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June 2007

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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 occassional comments by TheBookGuide.  Archived Stories.

July 2007Skip Free Registration

31.07.07.
If'n Books demonstration video

I never imagined that bookbinding could be this much fun! ... more  
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Lifting the lid on Warhol's Time Capsules
For years, the artist piled the ephemera of his life into boxes... now they're going on show in Edinburgh, writes Alastair Sooke ... more  
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Lost language of Pitmatic gets its lexicon
A dialect so dense that it held up social reforms has been rescued from obscurity by the publication of its first dictionary.     Thousands of terms used in Pitmatic, the oddly-named argot of north-east miners for more than 150 years, have been compiled through detailed research in archives and interviews with the last generation to talk of kips, corf-batters and arse-loops ... more  
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'The worlds biggest book bazaar
Stall-holders offer (almost) anything you could want at Delhi’s huge weekly book market, Stephen McClarence says ... more  
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28.07.07.
'Man harassed Harry Potter author

A man has been ordered to stay away from Harry Potter author JK Rowling after admitting bombarding her with letters and phone calls ... more  
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Scouting for Boys: The original 'dangerous' book for boys
First published in 1908, a few months after the founding of the Boy Scout movement, Scouting for Boys by Robert Baden-Powell went on to become the 20th-century's fourth highest-selling book. It is no longer used as a handbook by the Scout Association. Yet it still has a lot more to offer to 21st-century children than we might imagine. These extracts give a flavour of Baden-Powell's thinking ... more  
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A book sale - red in tooth and claw
I warn you: US Library Book sales can be mean. They are an unhealthy blend of Norman Rockwell and capitalism. Arrive early and you can witness the sideshow: the wrinkle-shirted book dealers with their dollies and empty cardboard boxes ... more  
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Why do kids love Thomas the Tank Engine?
This week the National Autistic Society (NAS) published a survey concluding that Thomas and his friends' adventures are educationally valuable to autistic children - helping them distinguish emotions, as well as colours, numbers and words. Earlier NAS research, from 2001, found that children with autism and Asperger syndrome have a particularly strong relationship with Thomas, identifying with him more strongly than any other children's character ... more  
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Gay Artist Burns Rare $60,000.00 Koran
Charles Merrill, the artist who recently edited the Holy Bible with a black marker and pair of scissors, has lately burned a rare Islamic Holy Book, The Koran, valued at $60,000.00, in an undisclosed Chicago location. "The purpose of editing and burning Abrahamic Holy Books is to eliminate homophobic hate," Merrill stated. "Both ancient books are terrorist manuals" ... more  
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26.07.07.
'World's most valuable comic book'' to be auctioned

Marvel Comics #1 is the holder of the Guinness world record for the most valuable comic book, and a copy is to be sold at the Heritage Auction Galleries' Vintage Comic Books and Comic Art auction, starting August 2nd ... more  
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Kashmir university digitalises rare manuscripts
Hundreds of rare manuscripts in Persian and Arabic languages, some dating back to 16th century, housed in Kashmir university have been digitalised and are now available online in that version, the university officials said today ... more  
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A novel idea
New authors should follow in the footsteps of many musicians and self publish - it's got to be better than playing games with publishers ... more  
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Got a bigger book than this one?
Celebrity book-binder Bill Tito is so confident he is bringing New Zealand's heaviest book to Palmerston North, he will give $100 to anyone who comes along with a heavier one ... more  
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25.07.07.
Heritage Auction Galleries sued

Dallas-based Heritage Auction Galleries is being sued in the state of Washington by Henry Gossage, a comic book collector who says that Heritage’s ex-consignment director spilled a latté on his rare comics, then paid only $8,000 for damages that will cost $132,400 to repair ... more  
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The art of doing nothing

People read fewer challenging books because they have no time digest them - this summer holiday take some time to not read ... more  
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Bedtime stories a problem for many parents
One in 10 parents struggle to understand the bedtime stories they read to their children, a survey by adult learning organisation Learndirect has found. Almost a quarter (23%) skip passages they cannot read or invent words to get to the end of a sentence, the poll found ... more  
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24.07.07.
Book gets hook

"Bookends" might have been a modest off-Broadway hit in the early 1960s, when the idea of girls daring to choose careers over marriage would have been fresh. The irony is, though, that this musical about antiquarian book sellers fails because it tries to sell its audience a book that feels antiquated ... more  
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Judge a book by its cover

