Well, just finished packing out from a great fair in SanFran. Found a few good things to buy…sold some interesting things. Notably I sold the biggest thing in the book (Mazur’s Inferno) *and* it was carried away! This last bit was *huge* as I had picked up a number of additional things at CODEX and the missing Mazur made a huge difference while packing.

Staying with Suzanne’s classmate was great fun…nice visit for a few day and then they left for the weekend, so I’ve the run of this lovely apartment all to myself. As bookfair lodging goes, it would be hard to beat…

I wrapped up the fair in a reasonably surreal discussion/theatre of the absurd performance art piece with My New Best Friend. I spent the final hour of the fair discussing debauched books, printing, and alternative uses for Amazing Tape (or, really, the original uses for AT…). It was a book fair discussing against which future such discussions will be measured and fall short…

Morning flight from SFO to Boston…then home. More to follow….

 

I managed to get another dozen or so new slips printed this morning (just finished cataloguing new books last night) before heading over to The Concourse for the far. Did a bit of cruising books, but even so, finished at a respecatbel 130ish…so had plenty of time to get ready and prep for the afternoon opening. Opening was nice…steady flow. Lots of interested people. Even sold some big books. All in all, not a bad day.

Pleased the day turned out as it did, as I was being blanked all day for not showing up at the K is for Kegger party at the Bookseller Real World house. On one hand, I feel sorry that I missed it (again)…on the other: 1) I have missed it each prior year for various reasons…there is an argument that there is a tradition to respect; 2) I had dinner less than 2 blocks from my place (and with an intervening crepe place on the way)…that is, the idea of moving blocks and blocks *away* from my place when my bed (and work) was so close seemed…er…unwise; 3) it seemed likely that it would be a late night and I was very fearful it would have a bad effect on my ability to get work done and/or get things done in the morn (as I heard people were still there and happy until 4am or so suggests I made the best choice. I am, however, very sorry that I let down people almost undoubtedly put out if I came upon them on fire…I will accept my blanking with dignity.

 

The pictures tell the story. Setup started at noon. I managed to actually go eat lunch, I was feeling so cool and collected. The booth is about 2/3 done. We have from 9am until 3pm to finish (and to cruise the hall). Looking forward to tomorrow. Many action shots promised… [It appears I have managed to 'miss' the K is for Kegger party...I had every intent to go...but after dinner and thinking of books I needed to catalogue and slips that needed printing at Fed Ex tomorrow...I just decided to continue my multi-year failure to attend....]

 

We had the extraordinary good fortune to be able to offer 20 pre-publication Special Editions of the portfolio of Occupy poster art. I’ve included a handful of images of some of the posters to be included. This edition includes 35 pieces (the regular edition will have 30) and includes thirty 12” x 18” hand silk-screened artists’ prints on French paper in an archival silk-screened presentation box. The collection has been curated by Occuprint organizer, Jesse Goldstein, BOOKLYN’s Marshall Weber, and various Occuprint editorial committee members including Molly Fair, Josh MacPhee, and John Boy.

Our special edition (Occupy the ABAA) pre-publication set is limited to an edition of 20 and contains , in addition to the above:

  • an original first edition of the Occupy Wall Street Journal’s Occuprint issue.
  • 1 copy of the Alexandra Clotfelter’s iconic “The Beginning is Near” roped bull   image, offset printed on French paper from a limited edition of 160 on French paper
  • 2 Occuprint “General Strike” offset posters
  • 1 Occuprint “General Strike Newspaper”.

While we placed most of the edition, I have a few sets left and, as this project is a fundraiser for Occupy, I’d like to see the entire run placed. Please contact me if you’d to have a set when they are printed (in the next month or so).

