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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.

March 2008Skip Free Registration

31.03.08.
Internet book piracy will stop authors writing

Book piracy on the internet will ultimately drive authors to stop writing unless radical methods are devised to compensate them for lost sales ... more   Add a comment

Tintin artwork fetches record price
Captain Haddock would have choked on his whisky: original artwork for a Tintin comic book fetched a record 764,200 euros (1.2 million dollars) at a Paris auction Saturday, organiser Artcurial said ... more   Add a comment

Literature collectors gather for £1m Dickens auction
The biggest auction of Charles Dickens' works for more than 35 years is to be held in New York this week. The lots include a rare manuscript page from The Pickwick Papers, written in the author's own hand with his corrections, and a special edition book inscribed by Dickens to fellow novelist George Eliot ... more   Add a comment

US presidential manuscripts on sale
Presidential manuscripts are set to be auctioned at Sotheby's in New York on Thursday, the centrepiece of the sale being the letter from Lincoln ... more   Add a comment


28.03.08.
Mohammed cartoon author to sue Dutch MP

The Danish cartoonist whose caricature of the Prophet Mohammed outraged Muslims said he would press copyright charges against a far-right Dutch MP for reproducing it in his controversial anti-Islam video ... more   Add a comment

Judges dismiss Japan WWII libel
Japanese judges have thrown out a libel case against Nobel prize-winning author Kenzaburo Oe, who was accused of lying about the country's war time past ... more   Add a comment

Landslide victory for 'oddest title'
In the fast-moving world of literary awards, few prize short lists are worth lingering over with as much care as the Diagram Prize for Oddest Book Title of the Year. The winner of this year's prize, a self-help manual by an American writer called Big Boom, wears its prize proudly: If You Want Closure in Your Relationship, Start With Your Legs ... more   Add a comment

End of Foyles dynasty
When the brothers William and Gilbert Foyle failed their civil service exams in 1903, they decided to start selling their old textbooks from their parents' kitchen table. What began as a humble book sale soon grew into a successful, family-run shop and, over the years, Foyles established itself as a literary institution ... more   Add a comment


27.03.08.
Miniature book collection opens at Olin Library

Throughout history, people have been fascinated by extremes, whether it's the tallest mountain, the longest river or the deepest sea. Julian I. Edison is no exception — only instead of things large, it's small books that fascinate him.
    Edison, a member of the University Libraries' National Council and a noted miniature book collector, is displaying approximately 200 of his volumes in the exhibition "Miniature Books: 4,000 Years of Tiny Treasures," which opened at Olin Library's Department of Special Collections March 17 ... more   Add a comment

Book thief's trail leads to Electric City
A thief stole valuable historic books and documents from libraries across the USA and Canada and then allegedly peddled the spoils on the popular eBay auction Web site from Great Falls, according to a librarian in Washington state ... more   Add a comment

Scholars find Greek New Testament manuscripts
According to a news release obtained by ANS, last summer the Center for the Study of New Testament Manuscripts (CSNTM) found a treasure trove of them during a trip to Albania ... more   Add a comment

Founder of Kennys Bookshop dies
The founder and driving force for so long behind one of Ireland’s best known family run bookshops - a woman who was best known for her love and knowledge of books - has passed away ... more   Add a comment


26.03.08.
First edition of Dickens' A Christmas Carol at auction

In their upcoming Rare Book auction, Heritage Auction Galleries will offer a scarce first edition, first issue copy of Charles Dickens' immortal novel, A Christmas Carol, in exceptional condition, estimated to bring $40,000 to $50,000 ... more   Add a comment

French first lady's nude auction
A nude portrait of French President Nicolas Sarkozy's wife Carla Bruni is to go under the hammer in New York next month, according to auctioneers Christie's ... more   Add a comment

London gets reading
The London based charity Booktrust has been getting the 2008 instalment of their Get London Reading campaign underway this week. The campaign, designed - as its name suggests - to promote reading in the capital, is a biannual cluster of workshops, readings, debates and general bookish celebrations in the weeks leading up to the London Book Fair ... more   Add a comment


