Tuesday, March 02, 2010

Hugh Hefner-Teen Cartoonist

Stephen Gertz has posted a very nice article at BookPatrol on the rather amazing collection of Hefner material I spent several weeks cataloguing. Stephen focuses on one elements, Hefner's brilliant cartoon. Hefner, as a young man, wanted to be a cartoonist (and did the early cartoons for Playboy).

During high school, Hugh would take notes on what his friends were wearing during the day so that he could sketch them accurately in the evening for his remarkable "School Daze" (approx. 33 volumes that are part of his private collection). Jane told me that she and her female friends would check School Daze to find out which of their boyfriends were fooling around behind their backs as Hugh would document *everything*. The cartoons in this collection are the only copies I know of that are not in Hefner's personal library.

I knew very little about Hefner before cataloguing this collection. 60 years of personal correspondence later, I have to admit that I am amazed by the man.

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Monday, February 08, 2010

Changes afoot here...please bear with us...

Apparently, I am one of the .5% of Blogger users that posts using FTP to my own domain. I've just learned that Blogger is going to stop supporting FTP as it is used by so few and is rather resource intensive for them.

I am in the process of deciding if this means I am going to shift to a different Blogger product/service or switch to a blog client that still supports FTP. The old school geek in me likes the idea of having all my bits on my own domain...but I must say I like some of the widgets, etc that would be available if I stick with Blogger.

Regardless, I'll do all I can to maintain things as they look and feel. Hope springs eternal.

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Friday, January 08, 2010

Recommended Inappropriate Books for Kids

Curious Pages is dedicated to recommending inappropriate books for kids. Their selections are wonderful, as are their images. I promise you will waste a good part of your day and, most likely, add it to your rss feed. It is my favorite recently discovered blog.

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Sunday, December 06, 2009

Mea Culpa: Update and the Infocalypse.

I have been a very naughty blogger of late. Extremely busy on many fronts. Micro-blogging (via Twitter and/or FB) seems to be all I can manage. I am working on changing this and, with luck, I should be back on a rather regular posting cycle again. Thank you for the nice range of msgs from "post more" to "are you dead".

Alternatively, please note that I can be found at any or all of the following. You may pick your level of hyper-connectedness:

Cell: 207-329-1469
GoogleVoice: 207-518-8589 (rings all associated lines and emails me voicemails)

iChat/AIM: iam112358132134
Skype: luxmentis


Twitter: @LuxMentis

Welcome to the Infocalypse.


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Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Two great blogs here in Portland (and a new book shop)...

I offer for your amusement and enjoyment two great new(ish) blogs. The first is

The Green Hand - Specializing in horror, mystery, and esoterica...best of all, just across the lane from Nancy. We're heading to a nice biblio-density level here on the West End. In Michelle's own words:
Hello everyone! It's official -- The Green Hand bookshop has secured its new shopfront space at 661 Congress Street, across Longfellow Square from our friend Nancy at Cunningham Books, and across the street from our compatriots in cultural intrigue, The Fun Box Monster Emporium and Coast City Comics.

Not only will we strive to provide a pleasant atmosphere and an ever-intriguing book selection, but also we are bringing into the fold the inimitable Loren Coleman's own International Cryptozoology Museum.
The other is the quite excellent foodie blog, "Portland Food Coma". It is not your usual food blog. Irreverent, debauched and...well...sometimes patently offensive (you are warned re the bacon cross tattoo-and/or the horror below it). All this notwithstanding, perhaps because of it, it is one of the great reads on and about food. Enjoy.

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Thursday, August 06, 2009

Good day on the PR front-and a great list of biblio-blogs

We were included in two "best of book blogs" lists yesterday and are flattered and honored by both.

The first was part of blog.com's ongoing program of providing internal and external "10 Best List"s. In this case, Larry Mitchell (collector, occasional dealer and special collections library) and author of the brilliant blog The Private Library was asked to compile his Top 10 list. Our blathering notwithstanding, it is a wonderful short list. I am pleased to say, it only added 4 that I was not already following...they have been added. Each site is described briefly so you can get a touch of flavor.

The only problem is that he was only allowed to include 10 blogs. Apparently, Larry heard about this shortcoming from a number of humans as he subsequently posted an apology. Such lists are obviously subjective...We are very pleased to be included in Larry's best of...

[N.B. As I have said before, The Private Library should be on everyone's blog roll...in addition to this regular and cogent posts, his navigation links provide a clearinghouse to nearly every substantive rare/used book resource available. It is the benchmark against which data-rich biblio-sites should be measured.]

OnlineSchool also included us in their "100 Best Book Blogs for History Buffs" under the "Rare" section. They have created a much longer list, broken up into sections (e.g. Reference, Librarian, Rare, Review, etc.) and, again, most have short bios. Obviously, there is a lot of crossover, but they try reasonably hard to group things properly and the result is a good list.

It is always nice to be recognized...more so by those you respect. Enjoy the various suggestions...I'm going to have to start posting more cogent missives.

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Friday, July 17, 2009

Foxing explored...

The Private Library has a great post up on Foxing. Good read for all who deal with it or wonder what it might be...

More broadly, I'll use this as another opportunity to encourage your active following of Private Library. It is, far and away, the best blog about on and about collecting and collections. In addition to great posts, his collection of bibliophilic links sets the bar against which all others should be measured... Enjoy.