Investing in modern first editions - usually those printed after 1900 - has become big business with good profits for those who do their homework. "Modern first editions appeal to many people because they are authors they can relate to and quite often have read," according to Roddy Newlands of Bloomsbury Auctions ... more  
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Potter magic smashes publishing records

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows has thrown off concerns over internet spoilers and broken embargoes to confirm its position as the world's fastest-selling book, with Nielsen Bookscan estimating a staggering 2.7m copies sold in the UK of the seventh and final book during a hectic period of just 24 hours - a 35% increase on first-day sales of JK Rowling's last blockbuster, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince ... more  
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Bookbuyer finds rare Mormon texts

It's a book collector's dream -- rifling through the shelves of a secondhand store and finding a valuable text for a bargain price ... more  
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23.07.07.
The interior designer and the bookseller

There was a short post yesterday in the Good Questions section of the Apartment Therapy New York website titled How To Start a Book Collection? The post was from an interior designer whose client has a new apartment with a lot of bookshelves and no books. There were already over 100 comments to the article when I came upon it and most were less than the kind ... more  
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Thrift-store shopper uncovers rare poster

... Sandwiched between the print and its cardboard backing was a much rarer find: an original "window card" poster from the 1930 film classic "All Quiet on the Western Front" ... more  
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Guantánamo's library: adding insult to injury

The following is a declassified letter from a Guantánamo detainee named Abdul Aziz, who has been held in US custody without charge or trial for over five and a half years.
    Abdul Aziz traveled to Afghanistan in late September 2001, after taking his final exams at the Imam Muhammad Ibn Saud University in Riyadh, to search for his brother, and to persuade him to return home.
    He was caught up in the chaos surrounding the fall of the Taliban in northern Afghanistan, and, despite never undertaking any kind of military training or raising arms against the Northern Alliance or the US-led coalition, was treated brutally in US custody in Afghanistan before being transferred to Guantánamo ... more  
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It's Hallows and goodbye to all that

She says she's 'relieved', and JK Rowling is probably not alone. The world went a little bit bonkers last week.
    In America grown men and women arranged their weddings around a reading of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. The ultra-sober New York Times broke the embargo of embargoes and breathlessly published an early review, to global literary consternation.
    In Britain, the helpline Childline announced the hiring of standby grief counsellors. And on Piccadilly, in London, children in witches' costumes camped overnight outside Waterstone's to buy a book that would anyway be on sale (at a supermarket discount) only a few hours later on Saturday morning ... more  
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20.07.07.
A bibliophile’s El Dorado

You might come across a priceless gem if you are patient and browse long enough in Old Delhi's book market, which has been around for nearly forty years, writes Sanjay Podder ... more  
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Once upon a time ... e-book revolution
There are now millions of books free online. So why hasn't the e-book revolution taken off? David Adams reports ... more  
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Former curator indicted for allegedly stealing rare atlas
The former curator for the Rockland County Historical Society has been indicted by a Rockland County grand jury on a charge of grand larceny in the second degree for allegedly stealing a rare atlas valued at over $60,000 ... more  
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Cupid gets indecency rap in Hong Kong
A book with a image of Cupid on the cover has been banned by Hong Kong's media watchdog which deemed it indecent. The 1798 painting of 'Psyche Receiving the First Kiss of Cupid' by French artist Francois Gerard was used on a book to be sold at a Hong Kong book fair ... more  
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19.07.07.
Mein Kampf ban 'should end in Germany'

A leading historian has called for Hitler's notorious treatise Mein Kampf to be published again in Germany to expose the nation to the incoherent ramblings of the Nazi dictator ... more  
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Potter publisher sues over breach
The US publisher of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows is taking legal action against two companies for dispatching copies of the book early ... more  
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Harry Potter early copies for sale on eBay
The eagerly-awaited seventh Harry Potter book is being sold on eBay more than a day before it is due to be released into British bookshops. One seller, asiamjohnson08, from Georgia in the US, said: "This is the real copy of the book. This is not a joke. I will send the book overnight to make sure you get it before the public does" ... more  
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Publishers reject Jane Austen manuscripts
Her work has endured for two centuries, sold in its millions and inspired countless film and television adaptations. But would Jane Austen be able to find a publisher and an agent today? A cheeky experiment by an Austen enthusiast suggests not ... more  
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18.07.07.
Vatican Library closure irks scholars

One of the world's oldest public libraries, the Vatican Library, has closed for rebuilding. It is not expected to reopen before September 2010 ... more  
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My beloved, horrible little book stores

One wall smelled like mold. In the summer, she (the owner) ran a giant fan that was so loud you couldn’t hear. The dogs were squat little things that liked to defecate near the Westerns. The owner was a little more than four feet tall and was always eating and sweating and reading a romance novel ... more  
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Harry Potter book leaks on to internet