25.03.08.
Family of Confederate soldier gives grim letter to USC

A letter detailing a grisly account of one of the Civil War’s first major battles has been donated to the University of South Carolina ... more   Add a comment

'Freaks' odd but well-written
Hubert's Freaks: the rare-book dealer, the times square talker, and the lost photos of Diane Arbus, by Gregory Gibson ... more   Add a comment

Paris is booked
Being in the bookshop Shakespeare & Company is a little like viewing life through a convex mirror. Shelves climb to the ceiling, cling to walls and stoop with the weight of sagacious volumes. The light from a dusty chandelier softly illuminates an iron-rimmed wishing well sunken into the floor. Frosted glass mounted on a wall reveals a crowd shuffling through the premises, browsing and marvelling ... more   Add a comment

Books and Bicycles
The Indianapolis 500 isn't the only prominent wheeled event in Indiana. The Lily Library at the University of Indiana is home to a stunning collection "of books, trade catalogs, periodical literature, photographs, sheet music, manuscripts and ephemera related to the early history of cycling" ... more   Add a comment

Scouting manuscript go on display
The original manuscript which started the Scouting movement 100 years ago is to go on display for the first time ... more   Add a comment


21.03.08.
Comic legend keeps true to roots

Comic book writer Alan Moore is revered across the world as being one of the most creative forces in the industry ... more   Add a comment

Unknown manuscript discovered in Berlin
Researchers of the History Faculty of Saint Petersburg State University have found an unknown copy of Novgorod First Chronicle in the Manuscript Department of the State Library of Berlin ... more   Add a comment

British writer denied entry to US
British writer and self-styled dandy Sebastian Horsley was denied entry to the United States after arriving to promote his memoir of sex, drugs and flamboyant fashion. Horsley said he was questioned for eight hours Tuesday by border officials at Newark Liberty International Airport in New Jersey before being denied entry on grounds of "moral turpitude" ... more   Add a comment


20.03.08.
Former PM's Napoleon archive a hit at Paris auction

Rare-book lovers, museum buyers and fans of Napoleon flocked Wednesday for a chance to bid on a rich archive on the emperor, put up for sale by former French prime minister Dominique de Villepin ... more   Add a comment

How to open a book
Found this little gem in a book recently. The text originally appeared in Modern Bookbinding Practically Considered : A Lecture Read Before the Grolier Club of New York, March 25, 1885 with Additions and New Illustrations by William Matthews and was published by the Grolier Club in a limited edition of 300 copies in 1889. There is no printing or publishing history present on the Notice ... more   Add a comment

US books chain faces funding crisis
The American high-street chain Borders is facing a cash crunch which may force it to put itself up for sale as music sales migrate onto the internet and discount retailers muscle in on the books market ... more   Add a comment

Five go Disney
Hurrah for updated Blyton! Lashings of organic, cane-sugared ginger beer is clearly the way to protect our children from reading anything new ... more   Add a comment


19.03.08.
Scientists and writers pay tribute to Arthur C Clarke

Arthur C Clarke, the pioneering science fiction author and technological visionary best known for the novel and film 2001: A Space Odyssey, has died at his home in Sri Lanka, aged 90 ... more   Add a comment

Auld Lang Syne Original Manuscript To Go On Show
An original manuscript of the New Year anthem Auld Lang Syne is to go on show in New York as part of a Scottish festival, it was announced today. The paper is written in songwriter Robert Burns' own hand and dates from around 1788 ... more   Add a comment


18.03.08.
Dolly's working Wigtown from five to nine-year-olds

America's undisputed queen of country music has revealed that the Galloway community will be the Scottish focus of her international crusade to improve literacy among youngsters ... more   Add a comment

Fight to keep author's home
The building where author and philosopher Adam Smith spent his last years is the subject of a new campaign. Academics at Edinburgh University are fighting to stop the historic house, off the Royal Mile, from being sold to a private buyer. The city council is keen to cash in on Panmure House, which could fetch the authority as much as £1m ... more   Add a comment