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Tuesday, June 30, 2009

"Christians" seek damages for exposure to a book...and the right to burn it...

I wish I could make things like this up. T. Gerristen (who I would love even if she were she not a friend) has just posted a great piece at Murderati on book banning efforts. Her post revolves around efforts in Wisconsin to ban/burn "Baby Be-Bop":
Robert C. Braun of the Christian Civil Liberties Union (CCLU) distributed at the meeting copies of a claim for damages he and three other plaintiffs filed April 28 with the city; the complainants seek the right to publicly burn or destroy by another means the library’s copy of Baby Be-Bop. The claim also demands $120,000 in compensatory damages ($30,000 per plaintiff) for being exposed to the book in a library display, and the resignation of West Bend Mayor Kristine Deiss for “allow[ing] this book to be viewed by the public."
Terry offers a nice overview of small-mindedness and error of such efforts...taking particular note of the fact that such efforts nearly always fail and generally serve the opposite effect, that is, peaking interesting and increasing sales of the subject books. She closes with a plea:
So please, ban my books. I want to join that lofty pantheon of authors that includes Alexie and Sendak and Twain and Vonnegut. My books have plenty to offend everyone. There's adulterous sex and graphic violence, foul language and disturbing perversions. So go ahead, ban me!
For those who do not have it bookmarked, here is the ALA's site for all things banning and bookish.

Personally, I think I am going to sue those who seek to ban books for emotional distress. I wonder if I could have them burned... Enough daydreaming, back to cataloguing books. Happy Tuesday.

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Thursday, May 07, 2009

The Private Library - A great new blog on the block...

There is an outstanding new reference/resource blog for bibliophiles: The Private Library. The site's owner is a longtime collector ("overly enthusiastic book collector"), a sometime antiquarian bookseller and a professional librarian (with a MLS w/ a Specialization in Rare Books & Manuscripts)...that is, he is a high-order book geek, to our great benefit.

His posts are well written, cogent, reasonably frequent and genuinely useful (as opposed to my random and often off-topic rants). He posts, as the title implies, on various aspects of the private library...all sorts, all levels and all nuances. As one who spends most of my time in and around collection development projects, it is a great treat to find.

Best of all, however, are the resources he has pulled together. At either side you will find:
GLOSSARIES OF GENERAL BOOK TERMS
GLOSSARIES OF SPECIALIZED BOOK TERMS
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHIC RESOURCES
BOOKISH ORGANIZATIONS
BOOKISH PODCASTS & WEBCASTS
BOOKISH BLOGROLL
STATE CENTERS FOR THE BOOK
It is, far and away, one of the best reference sites I know of and has leapt to the top of my "Hit Every Day" blogs. Enjoy.

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Tuesday, May 05, 2009

Bibliophiles in the strangest places...

Biblio-folk are showing up in interesting places these days. I joined Facebook a long time ago...and largely ignored it until relatively recently. Over the past several months, however, there has been a tremendous surge in book people (dealers/collectors/etc) who seem to be coming out of the woodwork. The ABAA now has a FB Page (as does Lux Mentis), ready for "Fans" to join and follow, as does Fine Books & Collections. The Rare Book School's Page has nearly 450 Fans... There are also many...many...many groups that are biblio-theme, from collecting to author-specific to elements of the craft.

When I started poking about FB, there were *very* few book dealers who had accounts, now there are literally too many count. Some are active, some on personally, others professionally and some just lurk...but there are a remarkable number of the biblio-crowd on FB and more joining every day. It is rapidly becoming a vibrant network to keep your pulse on the doings of the trade, hobby and/or obsession.

Linked-In is another site I've been for a very long time...more actively when I did more consulting work, but I kept my profile active and periodically checked on bookish elements there. Recently, in addition to a number of "serious" dealers beginning to be found there, more than one "book group" has formed (admittedly, one by me).

Last for today, and certainly not least, is Twitter. I am quite fond of it, as it updates nicely from my iPhone and auto-updates my FB page, killing two feeds with one, so to speak. A considerable number of people are beginning to use it in interesting ways. Publishers are using it around news, booksellers are carefully using it for traffic and sales (a tricky issue, as there is a general "anti-commercial" use sentiment...but very effective in good hands, as here). Personally, I find I tend to post biblio-related missives with a bit of news and a bit of "things that amuse/annoy me"....and I tend to most enjoy those who do the same.

There are beginning to be some good focus-centers for books Twitterers. WeFollow has a well developed "Bookseller" tag (we can be found on page two). There is also a "BookCollecting" tag that I am experimenting with... 

Potentially more useful (and still "emerging") is Twibes, where tweets that share common words can be grouped for easy review. See: Books, BookCollecting, BookDealers and/or Librarians (the last very active, with over 700 members).

This, in addition to the various blogs that are out there...many feeding each other. One of the nice things, frankly, with FB is that many/most of the best book blogs are either mirrored there or are part of NetworkedBlogs there, streamlining one's reading/following (though not, at this point, entirely replacing a good RSS reading). 

There is a tremendous abundance of bookish news, personal and professional. Enjoy the data-stream...

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Thursday, February 26, 2009

Quick interview of Hang Fire....

There is a fun little interview with William Smith, owner of Hang Fire Books over atBoingBoing. William specializes in "vintage paperbacks and lurid pulp fiction from the 1940s-60s" while also carrying general stock. His blog is great as he posts wonderfully lurid pulp covers with pleasing regularity. [Also, you should not miss his current post on the annotated sleaze that arrived recently. Thesis research?!?].

