14.03.05
Chaworth Roll
to stay in the UK. A magnificently illustrated 700-year-old manuscript describing
the early history of the English monarchy is to stay in Britain, after it was
bought by a British private collector on the opening night of an exhibition at
manuscript dealer Sam Fogg's gallery in London...more
Add a comment. 14.03.05
Orange longlist
announced. Joanne Harris, author of Chocolat and one of the five judges of
this year's Orange Prize for Fiction, this morning announced the names of the
authors on the 2005 longlist at an event at the London Book Fair...more
Add a comment. 14.03.05
Would-be royal
heirs bid for royal hairs. Locks of Queen Victoria’s hair stuck in an album
of keepsakes have triggered an extraordinary bidding war between would-be members
of the Royal Family who want to conduct a DNA analysis of the monarch’s follicles...more
Add a comment. 14.03.05
Jules Verne:
mythmaker of the machine age. His literary reputation is being rehabilitated
but, 100 years after his death, France is no closer to fully understanding him...more
Add a comment. 13.03.05
New Potter Book
Casts Spell over City. Exeter is the pottiest place in Britain about the new
Harry Potter book, high street chain WH Smith announced today. Shoppers in the
Devon city have placed more pre-orders for the next instalment than anywhere else...more
Add a comment. 13.03.05
Trash or treasure?
ustrailia's National Gallery of Victoria is about to host an exhibition of Andy
Warhol's Time Capsules - boxes filled to bursting with relics of his life and
times. But is it art? ...more
Add a comment. 13.03.05
British Writer
Chosen for Peter Pan Sequel. British author Geraldine McCaughrean fought off
100 writers from around the world on Sunday to land a daunting literary challenge
-- writing the authorized sequel to Peter Pan...more
Add a comment. 12.03.05
'Casino Royale'
first edition sells for £21,000. An inscribed first edition of Ian Fleming's
1953 James Bond novel, Casino Royale, sold for £21,000 ($40,454 USD) as part of
Bloomsbury Auctions Continental and English Literature and Modern First Editions
sale held on February 24, 2005. The final sale was transacted after the auction
had ended...more
Add a comment. 12.03.05
Stalin's secret
Hitler book to be published. A secret biography of Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler
commissioned by Soviet dictator Josef Stalin is to be published later this month,
the book's British publisher said today...more
Add a comment. 12.03.05
China plans mammoth
effort to popularize ancient literature overseas. A Chinese publishing giant
is planning an unprecedented effort to share the Chinese cultural pith with the
world by publishing a giant collection of Chinese classics in English...more
Add a comment. 12.03.05
Festival fairytale
start for City of Literature. Edinburgh is to host a celebration of the life
and work of one of the world’s greatest storytellers. The ten-month Hans Christian
Andersen Festival will see special events held across the city, including exhibitions,
talks, film screenings, live music and storytelling sessions...more
Add a comment. 12.03.05
The great self-saboteur.