Despite a massive security operation, the final book of the Harry Potter series has been leaked online three days before its worldwide release ... more  
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17.07.07.
Harry Potter and the edition of doom

Our writer thinks bitterly of the day he failed to take up an offer of a signed first edition from the then unknown JK Rowling ... more  
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Rare books, the bookshop and open access
Bookshops are one of the few places where one can get open access, they are places where anyone can walk into and see and handle books they only dreamed about. In many cases you have greater access to rare books at a bookshop than you do at the library. Yes, they might not be able to afford to buy the book but the experience of handling it is priceless ... more  
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Tiny tomes
One day, over 35 years ago, when searching at a rare book shop in Wilbraham, MA for new items for her rare book collection, Anne Bromer discovered a toolbox on top of some bookshelves. She asked the seller to take it down for her. When opened, the box revealed dozens of books all less than 3 inches tall packed tightly into drawers. Bromer bought the whole box, and her passion for miniature books -- or “treasures” as she calls them -- was born ... more  
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Bell tolls for Hemingway treasure
Finca Vigia, or Lookout Farm, 10 miles east of Havana, is the place Ernest Hemingway called home from 1939 to 1960, and it is there that the author's abundant tastes, in literature and in life, are on display. For the past two years, a group of American organisations has been working to restore the battered house and save the manuscripts and books. But US sanctions against Cuba have hindered the group's attempts to collaborate with the Cuban government ... more  
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13.07.07.
15 months for stealing Civil War papers

Denning McTague, 40, worked as an unpaid intern last summer at the National Archives and Records Administration branch in Philadelphia to complete a master's degree program. Assigned to organize Civil War papers, he took to stuffing them into his legal pads and walking out with them ... more  
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Author's nude drawings too hot for US publisher
One of Germany's best-selling children's authors is embroiled in an extraordinary transatlantic row about nudity after a US publisher refused to accept one of her books because it contained naive sketches of an art gallery with works depicting naked bodies ... more  
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Will a bookseller break Harry's spell?
With a week to go until the release of the final Harry Potter, there are predictions that some retailers may be tempted to steal a march by selling copies before the midnight embargo ... more  
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Fine presses and the bookseller
For those unfamiliar with the Alcuin Society it is a "voluntary association of people who care about the past, present and future of fine books" based in Vancouver, British Columbia whose two main goals "are to promote a wider appreciation of books and reading and to support excellence in book design and production" ... more  
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12.07.07.
Bid to ban 'racist' Tintin book

The Commission for Racial Equality (CRE) is calling on high street shop Borders to pull a Tintin adventure from its shelves completely. Tintin in the Congo has already been moved to the adult section over complaints that its content is racist ... more  
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New 007 book marks creator's 100th birthday
British novelist Sebastian Faulks has written a new Bond novel to mark the centenary of creator Ian Fleming's birth. The new 007 adventure, Devil May Care, will be published on May 28 next year on what would have been Fleming's 100th birthday ... more  
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First book written using mobile phone published
Italian author Robert Bernocco has amazed the literary world by publishing the world's first book written using a mobile phone. Bernocco published it on Lulu.com, the online marketplace for digital content and brain-child of Canadian businessman, Bob Young ... more  
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Steal das book
Rod Shene paid a paltry few grand for a volume worth $500,000 or more. Only one hitch: The German government wants it back ... more  
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10.07.07.
Six million books a year ... what's that in trees?

With the (Edinburgh) Book Festival looming, I wonder if director Catherine Lockerbie is losing sleep over the six billion books printed this past year. We in the UK buy 296 million books annually. That's one helluva lot of trees ... more  
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'More reading' than in 1970s
People in the UK seem to have been reading more over the past quarter of a century, a study suggests ... more  
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Other Times
Other Times Books, the West L.A. bookstore had one asset that no other bookstore could match: its owner, Andrew Dowdy. His health, and the changing times, write its final chapter ... more  
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09.07.07.
The Oscar sinners