“Occuprint emerged when The Occupied Wall Street Journal asked us to guest curate an issue dedicated to the poster art of the global Occupy movement. The Occuprint website is meant to connect people with this work, and provide a base of support for print-related media within the #Occupy movement. http://occuprint.org/

Occuprint showcases posters from the worldwide Occupy movement, all of which are part of the creative commons, and available to be downloaded for noncommercial use, though we ask that artists be given attribution for their work. Our Print Lab is collaboration with the Occupy Wall Street Screen Printing Guild. The OWS Screen Printing Guild is an official working group within the OWS General Assembly. It is an open working group that regularly incorporates new members into its process and can be contacted at owsscreenguild(at)gmail(dot)com.

We look forward to creating and distributing more printed matter by supporting the development of screen-printing labs at other locations worldwide, and by printing more of the wonderful posters that we are receiving.”                                                                                                                                                                                                                     —Occuprint

 

The dust is finally settling and I thought I best get some images and links posted about the ever-fabulous NYC ABAA Book Fair. It was, in brief, a wonderful fair and a great weekend (and then some). Melissa Sanders (of Ken Sander’s Rare Books fame) flew out early and both helped me prep for the fair and attended a great outing of the Ticknor Society with me. She also corrected errors in my database as she helped pack, for which I’ll apparently be repaying her on a per-error basis for years (overall, a win for me).

The fair was good fun, in that slightly over-intense and somewhat masochistic way. We sold well (and most of the things I really wanted to sell) and bought even better. The shadow show had some great things and was well worth the trip (though I wish some coordination could be such that one could do both the shadow fair *and* attend the ABAA annual meeting…). The best wrapup of the fair and it’s importance was done by Lorne Bair and can be found here (highly recommend the read).

The ABAA blog has a nice post on celebrity spotting at the fair. I was especially pleased to have Steve Martin actually stop by the booth and look about…and more so that he then posted about his visit as *his post* radically increased the fair’s twitter profile :)

A video of the booth can be found here (a bit too much background noise, but gives you a good overview:

Images are captioned and covers before and throughout…

 

 

Long day. Good day. Fun day. Very. Long. Day. Great compliments: one of best was approaching someone who was making a notation on their program (otherwise blank)…in block letters next to the LM entry: “AMAZING”. Must sleep now.

 

We had a very nice awards event this evening  for the 2011 National Collegiate Book Collecting Contest. The winners are:

First Prize: Mitch Fraas, Duke University, Anglo-American Legal Printing 1702 to the Present

Second Prize: Maggie Murray, Johns Hopkins, Literature of the Little Review: In Which Margaret Anderson Enters an Antiquarian Bookstore

Third Prize: Sarah McCormick, University of California-Riverside, Desert Dreams: The History of California’s Coachella Valley

Essay Prize: Emily Brodman, Stanford University, Sourcing the Sanctuary Movement

[N.B. Links to their essays can be found at the 'winner' page.]

Great dinner with Mark D at Zola. A wonderful evening.

 

Quick bridge post with many images. The APHA meeting was good fun. Great tour of the San Diego Supercomputing Center. Some wonderful books at the little book fair. The flight home was easy and painless and I had a few nice days with Suzanne before heading down to Washington, DC to peddle books and attend the National Collegiate Book Collecting Competition Awards event.

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Of the next 40 days (Oct. 5 through Nov. 13), I will be traveling for 27. The event bound up in this bit of insanity are as follows:

Seattle [WA] Antiquarian Book Fair (Oct. 8-9)
[Side trip to Portland, OR with friends and books and wine]
APHA Conference in San Diego (Oct 14-15)
National Collegiate Book Collecting Competition Awards Dinner at the LC (Oct. 21)
Oxford Fine Press Book Fair (and visit to the Chelsea Fair) (Nov. 5-6)
Boston ABAA Book Fair (Nov. 11-13)

I will be, to the best of my ability, posting updates on this ridiculous tour here, on Facebook, on Google+, and/or on Twitter. You choose the amount of fun and pain sharing you feel you can endure. There will be a bit of cross posting, but I’m hoping to keep it to a minimum. All I can say is that I should be in rare form by the time the Boston ABAA book fair rolls about. Come and watch the monkey dance…

Please let me know if you would like passes to one or more of these events (recommend emailing).