31st Auction of Hollywood Memorabilia
Amongst the items at the two-day auction on March 27/28 is a Greta Garbo portrait by Edward Steichen from A Woman of Affairs, expected to sell for at least $40,000-$60,000, and a King Kong Six-Sheet movie poster, one of only three known to exist ($200,000-$250,000) ... more   Add a comment

Turkish bookshop bombing trial "not fair"
Joint attorneys in the case against the suspected bombers of the Semdinli bookshop have withdrawn from the case in protest. They argue that the military court is not independent and there will not be a fair trial ... more   Add a comment


17.03.08.
Paris book fair evacuated after bomb threat

A bomb threat on Sunday targeted the Paris book fair, forcing organisers to evacuate visitors to the literary event, which this year is honouring Israeli writers despite a Muslim boycott, police said ... more   Add a comment

Growing craze for book crossing
A new phenomenon for swapping books with strangers has arrived in Wales, and it is turning the unlikeliest of public places into lending libraries ... more   Add a comment

German pilot shot down Little Prince author
A former German World War II fighter pilot has claimed he shot down French literary hero Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, author of The Little Prince, 63 years after the event. However, Horst Rippert, 88, said he would have held his fire on July 31, 1944, had he known his victim was one of his favourite authors ... more   Add a comment

Cookbooks old and new
Special dishes served at family gatherings often create a memory of taste that last a lifetime. That memory can make one nostalgic enough to hunt for the recipe and before long a cookbook collection evolves ... more   Add a comment


15.03.08.
Amazing Rare Things

David Attenborough retired from our screens (for the second time) when Life in Cold Blood ended last week, but he remains true to his mission of bringing us the wild and the downright freaky as curator of Amazing Rare Things, which opens today at The Queen's Gallery, Buckingham Palace ... more   Add a comment

£5m gift for Bodleian Library
Julian (Toby) Blackwell (of the bookshops), whose Oxford branch has long been intimately entwined with university life, has made a gift of £5 million towards a display centre for the treasures of the Bodleian. And what treasures they are, from a Gutenberg Bible, one of only eight surviving, to Tolkien drawings, to a first edition of Over the Rainbow ... more   Add a comment

France makes bookshop pledge
France's culture minister Christine Albanel has inked a deal aimed at saving France's independent bookshops. The deal was signed on the eve of the Paris Book Fair, Salon du Livre, which opend tonight13th March amid controversy over Israel's presence as the guest of honour ... more   Add a comment


13.03.08.
Pratchett funds Alzheimer's study

Best-selling fantasy author Terry Pratchett is to donate $1m for research into Alzheimer's disease. The creator of the Discworld series was diagnosed with a rare early-onset form of the disease in December ... more   Add a comment

Photo collection 'will fetch £1.5m'
Photographs of the world's most beautiful women are to be auctioned at Christie's with an estimated price tag of 3 million dollars (£1.5m). The collection includes nude portraits of supermodels Kate Moss and Gisele Bundchen, and an image of Brigitte Bardot ... more   Add a comment

Copernicus 1st edition for $1.5mn
Author J.K. Rowling has revived her bid to ban the further publication of a long-lens photograph of her young son after the initial privacy claim was thrown out by a London court last year ... more   Add a comment

Magna Carta what?
Nearly half of the UK population does not know what the Magna Carta is, according to a YouGov poll. The survey commissioned by the British Library found 45 per cent of the 2,000 people questioned had no knowledge of the English charter ... more   Add a comment


11.03.08.
Rowling revives privacy case over photo of son

Author J.K. Rowling has revived her bid to ban the further publication of a long-lens photograph of her young son after the initial privacy claim was thrown out by a London court last year ... more   Add a comment

A lecture on the demon drink
Sir Walter Raleigh, whose introduction of tobacco to England has killed millions in the intervening four centuries, keenly promoted the habit of drinking smoke, or quaffing the fume, as Georgian dandies called it. But old Walt – pirate, explorer, potato pioneer and poet – was a bit of a temperance bore on the subject of alcohol.
     In a rare first edition found in a private library and to be auctioned at Bonhams next month, Sir Walter counselled his readers that excessive drinking was a bewitching and infectious vice which destroyed health, promoted premature ageing and “transformeth a man into a beast” ... more   Add a comment