There is no excuse for what happened to Flann O'Brien. He died in 1966 at 55,
a bar-stool celebrity in a dirty old town. Dublin raised a glass in his memory
while secretly toasting the poetic squalor of his demise. His
friend Patrick Kavanagh, equally gifted and equally betrayed, would expire nearly
as badly three years later. Few artists lived or died well in Ireland back then...more
Add a comment. 11.03.05
Web squeezes
specialty shops. "The out-of-print, collectible books business has been changed
dramatically by the Internet," said Hessel, whose store specializes in rare out-of-print
books. "The Internet opens up the marketplace to anyone who has a computer"...more
Add a comment. 11.03.05
Uncompromising
Welsh author dies. Alice Thomas Ellis, a leading Welsh figure in 20th century
literature, has died aged 72. Among her most famous novels is The Sin Eater, about
a divided family gathering in Wales to await the demise of a patriarch...more
Add a comment. 11.03.05
Shabby UK public
libraries need lottery boost, say MPs. National lottery funding should be
introduced to tackle the "scandal" of Britain's shabby and neglected public library
services, according to a report yesterday which says that well-stocked, attractive
shelves, rather than IT terminals, are the bedrock of its future...more
Add a comment. 11.03.05
Divine inspiration
or earthly editing? People will be able to judge for themselves changes to
the world's oldest Bible - the Codex Sinaiticus - when experts complete work to
make the text available in digital form...more
Add a comment. 11.03.05
Bookshop's last
word a sign of the times. You turn left at the post office and there it is,
the empty bookshop. You look through the windows and think of all the good quality
second-hand books that were there only a few weeks ago...more
Add a comment. 10.03.05
Convicted killer
`reviews' book about his case. Danny Pelosi, convicted last year of fatally
beating millionaire investment banker Ted Ammon in his East Hampton mansion, submitted
a critique to Amazon.com commenting on a recently released book about the case...more
Add a comment. 10.03.05
Victories sweet
at St. Petersburg book fair. It is a terrible truth that the book you remember
most fondly is the book you never bought. Two years ago I passed up an opportunity
to buy a first edition of Robert W. Chambers' bizarre horror short stories, The
King In Yellow, for $40. That book is like a fish-hook in my heart today. I can
still see it in my mind. The agony of losing it! ...more
Add a comment. 10.03.05
Happy Birthday,
Jack Kerouac. Wish Jack Kerouac "Happy Birthday" Saturday in the first-ever
Bay State recognition of the celebrated author of "On The Road." Events for Jack
Kerouac Day will be held in Lowell where he was born and raised and Nashua, N.H.,
a source of the writer's French-Canadian roots...more
Add a comment. 10.03.05
Sadako Kurihara,
A-bomb poet, dies. Hiroshima--Staunch anti-war poet Sadako Kurihara, herself
a survivor of the 1945 atomic bombing of Hiroshima, died at her home here Sunday
night, family members said. She was 92. Kurihara is
best known for her moving anti-war poem about a baby's birth amid the devastation...more
Add a comment. 09.03.05
Da Vinci faces
Dylan in book race. The Da Vinci Code will go up against books by Bob Dylan,
Bill Bryson and Michael Palin to be named book of the year at the British Book
Awards...more
Add a comment. 09.03.05
Mexican officers
brought to book. Police in Mexico City, one of the most crime-ridden capitals
in the world, have been told they must read at least one book a month or forfeit
promotion...more
Add a comment. 09.03.05
A$1.25m for journals.
A Dutch book dealer has paid almost A$1.25 million for two rare volumes on the
discovery of Australia. The dealer paid A$768,900 for a 24-page book -- more than
A$32,000 a page -- published in 1701...more
Add a comment. 09.03.05
Christie's to
present library of Bernard Breslauer. New York - On March 21, an evening sale
followed by four day-sale sessions on March 22 and 23, will present the magnificent
library of Bernard Breslauer, the legendary New York-based book dealer and collector.
The sale will offer a spectacular collection of the fine books and historic and
artistic book bindings. A second part of the collection will be offered in June...more
Add a comment. 08.03.05
Retired blind
librarian dies. Lawrence Foushee London had been blind since childhood but
his great interest was incunabula, books published from 1450 to 1500, said Roberta
Engleman, assistant curator of rare books at the University of North Carolina...more
Add a comment. 08.03.05
Libraries may
ask smelly readers to go. Libraries in San Luis Obispo County have had their
own rules banning offensive body odor since 1994, but the policy became law after
the Board of Supervisors last month adopted an ordinance that lets authorities
kick out malodorous guests...more
Add a comment. 08.03.05
Newton's inspiration.
