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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.

May 2009 Skip Free Registration

29.05.09.
No news today ...
I'm out of the office until 11.06.09, so no news or updates until then. I shall do my best to stay out of bookshops whilst away, but you never know ...
:)  Add a comment


28.05.09.
The house where Big Brother was born

A pilgrimage to Jura reveals the distant and untouched glory of Orwell's cottage at Barnhill ... more  Add a comment

Manuscript may be a medieval women's magazine
Canadian researcher discovers historic document filled with romance and recipes ... more  Add a comment

Exile's epic history published at last
A handwritten Latin manuscript that was missing for 300 years has been translated into English for the first time by an 81-year-old Irish scholar. University College Cork historian Denis O’Sullivan, a former surgeon at Cork University Hospital, spent more than three years painstakingly translating the historical manuscript and his finished work, The Natural History of Ireland, was launched in Cork last night ... more  Add a comment


27.05.09.
ABA steps up efforts to resolve Slade affair

The Antiquarian Booksellers Association (ABA) has stepped up its efforts to recover books stolen by its former president, David Slade, from Sir Evelyn de Rothschild ... more  Add a comment

Auctioneer to 'sell' Robert Burns' Auld Lang Syne
The original Robert Burns manuscript of Auld Lang Syne is going under the hammer at a Capital auction house in August. But whoever buys the unique piece – expected to fetch about £50,000 – will not be able to give it pride of place in their home. Instead the artefact will be restored and placed in the new Robert Burns Birthplace Museum in Ayrshire, beside a plaque bearing the name of its new patron ... more  Add a comment


26.05.09.
Cooking for Marie Antoinette

Ivan Day once milked a cow into a glass of wine while researching the syllabub. Hattie Ellis meets a man who stops at nothing to re-create ancient recipes ... more  Add a comment

D-Day bomb raids were 'close to a war crime'
The RAF bombing raids in Normandy following the D-Day invasion were 'close to a war crime', a leading British historian has claimed. Antony Beevor has singled out Bomber Command's massive raids on the key city of Caen for particular criticism, describing the terrible suffering of French civilians trapped in the city as it was virtually destroyed ... more  Add a comment

Japanese horror novel printed on toilet roll
At just nine short chapters the author says 'The Drop' can be read in a few minutes and is printed several times on each roll of toilet paper, each copy taking up just 90 cm ... more  Add a comment

Shia books thrown in Afghan river
Provincial authorities in south-western Afghanistan have thrown thousands of books, mainly about Shias or Shia Islam, into a river ... more  Add a comment

Rare Avicenna manuscript recovered
Police have recovered a rare manuscript of the Persian polymath Avicenna's The Canon of Medicine which was recently stolen from his mausoleum in Hamadan ... more  Add a comment


22.05.09.
Unpublished Auden poems surface in film archive

Three unpublished poems by WH Auden have surfaced in the archives of the British Film Institute more than 70 years after they were written ... more  Add a comment

'Golden Age' comics fetch plenty of green
The payoff came Thursday when the 78-year-old Menomonee Falls man sold 72 comics from the 1930s and 1940s for $518,000, less the 6% he pays the auction house ... more  Add a comment

Iran arrests 'Agatha Christie serial killer'
Police in Iran believe they have caught the country's first female serial killer and are claiming she has disclosed a literary inspiration behind her attempts to evade detection: the crime novels of Agatha Christie ... more  Add a comment


21.05.09.
Dylan not author of auction poem

A poem thought to have been written by a young Bob Dylan has been exposed as a copy of lyrics written by country singer Hank Snow ... more  Add a comment


20.05.09.
Guilty plea in Ebay ''Autographed'' books scam

A man has pleaded guilty in federal court in Philadelphia to a book fraud -- forging famous authors' signatures and selling the books on Ebay as signed originals ... more  Add a comment

Toeing the Line
A very rare cartoon entitled ‘A Set-to for the Speakership’ by political satirist Charles Jameson Grant is for sale at the Antiquarian Book Fair, Olympia for £6,500 ... more  Add a comment

Do you listen to bookshop shelf-talkers?
You have almost certainly seen a shelf-talker, even if you didn't know it was called that: one of those little cards attached to the shelf on which a bookshop – or, better, an individual bookseller – pours out their enthusiasm for the title above ... more  Add a comment


19.05.09.
600-year-old manuscripts lie in a shambles

At least 4,000 rare and six-century-old manuscripts are falling apart at the Hazrat Pirmohammed Shah Library and Research Centre due to paucity of funds ... more  Add a comment

“Like burning the furniture to keep warm”

