town...more

31.03.04. Tolkien Books Smash Auction Hopes
Rare volumes of JRR Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings trilogy, including two copies signed by the author, fetched twice their estimated value at auction today...more

30.03.04. Michael Foot pledges Hazlitt library to trust
Mr Foot, 90, confirmed yesterday that the cream of the 1,000 volumes filling much of a book-lined room in his Hampstead home will pass to the Wordsworth Trust when, as he put it, he "conks out"...more

29.03.04. Artists create exhibit using hateful literature
Tim Holmes is seeking artists from all over the country and maybe the world to contribute pieces to a traveling exhibit made solely from the racist books ...more

29.03.04. Charity shop given rare 'Lord of the Rings'
A charity shop manager said today she was amazed to receive a set of first edition Lord of the Rings books handed over by an anonymous customer...more

29.03.04 .Folklorist's priceless collection finds a home
The lifework of the late legendary American folklorist Alan Lomax has been acquired by the American Folklife Center in the Library of Congress...more

29.03.04. British comic pair honoured with Paris show
Which literary characters have done the most to promote Britain across the Channel? Not Hercule Poirot, Oliver Twist or even Noddy, but two middle-aged toffs whose favourite expressions are "By Jove" and "The devil". Their names? Blake and Mortimer ...more

28.03.04. 'Aladdin's Cave' of rare books found in home
When retired accountant WS (Bill) Adams died in June last year aged 84, even his neighbours had little inkling that his home was a shrine to the printed word, containing thousands of rare books collected over the course of a lifetime...more

27.03.04. The sad, mad life of Henry James
Colm Tóibín, author of the Booker-shortlisted The Blackwater Lightship, does a fine line in repression. With that in mind, it seems natural that Tóibín should turn to Henry James for his next fictional enterprise, for James was a master at withholding information...more

27.03.04. Edinburgh's World City of Literature bid
Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson, Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, Jim Hawkins and Long John Silver, even Toad and Ratty . . . they are immortal names in the world of adult and children’s literature, and they all originated in Edinburgh...more

27.03.04. Harry Potter and the adult market
JK Rowlings
publishers will launch a renewed bid to sell her first four Harry Potter books to grown-ups this summer, issuing them for the first time as "adult hardbacks"...more

26.03.04. Libraries use Internet to entice readers
Patrons of the Dougherty County Library open their e-mail every day to find a chapter or so of a book. The hope is that these "five-minute reads" will get them to check the book out — or buy it...more

26.03.04. Sony launches true electronic book
The Hitch-Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy - the real one, not that Douglas Adams novel thingy - just came a step closer. Sony has launched its first electronic book using what it calls "electronic paper"...more

26.03.04. Rare books to go for £100,000
Hundreds of valuable books from the private library of the late WS Adams, one of Edinburgh's most prominent accountants, are to be sold at auction later this month and are expected to fetch more than £100,000. ...more

26.03.04. Anyone can now sell books online
Used bookstores used to be just about the only place to sell your old books. But times of have changed. Consumer Reports says now anyone can sell books online for fast cash...more

25.03.04. Distribution of Bible prompts complaint
A public school let an evangelical group distribute Protestant versions of the Bible to students, prompting complaints from a Roman Catholic mother...more

25.03.04. Library Purchases Rare Items In London
Baylor University’s Armstrong Browning Library recently added a number of major acquisitions to its world-famous literary holdings through the purchase of 25 lots from the sale of the Halsted B. Vander Poel Collection of English Literature at Christie’s in London...more

25.03.04. Children's writer confesses mid-trial
A celebrated children's writer dramatically changed his plea in mid-trial yesterday and admitted 11 indecent assaults on young girl fans during the height of his fame in the 1960s...more

25.03.04. Free books for children
Three free books each have been given to 460 children in Wales as part of the Reading is Fundamental project...more

25.03.04. Mystic Pages
The Rosicrucian Museum hosts a new show of rare of esoteric volumes...more

24.03.04. Potter powers Bloomsbury profits
New editions of JK Rowling's Harry Potter books - including versions in ancient Greek and Gaelic - are being planned by publisher Bloomsbury...more

24.03.04. Holding on with hope in the heart of Tampa
You are in no danger of becoming a millionaire when you run a secondhand bookstore. You do it because you love it. And you have to be half-crazy to be in the business in Tampa's ever-moribund downtown...more

24.03.04. Elvish is studied here
For 'Lord of the Rings' pilgrims, the journey to Middle-earth ends in Milwaukee, the home of many of J.R.R. Tolkien's best-loved works ...more