California - "All Was Light: Isaac Newton's Revolutions", opens today and
traces the alternately revered and reviled mathematician and physicist's progression
through thought and experiment, which led to an understanding that ultimately
altered not only the scientific arena but the general intellectual climate. Drawn
mainly from the Huntington's own history of science collection, the exhibit features
about 70 Newton manuscripts, sketches, personal belongings and other related items...more
Add a comment. 08.03.05
Diane Arbus celibrated
at The Metropolitan Museum. For the first time in more than 30 years, a major
retrospective of the work of the legendary photographer Diane Arbus (1923-1971)
will go on view in New York City...more
Add a comment. 08.03.05
Imprisoned Iranian
writer receives award. Cairo, Egypt -- An imprisoned Iranian writer has received
an award from Human Rights Watch in recognition of the 17 years he has spent in
jail for his views...more
Add a comment. 07.03.05
Party celebrates
writer Thompson. A private party to celebrate the life of writer Hunter S
Thompson was held in Aspen, Colorado, on Saturday night, with only friends and
family invited...more
Add a comment. 07.03.05
Dallas probably
will be site of Bush library. Momentous policy calls lurk ahead for President
Bush - Iraq, Iran, North Korea, Social Security. But the other big-time decision
of his second term - where to put his library - is all but settled...more
Add a comment. 07.03.05
When did the
barbarians last read a book?. The BBC, properly sceptical of ludicrous cultural
hoo-ha, celebrated last week's World Book Day with a provocative Culture Show
programme about the end of civilisation in book publishing...more
Add a comment. 06.03.05
New book claims
Hitler had nuclear bombs. Hitler's scientists tested a battlefield nuclear
bomb and were close to deploying the so-called "wonder weapon" towards the end
of the war, according to a book to be published in Germany this month...more
Add a comment. 06.03.05
Auction speaks
volumes. Described by Jonathan Wantrup, executive director of Australian Book
Auctions, as the most important collection to be offered for sale by auction in
Australia, there will be at least three sales, with tonight’s covering publications
up to 1810...more
Add a comment. 06.03.05
Confessions of
a rare and interesting book fiend. Yes, I like to buy books and sell them
online or donate them to schools overseas. I like to buy books and see what interesting
tales they have to tell. I like finding cool books, ones I'd never heard of, like
"Dear Dad, Letters from the Philippines" written in the 1920s, or the one that
had inscriptions and spells from Egyptian sarcophagi...more
Add a comment. 06.03.05
The life and
tomes of Howard K. Smith. Washington - Books lined the walls of the late Howard
K. Smith’s suburban living room - more than a thousand hardbacks, exquisite leather
bindings and classic titles neatly juxtaposed on dark wood bookshelves...more
Add a comment. 05.03.05
Rare books found
at Goodwill store. Two rare French books have turned up at at a Goodwill store
in St. Louis. The 18th-century books were found in the back rooms among the boxes
and bins. They sat untouched for more than 20 years before an employee discovered
them and began to investigate...more
Add a comment. 05.03.05
From celebrity
faces to creatures from children's books. "Works on Paper," the annual New
York art fair now in its 17th year, needs waking up. Not that it isn't worth a
visit, but it is just not as exciting as it could be, considering how much provocative
art on paper churns through the contemporary galleries of New York and elsewhere
every month...more
Add a comment. 05.03.05
Do look back:
‘Aperture’ visits the Aletti Archive. Fans of highbrow ephemera should check
out the new issue of Aperture, which features selections from Village Voice arts
editor Vince Aletti’s voluminous magazine collection...more
Add a comment. 05.03.05
Collector alert!
'SilverFin' first printing error. For those of you who care about this sort
of thing...more
Add a comment. 05.03.05
Book that predicted
bullet trains and TV now online. An obscure 1892 golf novel that predicted
bullet trains, television, digital watches and driverless golf carts has been
published online for the first time. The book, "Golf in the Year 2000; or, What
We Are Coming To", made international news earlier this year when a collector
paid more than $2,000 at auction for a rare first edition copy...more
Add a comment. 05.03.05
"It was the best
of times, it was the worst of times". In her speech at the Guardian World
Book Day Forum last Thursday, Caroline Michel, publisher of HarperPress, considered
the challenge to books presented by the electronic age. This is her speech in
full...more
Add a comment. 04.03.05
Manuscripts offer
dead puppy blood pimple cure. Two old manuscripts found at a British stately
home, and coming up for auction, suggest some truly odd cures for everyday ailments...more
Add a comment. 04.03.05
Tome Time.