Da Vinci's works on exhibit in Saxony
A Leonardo Da Vinci exhibition focusing on his fascination with machines opens in the Museum of Industry in the German city of Saxony ... more   Add a comment


10.03.08.
'POSSESSED'

'Possessed' enters the complicated worlds of four hoarders; people whose lives are dominated by their relationship to possessions. The film questions whether hoarding is a symptom of mental illness or a revolt against the material recklessness of consumerism. When does collecting become hoarding and why do possessions exert such an influence on our lives? ... more  (Many thanks to Gian Raviolo for the link)  Add a comment

Giuseppe Garibaldi’s letters take the biscuit
Giuseppe Garibaldi, Italy’s national hero, enjoyed an intense “romantic correspondence” with the wife of a British MP whom he met during his visit to England in 1864, according to unpublished letters which go on show at an antiquarian book fair in Milan this week ... more   Add a comment

Pulp Fact: book publishing gets greener
"Environmental Trends and Climate Impacts" is an 86-page summary, printed on 50 percent post-consumer recycled paper and full of charts about fiber, endangered forests and carbon footprints. The news: The book world, which uses up more than 1.5 million metric tons of paper each year, is steadily, if not entirely, finding ways to make production greener ... more   Add a comment

The beat goes on
OSU Press resurrects obscure works by William S. Burroughs ... more   Add a comment

Baby boomers collect books they loved as kids
Baby boomers, as a whole, have been fighting aging since they started turning the dreaded 30. Now, they're returning to their childhoods in droves by buying the books they loved when they were young. Old children's books are very collectible now, says Mike Slicker, owner of Lighthouse Books in St. Petersburg and an organizer of the 27th annual Florida Antiquarian Book Fair, which runs from Friday to March 16 at The Coliseum in St. Petersburg ... more   Add a comment


07.03.08.
Why poetry still matters

From Beowulf to Philip Larkin, poetry's past haunts its present. Andrew Motion, Bonnie Greer, the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Culture Secretary on the poems that changed their lives ... more   Add a comment

An Ansel Adams trove is scheduled for auction
On April 11 Christie’s New York is scheduled to sell about 200 silver-gelatin Ansel Adams prints from a corporate collection in California. It is among the largest Adams collections in private hands ... more   Add a comment

Lincoln `slavery' letter priced at $5
Abraham Lincoln's letter in answer to a petition asking him to free slave children may set a record for a manuscript by the former U.S. president when it's offered for sale in New York on April 3 ... more   Add a comment

Cash opens up literary treasures
British literary treasures, including the earliest complete book written in English, are to go on display thanks to a £5m donation. The artefacts at the University of Oxford's Bodleian Library are currently accessible only to a few scholars ... more   Add a comment

Bauman Rare Books opens new rare book gallery
The 2300-square-foot gallery will carry many highly valued volumes, including a 1687 edition of Chaucer's Works, a first edition of James Joyce's Ulysses (considered by many to be the most important novel of the 20th-century), a first edition of A Farewell to Arms signed by Hemingway, an exceptional first edition of Twain's classic Huck Finn, and a scarce first edition of Beethoven's magical Fifth Symphony. In addition to books, the Las Vegas rare book gallery will also offer unique documents, such as a lengthy autograph letter signed by President Lincoln and a military document signed by Napoleon as emperor ... more   Add a comment


06.03.08.
Was childhood ever innocent?

Children are growing up too fast, says a leading author. But hasn't society always worried that young people are experiencing adulthood too soon? ... more   Add a comment

How to write a misery memoir
Yet another tragic autobiography has been exposed as a fraud following rave reviews. John Crace offers tips to writers who want to wring a bestseller out of their dull life story ... more   Add a comment

World Book Day: Just leave it to Captain Underpants
Too many parents worry about the age at which their children learn to read. But it's all down to the individual, argues one mother ... more   Add a comment