23.03.04. Roman Polanski plans 'Oliver Twist' film
Oscar-winning director Roman Polanski says his next film will be based on Charles Dickens' classic novel "Oliver Twist"...more

23.03.04. Author 'sexually assaulted young girls'
A children's author befriended and groomed a young girl who was fascinated by his work to sexually assault and rape her over a five-year period, a court heard today...more

23.03.04. Newly found Rudyard Kipling story
The spring issue of the Kipling Society journal has been published at the end of March since it was founded in 1927, nine years before the author Rudyard Kipling's death. But this year - amid secrecy and excitement...more

23.03.04. Turn books to bedding
Households are being encouraged to turn telephone books into bedding in an initiative starting this month...more

23.03.04. Father of black history's library acquired
The Special Collections and Archives Division has acquired the library of African-American historian Carter G. Woodson, the first person to open the long-ignored field of black history to American schools and scholars ...more

22.03.04. Self-publishing will spur book industry
If Andy Kessler had published Wall Street Meat the traditional way, it would be hitting bookstore shelves right about now...more

22.03.04. Charity donors role in the next Pullman novel
Twenty novelists are giving readers the opportunity to buy literary immortality by bidding at a charity auction for a part in their forthcoming books. ...more

22.03.04. Librarian defends pot-growing how-to book
The director of the Teton County Library has staunchly defended carrying a book about marijuana growing ...more

21.03.04. Library anger over Murray archive row
The academic at the centre of the row over the National Library of Scotland’s attempt to win the biggest lottery grant in UK history has been accused of performing a volte-face as the controversy descends into a quagmire of claims, counter-claims, suspicion and legal threats...more

21.03.04. Conan Doyle sale disputed
The British Library is urging a halt to the planned sale of 3,000 personal papers of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle in May by auction house Christie's in London, England, until a dispute over the papers' true owners -- one of whom may be the Toronto Public Library -- has been resolved...more

20.03.04. Life's snippets gathered by collectors
Related to the word "ephemeral," or "short-lived," "ephemera" refers to all kinds of paper-based memorabilia collected by people like Ragsdale ...more

20.03.04. The Bookseller
Nicholas Clee on the latest news from the publishing industry ...more

20.03.04. Postcard exhibit traces change in Japan's culture
They recall the bygone days, pre-telephone, fax and e-mail, when people actually corresponded by mail. Vintage postcards offer a portal to the past, with images of grand hotels, riverboats and railroad stations, department stores and movie stars. But do we appreciate them as art?...more

20.03.04. Battle for rare books
THE University of WA is locked in a legal battle with the daughter-in-law of the late author Peter Cowan for control of a historic book collection that dates back 400 years...more

20.03.04. Move to stop criminals profiting from books
David Blunkett, the home secretary, yesterday pledged to try to stop criminals like Ian Huntley and Maxine Carr profiting from their crimes...more

19.03.04. 'Pop Culture' auction house sold
Baltimore businessman Steve Geppi announced his purchase of Hake's Americana & Collectibles, a leading "pop culture" collectible auction-house. Terms of the private company transaction were not disclosed...more

19.03.04. Web craze for short course in literature
Can you really distil the great works of literature into a paragraph? The exercise is as old as the hills but now the craze is said to be sweeping the internet...more

18.03.04. Earliest printed book put online by British Library
A website allowing scholars, historians and anyone interested in the history and significance of printing to explore in detail the British Library's rare copies of the Gutenberg Bible (the oldest surviving printed book produced in the Western World) has been launched...more

18.03.04. Who are the comic collectors?
A rare first edition of the Beano has been sold for £12,100, setting what is thought to be a new UK record for a comic. How can it be worth so much and who on earth would want it?...more

18.03.04. Few buyers for books by disgraced journalists
Jayson Blair and Stephen Glass, two young journalists notorious for fabricating stories, have something else in common: Both have written highly publicized books that few people are buying...more

18.03.04. A Samuel Johnson Trove Goes to Harvard
The Houghton Library at Harvard University has inherited the Donald and Mary Hyde Collection of material relating to Samuel Johnson. It is one of the world's largest and most comprehensive compilations of 18th-century rare books, manuscripts and personal correspondence...more

18.03.04. Dissident thinking on display
NEWSPAPERS, rock bands, books, pieces of art, radio channels: they are all different manifestations of samizdat, the underground genre of opinions and expression not corresponding to the official line in their aesthetics, form or content...more

18.03.04. New illustrated Dr. Seuss biography
Over the last 15 years, Cohen has amassed thousands of pieces of memorabilia that document Theodor Seuss Geisel's life and work. That collection is the basis of his new, illustrated biography, "The Seuss, the Whole Seuss and Nothing But the Seuss" (Random House, 390 pages, $35), released this month...more