Allan Stypeck remembers with amusement what it was like, in the spring of 1976,
to set up his wares at a table on the first day of the first year of the Washington
Antiquarian Book Fair...more
Add a comment. 04.03.05
Crime pays,
says Oxfam. Crime pays, at least as far as Oxfam is concerned. The charity
has launched a scheme to encourage people to take their unwanted crime novels
into its shops to be resold in aid of people living in poverty overseas...more
Add a comment. 04.03.05
Praise for 'forest
friendly' Potter. Bloomsbury announces that Harry Potter and the Half-Blood
Prince, the latest book in JK Rowling's Harry Potter series, will be printed on
paper from sustainable sources...more
Add a comment. 04.03.05
Library’s £12.5million
conservation centre. With one of the world's largest collections of rare and
ancient books, the British Library has an uphill struggle to keep its priceless
collection in good repair...more
Add a comment. 04.03.05
Book theft boss
must pay damages. Ronald Jordan who sold stolen books from his market stalls
has failed to have the amount of damages he was ordered to pay to retailers cut...more
Add a comment. 03.03.05
New York Public
Library puts collection of images online. A collection of 275,000 images including
maps, Civil War photos, illuminated medieval manuscripts and historic menus will
be accessible online starting today, the New York Public Library announced...more
Add a comment. 03.03.05
Dispute swirls
around pieces of ballet history. Butler University and heir to former ballet
director's estate battle over ownership of treasures from the Ballet Russe de
Monte Carlo. Court records describe the collection, which includes a backdrop
designed by Henri Matisse and another designed and partially painted by Salvador
Dali, as unique and irreplaceable...more
Add a comment. 03.03.05
Dostoyevsky
relative sues lottery over use of writer's image. A great-grandson of Fyodor
Dostoyevsky is suing a Russian lottery for using the famed writer's image on tickets
without permission, calling it particularly appalling because of the author's
long addiction to gambling...more
Add a comment. 03.03.05
Don't judge
an old book by its cover. Tia Ghose visits Twice Sold Tales, a quirky used
bookstore in Seattle...more
Add a comment. 03.03.05
World Book Day.
Giving and receiving a recommendation of a favourite book is a real pleasure and
it’s never been easier. Pick up one of the eight special postcards from a bookshop
or library, or visit the World Book Day website...more
Add a comment. 02.03.05
Surviving the
literary shakeout means turning to the Internet. When Skyline Books owner
Rob Warren opened his shop on New York's West 18th Street 16 years ago, there
were a half dozen similar stores nearby. The glory
days of "Book Row," the stretch of Fourth Avenue that held a dense network of
used and antiquarian dealers in the mid-twentieth-century, were long gone, but
independent shops could still draw in enough business to make the trade profitable...more
Add a comment. 02.03.05
Go-ahead for
court battle over Rachmaninov music score. The High Court gave the go-ahead
yesterday for a legal dispute over the ownership of an original Rachmaninov manuscript...more
Add a comment. 02.03.05
University criticised
for keeping looted manuscripts. A decision by the University of Edinburgh
court not to return looted manuscripts to Ethiopia was yesterday condemned as
a "retrograde step" by a lobby group...more
Add a comment. 01.03.05
Poets' plaques
rescued from skip. Plaques commemorating three historic Welsh figures have
arrived home in Powys after they were discovered in a skip in north Wales...more
Add a comment. 01.03.05
DH Lawrence's
wife 'was the real Lady Chatterley'. The affair at the heart of the novel
Lady Chatterley's Lover was inspired by a relationship between DH Lawrence's wife
and an Italian soldier, a new biography of the author claims...more
Add a comment. 01.03.05
Atherstone Booktown
Update. With Atherstone Booktown due to be publicly launched in mid-May 2005,
James Hanna the driving force behind Blaenavon
Booktown, talked to Atherstone-Online.
The website also has a community forum were this article and a recent public meeting
about the proposed book town are discussed.
Many thanks to Clive Keeble for the links.
Add a comment.
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