The world's biggest book, Bhutan, is put on display
Hundreds of events are expected to take place across Scotland to mark the annual World Book Day. The world's biggest book, a photographic record of the Himalayas measuring 5ft 7in, will be on display at the National Library of Scotland ... more   Add a comment


05.03.08.
Cromer bids to save Blogg treasures

Two gold watches and a hand-crafted book are the heartfelt “thank yous” to a legendary lifeboatman. They mark the lifesaving prowess of Cromer coxswain Henry Blogg who saved 873 lives during 387 launches in his 53 years of service. But the treasured items, along with papers and albums which give a unique insight into the family man behind the seafaring hero, are soon to go under the auctioneer's hammer ... more   Add a comment

Unearthing a bookworm's work
Information is a tool, but love of reading is a way of life. And like any love, it has a physical dimension. There is more to it than simply ingesting print. It begins with pleasure in the look, feel, and weight of a book. Some would argue that in our digital age, book arts matter more than ever before. Nowhere do they matter more than at the Grolier Club, founded in 1884 to promote the art of book production ... more   Add a comment

Memorable literary hoaxes
Margaret Seltzer joins a list of authors and writers whose memoirs were more fiction than fact ... more   Add a comment


04.03.08.
Author admits gang-life 'memoir' was all fiction

The gripping memoir of "Margaret B. Jones" received critical raves. It turns out it should have been reviewed as fiction. The author of "Love and Consequences," a critically acclaimed autobiography about growing up among gangbangers in South Los Angeles, acknowledged Monday that she made up everything in her just-published book ... more   Add a comment

Arab countries boycott Paris book fair
A high public profile is one of the aims of the Salon du Livre international book fair in Paris. But the widespread attention the Salon is currently receiving is far from welcome, following a vociferous campaign to boycott the fair over a decision this year to dedicate the event's prestigious "Pavilion of Honour' to Israeli writers ... more   Add a comment

Cleaning 400 years of dust from books
The Long Room in the Old Library at Dublin's Trinity College houses one of the most extensive collections of antique books in the world: it contains about 300,000 volumes as well as a trove of historical documents ... more   Add a comment

Penguin audiobooks to be copyright-free
Penguin is planning to offer audiobooks that are free of digital copyright protection technology, which will allow buyers to play them on any digital device, dismissing fears that they could become the latest target for online pirates ... more   Add a comment

The great Bronte mystery
Justine Picardie investigates whether Emily's poems were really written by her reprobate brother Branwell ... more   Add a comment


01.03.08.
Charles Dickens collection to be sold

Rare works by Charles Dickens, including a page from the original manuscript of "Pickwick Papers" and an illustration of the "Oliver Twist" character Bill Sikes, are going on the auction block ... more   Add a comment

Bestselling memoir was a pack of lies
At just six years old, Misha Defonseca trudged across three countries to try to find her Jewish parents who had been carted off to Auschwitz by the Nazis. She collapsed in a forest but was rescued by pack of wolves who adopted her as their cub. Her story became the best-selling Holocaust autobiography, Misha: A Memoir of the Holocaust Years. The only problem? It was not fact, but fiction ... more   Add a comment

Author plans posthumous comeback
Author Jan Morris has come out of retirement to write one more book - but it will only see the light of day after her death ... more   Add a comment

Manuscript "The Housebook" reported sold in Germany
It is unclear whether the purchase is in fact legally valid because the manuscript was sold without the permission of the government of Tübingen required by the law of fideikommiss dissolution (similar to the common law institution Fee tail). German law forbids the export of such a precious manuscript, which is registered in the list of national cultural property ... more   Add a comment

Back to the Futura: preserving printing’s past
The granddaddy of all printing museums is off a large square in the small Town of Mainz, Germany, in the shadow of the great Cathedral. The Gutenberg Museum has several Gutenberg Bibles, machinery, artifacts, and other attractions. It is, for printing afficionados, our own Mecca, if you will. The Plantin-Moretus Museum in Antwerp is a shrine to the printing arts. It was both the home and the workplace of Christopher Plantin and generations of his family. There is no single American printing museum like Mainz or Antwerp, although, a few come close ... more   Add a comment

 

 
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