17.03.04. Beano sells for £12,100
The Beano comic has been sold for a record price of £12,100 after “enormously fierce” bidding, an auction house said. The comic, dated July 30, 1938, is one of only 12 first editions of the Beano known to exist...more

17.03.04. UCLA library purchases key Wilde manuscripts
UCLA's William Andrews Clark Memorial Library has acquired a college notebook kept by the 19th-century wit, playwright and cult figure Oscar Wilde, as well as the original manuscript of his homosexual lover's autobiography...more

17.03.04. Bookshop quits Westminster
The man behind one of Westminster's most improbable hits - the Politico's bookshop in London's political village - is this week packing his bags...more

17.03.04. Domesticated Goddess
"Dying is an art," said Sylvia Plath. But so is living, and she excelled at both—not that her biographers, with one wise and big-hearted exception, have noticed...more

16.03.04. Grolier book shop to close
The book is about to close on the nation’s oldest all-poetry store, as the Grolier Poetry Book Shop is forced under by competition from chain bookstores and the Internet...more

16.03.04. Conan Doyle papers 'to fetch £2m'
A lost collection of personal papers belonging to Sherlock Holmes creator Sir Arthur Conan Doyle have been found...more

16.03.04. Orange prize longlist revels in diversity
The Orange prize for women's fiction publishes a longlist today which underlines its evolution from a British feminist ghetto towards Britain's most international literary award...more

15.03.04. Ancient map at core of new debate
A University of Minnesota library treasure is cited as evidence that Chinese explorers reached the Americas first...more

15.03.04. Library forging ahead with Murray archive bid
The National Library of Scotland is planning to buy the John Murray Archive for a reduced price of £33 million with the help of the Scottish Executive, lottery funding and the public purse...more

14.03.04. `Little Black Sambo' is not worth pain
As a child, I adored the story of Little Black Sambo. I thought Sambo incredibly brave and wily. I, too, wanted to watch tigers whirl themselves into a pool of golden butter and then eat 169 pancakes fried in that butter...more

14.03.04. Poe's literary influence is forevermore
Author Edgar Allen Poe, the creator of the modern detective story, is featured in a number of new books, both fact and fiction....more

14.03.04. Eng lit as it is now writ
Read all about it - why writing has radically changed - in Randall Stevenson's final volume of the Oxford English Literary History series, The Last of England?...more

14.03.04. Rare books highlight fly-fishing
The Toppan Library hosts an assortment of rare fishing titles equaled by only a few collections in the United States...more

13.03.04. The Bookseller
Nicholas Clee on the latest news from the publishing industry...more

13.03.04. New picture of Dr. Seuss emerges
It was the genius of Theodor Geisel, aka Dr. Seuss, to narrate his slightly surreal and beguiling world with a singular doggerel that mesmerized baby boomers, instilling in many a love of reading ...more

13.03.04. Rare books open a window on past
A rare collection of more than 7,000 books has been unearthed from beneath cobwebs and dust...more

12.03.04. Books that changed the world - for a while
Sixty years ago this week, George Orwell reviewed a work by a little-known Austrian professor and refugee from Hitler, FA Hayek. It was called The Road to Serfdom, and Orwell didn’t think much of it...more

12.03.04. Publishing mainly white and middle class
Publishers love to hype ethnic minority writers such as Zadie Smith and Monica Ali. But, behind the scenes, publishing offices are overwhelmingly white, middle class and, in the top jobs, male dominated...more

12.03.04. Bookseller at war with Tolstoy and cancer
When A. David Schwartz thought he was dying of cancer some months ago, he found a companion for his dark moments of chemotherapy and depression, a cranky old Russian who could argue the big questions of life with him: predestination, the existence of God and the mechanisms of history...more

11.03.04. New book about slave raids on Europe
North African pirates abducted and enslaved more than 1 million Europeans between 1530 and 1780 in a series of raids which depopulated coastal towns from Sicily to Cornwall, according to new research. ...more

11.03.04. Dan Dare reprint series announced
In March 2004, Titan books will begin publishing a new hardcover, library edition series of graphic novels collecting the classic British comic strip Dan Dare: Pilot of the Future, taken from famed boys adventure comic The Eagle...more

11.03.04. A paradise of pages
More than 115 vendors will have stacks of books, maps, autographs and other paper collectibles at the Florida Antiquarian Book Fair in St. Petersburg...more

10.03.04. Archbishop praises author accused of blasphemy
Philip Pullman, the best-selling author with a widely advertised contempt for organised religion, has found an unlikely champion in the Archbishop of Canterbury who has risked the wrath of fundamentalists by praising the National Theatre's adaptation of the author's His Dark Materials as a "near miraculous triumph" ...more