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Tuesday, February 24, 2009

A blog reborn...Good things happening over at Fine Books & Collections

Among the new things happening over at Fine Books and Collections is a new "group" blog. I am very pleased to say that I was involved in drafting the first crop of bloggers and I think it is off to a great start. The intent is that everyone will post about once a week, which should provide for some steady, interesting posts with a variety of voices and focus areas. Though there are a few asks still jelling, the crew as it stands includes the following:A riotous crew, if I do say so myself...and I do. I'm hoping to announce one or two more bloggers in the near future. So head over and read some interesting posts by people who write better than I.

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Saturday, August 09, 2008

George Orwell Blogging From Beyond the Grave

The Orwell Trust (together with Political Quarterly and the Media Standards Trust) has begun posting daily entries from George Orwell's diaries exactly 70 years after he wrote them. Thus, the first entry was August 9th, 1938 ("Caught a large snake in the herbaceous border beside the drive..."). The entries are annotated and tagged. It is quite brilliant.

NPR has a nice bit about it and the geeks are pleased, too.

From the site's announcement post:
From 9th August 2008, you will be able to gather your own impression of Orwell’s face from reading his most strongly individual piece of writing: his diaries. The Orwell Prize is delighted to announce that, to mark the 70th anniversary of the diaries, each diary entry will be published on this blog exactly seventy years after it was written, allowing you to follow Orwell’s recuperation in Morocco, his return to the UK, and his opinions on the descent of Europe into war in real time. The diaries end in 1942, three years into the conflict.

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Saturday, March 29, 2008

Book Theft Blog...

Not too long ago Travis McDade wrote a nice book on a book thief called, aptly enough, The Book Thief. He has, I have just discovered, also been running the blog Upward Departure...subtitled, in part, "Thoughts about book crimes and punishment..."

I have skimmed it and will be returning, when the dust of the next week settles, to delve deeply...as I know there is much to read and learn and grok. Enjoy.

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Saturday, January 26, 2008

Chaos at W#@$ette leads to a new blog and...

our first foray into web advertising. I have enjoyed and followed Wonkette (sorry, no link, still annoyed) from the early days when it was, you know, still Ana Marie Cox's baby. She basically sold it/moved on and it became part of Gawker Media's clot of blogs.

'ette was notable for its *very* snarky and "insider" DC/politico news. Funny, on point and on pulse with a serious love of the loathsome nature of DC and its resident political sleazebags and their minions. You know, the way news should be...

Anyway, they blew through a fair number of writers post-Ana (all male...at 'ette...urgh). Then the frequent poster, Anonymous Lobbyist, came "out" and revealed herself as Megan Carpentier and let us know that she had quite the lobbying gig and would be full time at 'ette. I had dropped back to check it about once every two days or so until Megan began writing...'ette was back. Sharp, funny, profane and just "back". Hell, Megan literally waterboarded a co-worker for our pleasure and amusement...and then destroyed the tape (luckily, there was a secret camera).

I was back to checking it at least twice a day and clicking through on many/most of the posts (i.e. generating money for the site). Then Ken Layne "came back" to 'ette and, in short order, fired the only 'ette at 'ette (it was not a gender thing, apparently, but a style thing....Megan wanted 'ette to be 'ette and Ken apparently wants it to be back in the "snooze" period). There was much gnashing of teeth (notably here) and much outpouring of support for Megan.

About two days ago or so, Megan, Greg Wasserstrom (also recently axed at 'ette) and Hunter Walker (of Gridskipper) founded a new snarky political blog, Cynics' Party ("Exposing hypocrisy, Espousing Profanity since January 24, 2008."). They are off to a great start from a content standpoint...but the off the blocks GoogleAds monetizing resulted in a horrifying amount of Ann Coulter (care, don't say it out loud or an angle looses its wings) and Newt Gingrich newsletter appeals (clearly a deep and disturbing flaw in AdWords).

Late yesterday they redesigned in a way the pushed AdWords "down" the page and added their own support ads. In support of their new venture (and in response to their *very* competitive pricing), I decided to run a wee banner ad on the site. It is our first online buy. How knows, with a bit of luck, it will drawn a new client or two...hope springs...er...eternal. Best of luck to Megan, Greg and Hunter.

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The glory of pulp...


It has been too long since I have been over at Hangfire's blog and clearly a bad oversight on my part. He has just posted a great review of wonderfully horrible pulp covers. This gem is captioned:
First Hoke Jackson's Orgy Days (Nightstand NB1903) featuring topless, high-heeled rock climbers on their way to the sex chalet.
It may just be me, but I think the world needs more topless high-heeled rock climbers...and cute little cape sex chalets.

Don't miss the Detroit textbook warehouse (of death) image post, either...I highly recommend opting for the "slide show" viewing option with Mozart's, Requiem playing in the background.

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Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Engineering a Solution to the "Library Problem"

A husband and wife pair of engineers had 3500 books and no shelving or organizational scheme. The solution is explored, in detail, at their blog Hackito Ergo Sum. It is a sound plan and they seem happy. All is well.