When six original Oscar Wilde manuscripts surfaced in New York in April, they were expected to fetch hundreds of thousands of dollars. But soon doubts were cast on their authenticity — and a dark tale emerged of greed, forgery and foul play stretching back to the 1920s. Anthony Gardner reports ... more  
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Harry Potter worm claims wizard hero is dead
Can't wait to find out what happens to Harry Potter when the final book in the series comes out this month? Be careful where you get your spoilers from.
    Security researchers are warning people not to be lured in by online promises of information about the outcome of the final battle at Hogwarts. Sophos Inc. reported that a new worm is taking advantage of the Potter mania that is starting to build around the world ... more  
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Leonardo Da Vinci drawings to go online
Thousands of Leonardo Da Vinci's drawings and scientific theories will soon be viewable for free on the internet. Until now the majority of the manuscripts have been seen only by scholars but the National Museum of Leonardo in his hometown of Vinci has promised to scan about 12,000 pages and create an archive ... more  
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Judge the book trade by its covers
The artist Harland Miller praises the winning jackets of the inaugural Penguin Books Design award ... more  
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06.07.07.
The digital bookshop that prints out on demand

A revolution in publishing may soon see bookshops stripped of their shelves. Instead, customers will simply choose the novel they want, punch some numbers into a digital printer and leave a few minutes later with a freshly printed and bound copy ... more  
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Gibran manuscripts donated to Princeton
The Princeton University Library is now the holder of working manuscripts and notebooks for four well-known Kahlil Gibran books, including the Lebanese-American’s bestselling The Prophet ... more  
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Finding a niche in erotic books
Granity. Population 230. One part-time library, one restaurant-cum-video shop, one erotic-books seller ... more  
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The Heritage effect. The book trade waits
Booksellers will step up to fill the hole (left by the closure of Heritage) but the money flow will be different and that will effect a fair number of booksellers ... more  
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05.07.07.
George Melly dies at 80

I know he was not perhaps best known as an author, but in a week when little is being written that isn't about Harry Bleedin' Potter, the passing of a very human being seems all the more poignant.

Surrealist, singer, critic, libertine, author, raconteur ... but it was his extraordinary lust for life that has left the greatest impression on me. Loads of obits here, but this is probably the best

I can't resist a couple of quotes:

"I'm very fond of alcohol but I drink a minute amount compared with what I did at one period in my life, when I drank at least a bottle of brandy a night, plus gins and things during the day. Now I'll have a dry sherry around noon, maybe a glass of wine a lunch and then in the evening I'll have two or three gin and tonics and half of bottle wine and probably a couple of brandies, which for me is practically being teetotal."

"As a surrealist, I quite enjoy having dementia."  

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03.07.07.
A howl for literary freedom

It was 50 years ago this summer that Americans finally won the unfettered right to read whatever they wanted to read, a half-century since poet Allen Ginsberg's "Howl" went on trial in a San Francisco courtroom ... more  
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Book shop offers real-life experience
Kathryn Fisher loves to browse in shops and unexpectedly come across a book or a gift she hadn't even considered. She most certainly does not enjoy shopping on the Internet ... more  
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Motion bids to save manuscripts
Poet Laureate Andrew Motion has called for new tax breaks to allow literary manuscripts to remain in the UK. The writer has expressed concerns that work by figures including Tom Stoppard, Ted Hughes and Evelyn Waugh is being snapped up by US institutions ... more  
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02.07.07.
A treasury of ancient manuscripts in a fabled city

Mr Muhammad pulled back its flaps to reveal a sheaf of yellowed papers. Their edges had crumbled away, but the neat Arabic calligraphy was still clear."A Qur'an," he said. "From the 1300s." For an outsider, such a remarkable find might seem extraordinary. In Timbuktu and its surrounding villages like Ber, where Mr Muhammad lives, it is commonplace ... more  
    
Audio slideshow: Timbuktu's ancient manuscripts  Add a comment

Shakespeare's status under threat at Oxford
Oxford University is courting controversy with plans to "downgrade" the importance of William Shakespeare for its English literature undergraduates. The radical move would mean in-depth examination of Shakespeare's works would not be compulsory. In exam terms, students could avoid answering questions on the playwright ... more   Add a comment

Book Baron in Anaheim turning the page
Bob Weinstein is writing the final chapter on his career as a bookseller. He's closing Book Baron in Anaheim,Southern California, the used bookstore he opened in 1980 and nurtured to its current size of 400,000 books spread over 20,000 square feet -- bigger than many branch libraries and chain bookstore superstores ... more   Add a comment

Harry Potter and the Gyrating Book Sales
Sales of children’s books rose last year at a rate that disappointed the industry, according to a report released in June by the Book Industry Study Group, a US publishing trade association. Sales revenue for hardcover books, the format in which new books typically reach the market, increased just 2.5 percent over the previous year, compared with the more usual 5 percent to 6 percent. And by some measures -- units sold, for example -- hardcover sales were almost flat ... more   Add a comment

 

 
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