10.03.04. Disney buys up Judy Blume books
A series of films based on books by the children's author Judy Blume are to be turned into Disney movies ...more

10.03.04. Peters book shop loses lease, set to close
Sandy Petrosky, of Washington, has lost the lease on Sandy's Book Shoppe, and must close. So with 40,000 books remaining on wooden shelves, she's turning the page, ending this chapter of life and closing the cover March 31 on the 23-year-old bookstore ...more

10.03.04. The origins of genius
Joan Winterkorn has rifled through the lives and leavings of many of the good and great. She worked on the Churchill papers, the archives of actor Laurence Olivier and of scientist Francis Crick, co-discoverer of DNA...more

09.03.04. Aiken left behind legacy of literature
Joan Aiken, who died in January at the age of 79, wrote poetry, plays and short stories for all ages, but it was for her children's books that she was best known...more

09.03.04. Brought to book
Ronald Jordan has been described as a latter-day Fagin. He's the man behind the biggest book-stealing operation Britain has ever seen. But how did his very public criminal activities go unpunished for so many years? ...more

07.03.04. Disney pins $100m hopes on Narnia
CS Lewis's tales of an enchanted world reached through a wardrobe are to hit the big screen as Hollywood studios seek to repeat the success of JRR Tolkien's fantasy epic The Lord of the Rings...more

07.03.04. How Hemingway gored his rivals
A fierce and foul-mouthed tirade by Ernest Hemingway against his literary rivals has surfaced after nearly 80 years and is expected to fetch up to £30,000 at auction...more

06.03.04. For the love of Books
Bibliophiles will find kindred spirits in “At Home with Books: How Booklovers Live with and Care for Their Libraries”...more

05.03.04. Beatrix Potter had more to offer world
Peter Rabbit books gave her the fame and fortune she needed to pursue other interests...more

05.03.04. New chapter for a town time forgot?
World Book Day started in Blaenavon at 7.45am, when James McDonald sold two Terry Pratchett paperbacks for £3.50 to a customer surprised that even the newsagents at the top of the town had turned into a bookshop...more

05.03.04. Murder and antiquity
John Dunning is an antiquarian book dealer who's written three novels about a cop who becomes an antiquarian book dealer. The first of those novels, "Booked to Die" (1992), is a valuable book, making Dunning a rare-book dealer whose book about a rare-book dealer is a rare book...more

04.03.04. Books are not eggs
Our rich and varied literary life is under threat from proposals for a new pricing structure on what we read says Philip Pullman...more

04.03.04. Rowling talks about Harry Potter books 6 and 7
J.K. Rowling participated in a live chat with school children this morning to celebrate World Book Day. In the course of this chat she gave some very interesting information about the future of Harry Potter books, including the fact that she might go back and revise all the books once they're finished...more

04.03.04. World Book Day Online Festival
Today, World Book Day, Thursday 4 March 2004, sees the launch of the 2nd World Book Day Online Festival, where all events happen virtually, on the Internet. Last year's Festival attracted readers from 100 countries, and we hope to see even more this year...more

04.03.04. Medieval book 'should return to Norfolk'
A Norfolk heritage group has called for a beautiful medieval book of psalms to be returned to the county before it goes under the hammer...more

02.03.04. Excellent catch of fishing books
It is said some of the best fishing is to be found in print. Angling undoubtedly has the finest and largest literature of all sport...more

02.03.04. In defence of romance
Isabel Wolff is proud to be part of the romantic fiction tradition that includes the Brontës, Tolstoy and Austen ...more

02.03.04. Jack and Jill in single mother shock
Britain's most popular nursery rhymes, recited by generations of parents to their children, are teeming with references to bed-hopping royals and teenage sex, according to a book on the origins of 24 playground ditties...more

02.03.04. 10 facts about Dr Seuss
It's the 100th anniversary on Tuesday of the birth of the children's writer, Dr Seuss, author of classics such as The Cat in the Hat, and Green Eggs and Ham...more

02.03.04. £33m deal to save Murray literary archive
A £33 million deal has been agreed to save Britain's greatest private literary archive, which includes the original manuscripts of works by Lord Byron, Sir Walter Scott and Benjamin Disraeli and more than 150,000 letters...more

02.03.04. HCL Obtains Rare Manuscripts
After months of financial belt-tightening, Harvard College Library (HCL) announced last Friday that a major donation of rare 18th-century books, paintings and artifacts has checked in to Houghton Library...more

More Book News01.01.04 - 29.02.04
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28.06.03 - 31.10.03
 
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