Some faculty members at the Jesuit-run University of San Francisco are up in arms over economic contingency plans that include selling some of the university’s rare books collection and auctioning off pieces of valuable art owned by the school ... more  Add a comment
.
UK scientist hopes to 'read' 3,000-year-old scrolls

Brent Seales, the Gill professor of engineering in UK's computer science department, will use an X-Ray CT scanning system to collect interior images of the scrolls' rolled-up pages. Then, he and his colleagues hope to digitally "unroll" the scrolls on a computer screen so scholars can read them.
     "It will be a challenge because today these things look more like charcoal briquets than scrolls," Seales said last week. "But we're using a non-invasive scanning system, based on medical technology, that lets you slice through an object and develop a three-dimensional data set without having to open it, just as you would do a CT scan on a human body" ... more
 Add a comment


18.05.09.
Court ends dispute over Steinbeck's works

Ending a decades-long dispute over the rights to John Steinbeck's classic literary works such as Of Mice and Men and The Grapes of Wrath, the U.S. Supreme Court today declined to hear an appeal by the son and granddaughter of renowned novelist John Steinbeck, thereby affirming that the rights to the author's best-known early works lawfully belong to the Estate of John Steinbeck's widow, Elaine Steinbeck ... more  Add a comment

'Golden Age' comics go up for auction in Dallas
The collection boasts the likes of "Batman" No. 1 and "Marvel Comics" No. 1. The most expensive comic — expected to clear $100,000 — is the scarce "Marvel Mystery Comics" No. 9, noted for its cover battle between the Human Torch and the Sub-Mariner — the first time two superheroes appeared in the same story ... more  Add a comment

Jonathan 'Wossy' launches Twitter book club
Richard and Judy's book club might be meeting an untimely end this summer but Jonathan Ross has stepped into the literary breach, launching a book club on Twitter which has sent his first choice, Jon Ronson's The Men Who Stare at Goats, soaring up the bestseller charts ... more  Add a comment

Opening a new chapter on old books
Opening an independent (secondhand)bookstore on Danforth Ave. last month called Re: Reading was almost a mission for Sheedy, but it still seems like a strange thing to do in these times of "ebooks" and cut-rate, Internet bookselling sites. Opening one near some bigger, more established bookstores in the midst of what's considered the worst recession in half a century seems even stranger ... more  Add a comment


15.05.09.
Why paper still cuts it

News online, the rise of the e-book, photo prints in decline - it all points to a paperless future. But here's betting we can't live without the stuff ... more  Add a comment

A novel way to beat the blues
In quiet moments all authors hope their work may some day change the world. Few ever realise the dream, but if a scheme currently running in West Yorkshire is anything to go by, novelists may yet be the secret weapon in the battle against stress, depression and loneliness ... more  Add a comment

Not so elementary, my dear Watson
For more than a century, Sherlock Holmes, the most famous creation of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, has captivated mystery fans, literary scholars, and researchers of virtually every stripe. But, as dozens of Doyle scholars and Sherlockians showed during a recent three-day symposium at Harvard, the Holmes stories represent only a small part of Doyle’s contribution to literature ... more  Add a comment

A rare snapshot of England's battlegrounds
Don McCullin is one of our greatest living photographers. Best known for his war photography, McCullin also recorded striking images of England. Nick Ahad on a celebration of his work ... more  Add a comment


14.05.09.
Piece Of Dr Pepper iistory fails to sell

A tattered 359-page ledger from the Waco drugstore where Dr Pepper was invented more than 120 years ago failed to sell at auction, Dallas-based Heritage Auction Galleries said Wednesday. The gallery said bidding for the book containing a recipe titled "D Peppers Pepsin Bitters" failed to meet the $25,000 minimum reserve ... more  Add a comment

Science dominates Samuel Johnson prize longlist
Samuel Johnson himself would, no doubt, have been delighted: a biography of his sparring partner and confidante, the woman he referred to as his "dear Mistress", is in the running for the literary award named in his honour ... more  Add a comment

Profile of magician and book collector Ricky Jay
“The pleasure of locating a book or a poster on eBay is completely different than walking into [a bookstore] and finding something you’ve been looking for for 20 years. It’s just a very different experience than typing something onto your computer and finding it. And I’m not claiming there isn’t some joy in that, but it’s very different. What I truly do fear is places that sell books and ephemera are closing down. Because that used to be the great delight for me. Before I had a home, all those years that I spent on the road opening for rock and roll bands and Cheech and Chong and various people, and living in a small place or on people’s couches. When I would come back to the city the first thing I would do would be to go to a bookstore. I just felt comfortable in print shops and bookstores. Just sitting there. And that feeling is still really strong” ... more  Add a comment