Interestingly, the "geek factor" of it was enough to get it posted on Slashdot (N.B. the couple hosts their blog on their own hardware and he wisely posted it immediately to /. to avoid having the hordes of /.ers crash his system. The posts there are a riot. My personal favorite:

Oh, painful memory (Score:5, Funny)

...of my ex-daughter-in-law, who decided to surprise me for my birthday by reorganizing my (3500) books:

By height.
Great fun, all around...

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Quick blog update and a huge apology...

It has been too long since I updated my book blog list...and I am not really going to do so now as I just don't have the time. That said, I have to note a few things and make a big apology.

1: Don and Samantha Lindgren of Rabelais Books are blogging and is is great if you like cooking, food, wine, $300,000 fungi and pink sheep. I bought two copies of Beyond Nose to Tail for the holidays (one for my Brit. BiL and one for...er...me). It is a great read.

2: Bitch with Books is subtitled: "The Babble of a Bitter Book Seller, Bad Typer & Mostly Silly Girl"...all may be true, I just really like the blog name...and that she admits to playing D&D.

Finally, I have a huge and wildly embarrassing admission to make. I am very fond of a young man named Jeremy Dibbell. He is charming, funny and a wildly obsessive book human...all good things. He is also the scribe behind one of the few blogs that I check pretty much every day, PhiloBiblos where he blogs *much* more regularly than I about all the things that I wish I could blog about if I could find the time (he, clearly, is more organized that I). He even covers bookish events IN MAINE better than I...it is very sad. I have just discovered that despite my personal appreciation of his great blog, I had failed to include it in my list...because I cross-wired it in my marginally functioning brain with "Philobilon" (another bookish blog, but of a rather different bent...). Mea culpa. I have rectified it and do strongly suggest you stop reading my drivel and read Jeremy's far more cogent posts.


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Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Boston book fairs, etc.

Just a quick reminder (in the midst of my packing and usual chaos) that the two Boston shows are this coming weekend. We will be at the Boston Book, Paper and Ephemera Show at the Radisson on November 17th from 9am to 4pm. This is, of course, also the weekend of the ABAA's Boston International Antiquarian Book Fair at the Hynes Convention Center from Nov. 16-18.

We hope to see some of you there. I'll be blogging about both during/after the event(s).

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Sunday, October 21, 2007

quick update...Northampton in brief, etc...

It is late and I must be to bed. Back from Northampton fair, more on this to follow, too tired now. It will likely not be tomorrow (perhaps late in the day) as I am heading north to an auction. Too much driving (and flying) of late.

I feel minorly obligated to be more diligent about posting (and/or being somewhat salient when doing so). I have had at least a dozen people at the last two fairs tell me how much they enjoy this blog. The first few I could write off as people with too much time on their hands and/or *really* low standards...but the total number has compelled me to conclude that there are an unreasonable number of humans "out there" reading this drivel (*or* there are a *lot* of people with too much time on their hands and/or really low expectations). Regardless, I will try to do better going forward.

Some interesting things afoot: two interesting auctions this week and some short and some tactical decisions in the works. Much fodder for my ramblings...and an overview of Northampton (with pictures of this and Seattle booths for your viewing pleasure (and/or amusement).

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Monday, September 17, 2007

Eye-candy for bibliophiles...

Curious Expeditions has posted a lovely collection of some of the great libraries of the world (here being Queen's College, Oxford). I clearly need to do more traveling.

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Saturday, September 15, 2007

Baltimore Antique Show Addenda [and a great lit blog]

Jed Birmingham (passionate and articulate Burroughs collector) runs a great Lit/Burroughs blog and the "Burroughs Community" RealityStudio. Jed just posted on his thoughts and reactions to the Baltimore Summer Antique Show. More broadly he offers some interesting thoughts on changes profession. In full disclosure, he says some very nice things about me, but this should not be held against him...his judgment, opinion and writing seems on all other matters cogent, incisive and engaging.

Fair warning, if you have even the slightest interest in Burroughs, you will lose hours at RealityStudio until you catch up...you are warned.

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Sunday, August 12, 2007

Two great resources:

Two sites worthy of your time:

Bookshop Blog: There tag line is, "...to help you be a better bookseller" and that seems to sum it up nicely. I must admit that they had missed my radar until they responded to a recent post. I am very pleased to have found them and wager you will, too. Organized, cogent and topical...on bookselling, by booksellers.

Gutenberg Bible Census: For those who have ever wanted to know where every known copy of the GB is hiding, Clausen Books has a page for you. Includes 1950 and 2007 variations.

Posting this makes me realize that I have not updated the list at the right in far too long. Urgh.

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Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Dealbreaker books...

Hang Fire Books has a great post asking about "dealbreaker books", books on the shelf of a friend or acquaintance that make it difficult to continue taking them seriously. It's the likes of Sparks and Steele for me, could be Rand or Buckley (the elder) for others. You get the picture. Give it a read and post your twitchiness.

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Thursday, June 07, 2007

quick update and mea culpa...

Thank you for your notes, pleasant, pleading and snarky. I do apologize for my silence of late. I have *many* things to post about and no time at all to do so. However, I will find the time in the next few days. As a teaser, posts will included, but not be limited to, the following:

1: Auctions adventures (I've had great luck and fun of late)
2: Princeton reunions (and books their special collections)
3: Coffee (Ahab's Revenge and other great roasts)
4: Preparing for bookfairs (Portland bookfair is this coming weekend, come one, come all)
5: The joys of laser prints and technology in general (aka, the revenge of unintended consequences)
6: Book hunting, book hunters, the good, the bad and the downright rude and surly.