 

As I am accustomed to doing, I must apologize for the delay in posting the fair wrap-up. The ‘why’ of it should be clear as I flesh out the how and when of it all. Sunday at the Park Ave. Armory was great fun. Unlike many fairs, where Sunday drags on with few humans and little energy, this past one was active and interesting all day. I did manage to have a bit of time to actually get around to some (but not all) of the booths I had been intending to visit all weekend…but I also was surprisingly busy. Our first NYC “big show” was three years ago at what I think is universally considered the worst year for the fair in recent memory–we were pleased to make it through that show in the black. I am pleased to say that our Sunday sales pretty much equally our first first year total. It really was, on all fronts, a great fair. I want to thank everyone who worked so hard to make it possible, especially Sandy Smith and his team and Susan Benne, et al.

The ‘shadow show’ was proved itself a great trip. I have to admit that between the broken toe and inability to speak I was not hugely excited to make the trek over. Suz and Brian proved convincing, however, and I am extremely pleased I gave in. Above and beyond another room full of interest books, some of my favorite humans were in attendance. I was able to catch up with old friends like The Dennae (First Folio) were there (barely, as they just managed to avoid carbon monoxide poisoning in their home), as was Melissa Sanders, Kent, and Katie (Ken Sanders Rare Books), and Roland and Tina (Panoply Books). Perhaps best of all was finally seeking Molly Sacamano (late of Royal Books) who not too long ago returned to her roots in the West and opened her own shop, Iron Wheel Books. She came with a wonderful stock of fine press and artists’ books…several of which I left with (and all of which I sold pretty much immediately…clearly I should have bought more).

Packing up was as wretched as always. We used our usual method of slow plodding to great effect. By the time we were done, most everyone else had left, there was not line to get in and it was as painless as possible. We made it down to my sister’s in NJ with time for tea and a bit of relaxing..much needed as I was far from done on this trip.

Now any rational human would take a day or two following the intense chaos that is the NY ABAA fair and relax a bit…ship sold items, write thank you notes, etc. I, in a fit of brilliance, scheduled additional meetings “down that way”. Thus I woke at 5:30am in NJ, shifted the load a bit in the van, and hit the road for a day trip to Washington, DC to deliver some books to the LC (happily still functioning after a bit of a ‘shutdown scare’) and to deliver an archive to Georgetown Special Collections in hopes that they couldn’t resist its riches. While 10 or so hours of driving were rather painful (physically and emotionally), visiting humans I like a great deal was good fun and the archive did not come home with me (thus making my wife extremely pleased).

Having returned to NJ rather late, I still managed to hit the road reasonably early Tuesday morning to begin our journey home…but not before one more stop. Marvin Taylor (another of my most favorite Special Collections Librarians) had been overseas during the book fair and I had some trinkets that I thought might make him happy…and he was kind enough to set aside a bit of time (no small matter as he had just returned from 10 days away). Suzanne and I had a good meeting with Marvin and Charlotte at NYU’s Fales Library and managed to leave with less than we arrived with…though the meter violation was a bummer.

We arrived home late Tuesday and I have pretty much spent the rest of the time sleeping, unpacking, and shipping books. Around the corner we have the Boston Book and Paper Expo (a MARIAB event) on May 7th. This should be plenty to keep me busy…especially with that interesting egg-laying-bunny holiday in between…but no. I had two or three people talk with me about the Paris book fair while in NYC, that I should attend and meet some particular people, etc…and I have some books to pick up in Paris that will be easier to travel with than to ship…so I’ve booked an impromptu trip to Paris to attend the International Antiquarian Book Fair at the Grand Palais. I might have to do a photographic “compare and contrast” of the Salon du Livre Ancien de Paris and the Boston Book and Paper Expo. We shall see. All I know is that I am inexplicably busy…and not complaining one bit.

 

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