13.05.09.
Tintin breaks records at auction

It’s a good thing Tintin’s hair is already standing on end — even he might be surprised by an auction held on Sunday in Belgium at which more than $1.57 million in Tintin-related artwork and items were sold ... more  Add a comment

Sony UK sponsors Guardian Hay Festival
Sony UK is aiming to steal a march on Amazon's Kindle in a battle of the ebook readers by sponsoring the Guardian Hay Festival ... more  Add a comment

John Lennon: The New York City Years
“He was a New Yorker already, in Liverpool,” said Yoko Ono yesterday of her late husband. Ono was speaking at the opening of “John Lennon: The New York City Years” at the local annex of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in SoHo. Ono worked with curator Jim Henke to put together the show, which presents photos, hand-written lyrics and other ephemera. They drew on the Hall of Fame’s permanent collection, as well as that of the John Lennon Museum in Tokyo and Ono’s personal stash ... more  Add a comment

Money off at WHSmith for charity donations
WHSmith has teamed up with the British Heart Foundation to offer money off vouchers to those who donate books, dvds or cds to the charity ... more  (Thanks to Clive Keeble for the link.) Add a comment


08.05.09.
Rubbish poetry

Two shabby looking volumes which were recently found in a skip in France have turned out to belong to Lord Byron and Shelley ... more  Add a comment

Book of a lifetime: Buffalo Bill Wild West Annual
It would have been given to me by my parents, the Christmas after my 12th birthday, 1950, cementing an interest in "cowboys and indians" that, for as long as I could remember, had been played out with friends – or, if necessary, by myself – in the streets and gardens of north London or on the open plains of Parliament Hill Fields and Hampstead Heath ... more  Add a comment

Controlled chaos
This is the 8th article in the “Book Wars” series of articles, a series of articles where the author interprets the strategies taught in The 33 Strategies of War by Robert Greene, and applies them to the business of the independent bookseller, in the arena of the difficult book trade ... more  Add a comment

Napoleon Bonaparte – the romantic novelist
Napoleon Bonaparte may be known as one of the greatest military leaders of history, but another talent has been unveiled as his romantic novel is set to be released in English ... more  Add a comment

Ottoman Turkish manuscripts course
Uiversity of London will host a study course on Ottoman Turkish manuscripts between 1-4 June ... more  Add a comment

The next age of discovery
In a 21st-century version of the age of discovery, teams of computer scientists, conservationists and scholars are fanning out across the globe in a race to digitize crumbling literary treasures. In the process, they're uncovering unexpected troves of new finds, including never-before-seen versions of the Christian Gospels, fragments of Greek poetry and commentaries on Aristotle ... more  Add a comment


07.05.09.
Biblio launches UK site

Biblio, Inc., which operates Biblio.com, today announced the launch of its new UK website, Biblio.co.uk. While Biblio.com is one of the largest used book marketplaces in the world and carries books from independent booksellers in over 40 countries, Biblio.co.uk will be primarily focused on serving European customers who are looking for second hand and antiquarian books specifically from the UK or other parts of Europe ... more  Add a comment

The decline and fall of books
Traditional bookshops are closing; vending machines are churning out novels; and e-books are the new paperbacks; so is this the final chapter for the book industry? ... more  Add a comment

Dan Volkmann, collector of rare books, dies
Dan Volkmann spent 39 years collecting a complete first-edition set of Californiana books called the Zamorano 80 - a feat accomplished by only three others ... more  Add a comment

Penguin shows off its SF covers
Alison Flood is dazzled by the publisher's display of its classic science fiction jacket designs ... more  Add a comment


05.05.09.
Lost manuscript unmasks details of original Ponzi

The memoir — “The Ponzi Story,” typed on 206 double-spaced pages and completed around 1962, six years before Mr. McMasters died at 94 — is part of a trove of 2,200 books, manuscripts and pamphlets on swindlers and their frauds, hoaxes and confidence games acquired a year ago and recently catalogued by John Jay College of Criminal Justice ... more  Add a comment

Working on Coptic archives
The Coptic Museum archives, considered to be the world's most important Coptic library and containing more than 5,000 manuscripts and books, are being given a facelift ... more  Add a comment

JRR Tolkien fans await latest book
A scholarly translation of a 1,000-year-old Norse text will make an unlikely best-seller this week as it becomes the latest book by JRR Tolkien to be published posthumously ... more  Add a comment


01.05.09.
US government dumps children's colouring book

A children's colouring book that depicts the burning towers of the 9/11 terror attacks and the devastation of Hurricane Katrina has been removed from a US government website over concerns that its contents could prove upsetting ... more  Add a comment

Judging books by their Cover
This summer, the Bodleian Library will celebrate the art and craft of bookbinding from both traditional and contemporary perspectives with two major exhibitions ... more  Add a comment

 
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