More to follow...promise...really....

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Thursday, April 12, 2007

quick follow-up re Vonnegut's passing...

As is now widely known, Kurt Vonnegut passed away last night (see previously mentioned, genuinely well written, NYT article). I have received and/or seen two things I wanted to pass along:

Rob Stuart of Frenchboro Books email me the following in response to the news:
In the early 60's, before email and blogs, a few of us might have too much to drink, and we would call Vonnegut (and if Vonnegut, then always also Claude Sitton, who was writing extraordinary stuff from the South for the NYT, for which he eventually won a Pulitze--and yes, a few others) and we would leave slobbering messages of appreciation, adoration, and exhortation, thanking them for expressing what we liked to think were our ideas as well, but really because they gave us hope and courage--and heroes!
Also, Wonkette has a nice post and some great comments, including:
I was a kid when I first read Vonnegut and Joseph Heller. All I could think was OMG! Adults are even more pissed off than I am.

One of my most treasured posessions is a letter Kurt wrote me when I was a freshman in college complete with the ass-terix in the signature. 'Harrison Bergeron' was satire when he wrote and now it is public policy. Life imitates parody.

and

Kurt Vonnegut wrote books with pictures of assholes juxtaposed against depressing truths. He wrote the truth because he loved people. He died today. He hated semicolons; so it goes.

I can feel a rereading binge coming on...

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Saturday, April 07, 2007

Bookride...an interesting exploration of the uncommon...

(and sometimes quite common). I've just been given a heads up by the author of Bookride and I am both grateful and annoyed. In it Nigel Burwood (Any Amount of Books) engages in an "evaluation of why the book is wanted, what it is worth - with a range of selling prices, some trivia, apercus and bon mots, a few anecdotes, so called jokes and occasional rants."

I am grateful because it is an absolutely great read. I am annoyed because: A) I wish I had the time (and knowledge) to craft as readable entries; b) I did not find it sooner (while it appears to have been launched in Dec., 2006, there are 160 posts already...all eminently readable); c) I know have one more thing that I am going to have to read regularly. Ah, how I suffer.

I expect you will be seeing references in the future to some of his posts. You can start with this post, about a possibly apocryphal James Joyce broadside published by his father when he was 9. I will, I predict, have a dream this evening of opening some dusty copy of Ulysses and finding such laid in...ah, how I love flights of fancy...

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Friday, April 06, 2007

Quick follow-up to Heritage events

Scott Brown, et al, at Fine Books and Collections have a great post on what is happening at with and around Heritage Books. Rumors tied up, facts laid out, the hint of what is likely to be an exceptional auction on the horizon. A very good read.

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a better followup to Boston...

Don Lindgren has a very nice (and far more articulate than my...) summary of the MARIAB fair. I agree with most of what he said...though it was a pretty good show in the short-term for us...mid and long term remains to be seen.

I was particularly interested in Don's view of "bargaining". As Don notes, I find the tendancy of asking/expecting discounts to be very strange. I extend discounts to dealers as a professional courtesy and think such make prfound sense for many reasons. I strive not to do the same for clients. I try to price my material for what I think is a fair market price and really expect items to sell there. The prevalence of asking for discounts implies that dealers price their material high in the expectation of negotiating it down and, at least for us, that is simply not true.

I certainly do extend discounts sometimes...typically with a very good customer or with someone who is purchasing several things at once or...frankly...when the situation warrents it. I have sometimes extended very deep discounts when it meant putting the right book in the right hands. I really do not, however, think that an expectation of a discount is reasonable.

I suggest that there is a preception issue in play that many choose to ignore. If I agree to extend discounts of 10-20% to "new" customers, I am effectively telling them that I have overpriced my stock to "build in" such reductions. If I agree to "not charge tax" (as I was asked several times over the weekend, usually with a "no one else is charging it") I am effectively telling this potential new client that I will happily violate the law to close a sale. While this may please the client in the short-term...consciously or unconsciously, I am telling them that I am untrustworthy.

I would much rather have clients feel confident than I am pricing material (and treating them) fairly than having clients feel that they need to negotiate every purchase to "see what I will do".

As Don summed up, I think this fair has the potential to be extremely good. I look forward to being there next year.

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Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Time joins Newsweek in keeping America stupid...

Well, Newsweek treated its US readers as morons twice last year (here and here), now Time joins its competition in "protecting" us from...well...you know, real news. I don't know about you, but I am not certain if I am insulted these NEWS journals view the US "market" as preferring a protracted advertisement for Leibowitz's retrospective to "real news" or if I just feel sorry for our society that "news" has, to all extent and purposes, become lost to our "lowest common denominator" cultural morass.

Sadly, I have been getting most of my day-to-day "news" from foreign sources for the last several years (one of the better side effects of the emergence of the web). CNN, et al have effectively been relegated to the equivalent of an alternative to a poorly scripted "reality" show...which seems to be the niche they are seeking to fill. I have this vague memory of R. Murdoch under oath before Congress stating that Fox "News" had "no obligation" to tell the truth in their reporting...that they were an entertainment corp (I have not citation for this and lack the time to find it...but the memory is reasonably clear (it...er...annoyed me *a lot*)).

I'm going back to preparing for the Boston book fair this weekend. More shortly on this front.

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Sunday, March 11, 2007

[S]ex Libris...

Thanks to my friend Nancy for the heads up on the nonist's post Red-Hot and Filthy Library Smut.

A clever post (title here stolen) focuses on "the full-frontal objectification of the library itself. Oh yeah." A wonderful collection of images from Candida Höfer's book, "Libraries."

To the right is Trinity College Library, Dublin. It is almost enough to make me go back to school.

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The Pefect Storm...


No, not that reasonably good sea story or slightly less good Clooney vehicle. A *REAL* perfect storm. Two of my favorite humans on earth, Ze Frank and Jonathan Coulton are together on a recent episode of Ze's exceptional vlog The Show.

Ze is, in my not remotely humble opinion, one of the sharpest, funniest and most creative forces currently wandering the planet. Jonathan is among the darkest, wittiest and most wonderfully twisted singer/songwriters the software coding world has ever produced [we played Skullcrusher Mountain and Mandelbrot Set at our wedding reception].

I'm going back to bed. This day can not get better...

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Tuesday, March 06, 2007

Bookswim, Netflix for books....

Bookswim is set to roll out in the first quarter of 2007 (which would suggest the end of this month). They promise a catalogue of 80,000 volumes, free shipping in both directions and no late fees...and if you fall in love with your tome, you can purchase it outright. It is, effectively, Netflix for books (with a bonus purchase option).

They are currently offering "free membership" for signing up before the public release. One can also, it appears, buy into them. I am not certain I would invest in them, but the concept is interesting and certainly could have value and a place in the proverbial marketplace.

I have a hard time making the numbers work in my head (and refuse to spend the time/effort to put pen to paper). I with them the best...I'm willing to support anything that puts more books in more peoples hands. I'll be watching.

Thanks to Wonkette for the heads up of the COO interview.

UPDATE:
Anirvan of BookFinder fame forwarded the following list of related sites/services. It would appear that there is, in fact, a viable business model. Thinking about all this also reminded me of the granddaddy of all such things, BookCrossing. I have "released" a number of books to the wild and had far too much fun watching them travel (I've had several travel more broadly than I...very sad).

"NetFlix for books" service
BooksFree
Bookswim

Person-to-person book sharing sites include:
BookMooch
PaperBackSwap
FrugalReader
BookIns
TitleTrader
SwapSimple
WhatsOnMyBookshelf
SwapThing
AmericasBookshelf

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Tuesday, February 27, 2007

The Second Amendment meets the First Amendment...

...and the expected bloodbath ensues. The Washington Post has just published an interesting article on the colossal implosion of big-game hunter Jim Zumbo's career. In brief, Zumbo, a 40+ year NRA member, hunting writer, host of a popular TV program on the Outdoor Channel, etc. wrote a couple of posts calling into question "long range shooting" and the use of assault weapons in hunting (i.e. prairie dogs). Since this began two weeks ago or so, he has "resigned" his position as hunting editor for Outdoor Life (for whom he had written for 42 years), been released from his long-time relationship with Remington, had his highly rated hunting program on the Outdoor Channel put "in hiatus", etc. Personally, I am less interested in this chain of events as a "second amendment" issue as I am from the First Amendment side, the "chilling effect" this will have on rational debate and the matter of the power of unintended consequences.

While many people seem to be writing (or ranting) about this without, apparently, reading what he wrote, I thought I would post it here (N.B. the original posts, on his blog at Outdoor Life, have been removed...an interesting ancillary issue (that is, the "loss" of significant writings when they inflame unusual passions)). The following are the two posts that appear to have some folks worked into a lather:
While at the SHOT Show recently, I ran into a guy who complained that too many hunters were taking excessively long shots. He’s an outfitter, and witnessed plenty of people shooting at elk at distances greater than 350 yards. He suggested that that was too far, primary because the majority of those hunters had no clue of ballistics. Most were “Hail Mary” shots. I agree. We read about people making 500 yard shots and more, and that, to me, is ridiculous.

Then at the SCI convention last week, I talked to a guy who bragged that his custom gun kills deer out at 800 yards and better. To each his own, I suppose, but that isn’t hunting. It’s shooting. And I don’t care how great a marksman you are. The risk of wounding an animal at extremely long ranges is high, and where’s the sportsmanship, the ethics, the satisfaction of taking outrageously long shots? I understand there’s a group in PA that shoots deer at 1,000 yards and more. More power to them. Just don’t ask me to support that kind of “hunting.”
(J. Zumbo, 2/6)
As I write this, I’m hunting coyotes in southeastern Wyoming with Eddie Stevenson, PR Manager for Remington Arms, Greg Dennison, who is senior research engineer for Remington, and several writers. We’re testing Remington’s brand new .17 cal Spitfire bullet on coyotes.

I must be living in a vacuum. The guides on our hunt tell me that the use of AR and AK rifles have a rapidly growing following among hunters, especially prairie dog hunters. I had no clue. Only once in my life have I ever seen anyone using one of these firearms.

I call them “assault” rifles, which may upset some people. Excuse me, maybe I’m a traditionalist, but I see no place for these weapons among our hunting fraternity. I’ll go so far as to call them “terrorist” rifles. They tell me that some companies are producing assault rifles that are “tackdrivers.”

Sorry, folks, in my humble opinion, these things have no place in hunting. We don’t need to be lumped into the group of people who terrorize the world with them, which is an obvious concern. I’ve always been comfortable with the statement that hunters don’t use assault rifles. We’ve always been proud of our “sporting firearms.”

This really has me concerned. As hunters, we don’t need the image of walking around the woods carrying one of these weapons. To most of the public, an assault rifle is a terrifying thing. Let’s divorce ourselves from them. I say game departments should ban them from the prairies and woods.
(J. Zumbo, 2/16)

So it appears that, as a professional hunter, he questions the increasing use of "long range" shots ("shooting" vs "hunting") and the use of "AR and AK" rifles (auto and semi-auto "assault weapons") in hunting (specifically referencing prairie dogs). He *might* have gotten away with this as mere opinion *except* that in his post, he distinguished between "sporting firearms" and "'terrorist' rifles". This alone appears to have worked *many* people into a frothing lather (I'm not posting links to the apparently endless blog posts ranting about Zumbo's "betrayal"...google his name and pretty much the first 45,000 returns are in the "Zumbo=Dumbo" vein).

I will preface by saying that I grew up in rural Maine, have hunted, support the right to hunt (by bow, gun or slingshot) and, in general, support 2nd amendment (which, for those who forget, reads, "A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the People to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.") [N.B. While I do support the 2nd Amend., am I the only one who reads "well regulated" with as much weight as "shall not be infringed"?] I am not interested in discussing what Zumbo said, per se, but rather the reaction and broader implications. Frankly, nearly every "serious" hunter I know would agree with most of what he said...long range shots are flaky and arguably more dangerous and "hunting" with AR/AK rifles, while fun, lacks a certain amount of "sportsmanship." He did not say that such rifles should be banned, per se, simply that they should be banned "from the prairies and woods." By all means, go to a machine gun shoot (Maine had a great event up in Dover-Foxcroft, named for the inventor of the first portable fully automatic machine gun, Hiram Maxim (who also invented the mousetrap), though I do not know if it is still being held)...but blowing away prairie dogs with an AK-47 does seem to lack a bit of...er...challenge.

The WP appears to have hit on the substantive issue. What is important is not the pros and cons of using a .50-caliber sniper rifle to hunt deer (or, as it were, collect deer parts) or AKs on prairie dogs, it *is* an issue of not allowing any division or distinction between hunting rifles and shotguns and assault weapons. The NRA and similar gun-rights groups are adamant in pushing the slipper-slope argument that any regulation of assault weapons, sniper rifles, armor piercing ammunition, etc., etc. will inexorably lead to regulation of hunting weapons (ignoring that whole "well regulated" aspect of the amendment). The point they make is that most of the *money* comes from hunters while most of the "feet on the street" passionate advocacy comes from assault weapon owners and that the NRA effectively endorsed this as the salient point by showing that, "the Zumbo affair shows there is "no chance" that a "divide and conquer propaganda strategy" could ever succeed."

Zumbo apologized profusely, but the lifelong hunter and hunting rights advocate was promptly burned in effigy. Granted, the "terrorist" reference was semantically poorly chosen...but his overarching points are at least colorable, if not correct. However, in the editor's note regarding his "resignation," Todd Smith of Outdoor Life states, "We respect Mr. Zumbo's First Amendment right to free speech, and we acknowledge his subsequent apology and admission of error." This is immediately followed with,
However, Outdoor Life has always been, and will always be, a steadfast supporter of all aspects of the shooting sports and our Second Amendment rights, which do not make distinctions based on the appearance of the firearms we choose to own, shoot or hunt with.
The "admission of error", one hopes, was that of speaking a thought out loud and offending the "all or nothing" approach of the NRA, et al (and, for that matter, they clearly do *not* respect his right of free speech, or they would defend his speech on those grounds). The implications, of course, are clear. There can not be a rational discussion of the pros and cons of any of these issues. You either support the completely unfettered "right to bear arms" or you are an enemy to be attacked and pilloried in any and all ways possible. I find this really troubling.

It appears there can be no rational voices in this matter at all. On the "right", you get thrown out of the club if you support any regulation of anything that goes "bang", on the "left" you get ousted if you acknowledge that hunting...and shooting...is fun, constitutionally protected and generally not such a bad thing. As Yeats said, "The best lack all conviction, while the worst/Are full of passionate intensity." I think the opinion of a renowned and articulate hunter would be of value in this debate. I bet we don't hear any in the near-term (or at least none not towing the party line of "no regulation is acceptable").

Personally, I am fond of that term "well regulated" and just can't seem to get myself worked up on one side or the other (lacking all conviction). There are firearms that are appropriate for hunting...and there are firearms that are appropriate for target shooting. I am not certain it is unreasonable to have "time and place" restrictions on semi/automatic weapons, sniper rifles, flamethrowers, rocket launchers and such things. There is a rationality issue at play here...in Maine, I am not able to own a Black Cat firecracker, but there is no problem with my owning a .50 caliber weapon with an effective range of 7,500 yards (yes, 4 miles) and the ability to punch through an inch of vehicle armor or 3/4 of an inch of bullet-resistant glass (there are purportedly over 20,000 of these firearms in private hands in the US). Now there is not doubt that big guns are fun...but does one really "need" one. The same argument applies to ARs and AKs. Unfortunately, no one seems able/willing to discuss these issues in anything but extremes...and well all end up suffering for it.

The worst aspect of the Zumbo affair is that it absolutely confirms the worst fears of "rational voices" and reduces the "debate" over gun control to a battle of zealots. Unfortunately, this appears to be an increasingly common problem in this country, from the President's, "If you don't support me, you support Terrorism" stance to the arguments around Intelligent Design (or the lack thereof) and Evolution. Personally, I'm tired of dogmatic arguments unsupportable by reason or logic. I'm tired of the increasingly anti-intellectual sentiment so pervasive in this country. I'm tired of vapid talking heads on "news" programs telling me that if I'm not embracing the current Anna Nichole Smith pseudo-news event then I am "snob". I'm tired of a political environment where deep and/or long-term thinking is *actively* condemned and ridiculed. I am just tired.

It is a good thing Carl Hiaasen has a new book out...I bet the twits in Nature Girl will get their's in the end..............

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Monday, February 19, 2007

And the best book blog title goes to:

Biblio's Bloggins. Ok, I admit that I am a JRRT fan (and reread the cannon about once a year or so)...but really. I am ashamed for not thinking of it. The author is a reader and collector of modern fiction...rich is review and commentary (and seldom the mindless rants as found here). Just a very nice read.

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Wednesday, February 14, 2007

ABE's top 10 vs AE's top 500...poking the numbers...

Americana Exchange, an auction results database and producer of AE Monthly, have just run an interesting article titled, "ABE's Top 10: What Does It Tell us About ABE?". They note that in 2006, ABE's top sales ranged from $25,000 (Durer's, Institutiones Geometricae) at the high end to $9,000 (Frank's, Flower Is tied with another photography collection). AE's auction records for 2006 show a much different range: $5.2MM (Shakespeare's, First Folio) to $60,000 (de Vou, et al's, Rotterdam me al syn rebouwen...). In short, the *lowest* sale on the top 500 was about 2.5 times the highest sale on ABE.

Interesting, but so what? While the author notes that based on generally accepted numbers (about 20,000 sales/day, then "book sales at all substantial auctions combined are maybe 2% or 3% of what they are on Abe alone", and this does not touch sales on various other aggregators. It appears that while there is no doubt that there is a great *volume* of sales online, the *serious* transactions take place elsewhere.

I think most people accept that most collectors would never buy a *major* item sight unseen from the web. Even ABE knows this, as evidenced by Richard Davies' response (Davies is ABE's PR and Publicity wonk). He notes that there seems to be a ceiling to what people will pay online. Sales at the $1000 price point are quite common, but 5 digit sales are quite rare.

I completely agree with his analysis. I know I have absolutely no expectation of selling my higher-end material through an aggregator...I would be suspect of anyone being willing to spend $10K and up without handling the item...hell, I worry about people purchasing $1,500 items online.

I do, however, think that it is an effective advertising venue...a means for collectors (and other dealers) to find material that they would otherwise have to work harder to locate. Our listing fees at ABE, Biblio and TomFolio fall under marketing/advertising on our P/L statements for a reason (as opposed to cost of goods sold). If the sites break even or better, that is great...but first and foremost they are a means to advertise our inventory and our brand. I wager that the same is the case for many other professional dealers.

AE also digs into some of ABE's other numbers...with interesting and/or frightening and/or sad results... Apparently the top 10 list of authors ranges from Stephen King, Ernest Hemingway, Charles Dickens and Dan Brown...and Nora Roberts (with over 4o,000 books listed). As the author notes, it is not often that Dickens and Roberts show up on the same list...urgh.

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Thursday, February 08, 2007

Building the case for Biblio-Tourism

The Bookstore Tourism Blog recently announced the creation of Biblioexpeditions, the first "for-profit bookstore tourism company." Created by the Rebel Bookseller, Andy Laties (and author of the book of the same name), the idea is apparently to build a tour company built around book and bookstores. I can think of worse things, tour of special collection at NY Public Library, lunch at the Morgan, spend the afternoon at various shops then spend a nice evening (or two) at the Library Hotel. The question now, of course, is whether there are enough people like me (and you, if your are reading this) to make it viable.

His business statement, in part, is as follows:

BIBLIOEXPEDITIONS

OVERVIEW AND MISSION BiblioExpeditions is the nation's first “Bookstore Tourism” company. A Massachusetts-based for-profit corporation, BiblioExpeditions aims to mobilize readers to channel funds to libraries and community bookstores by gathering public, corporate, and non-profit organization support to achieve the National Endowment for the Arts' (NEA) “Big Read” mission: “To restore reading to the center of American culture.”

DEMAND AND OPPORTUNITY The landmark NEA report "Reading at Risk: A Survey of Literary Reading in America" (2004) documented a dramatic decline in literary reading among all age groups, ethnic groups, and education levels. BiblioExpeditions, noting that these findings correlate with a sharp decline in the number of bookstores, implements cause-related marketing campaigns that leverage booklovers' tales of journeying to great bookstores in order to create an image-enhancing value proposition for corporate sponsors. Sponsors invest in Calvert Social Investment Foundation “Community Investment Notes” (CINs) that underwrite rotating credit facilities to strengthen our partner bookstores.

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Wednesday, February 07, 2007

An interesting voice temporarily (I hope) silenced...

One of my more favorite blogs, Tech Ramblings from the Rare Book Trade, has gone off on an indefinite hiatus. This is unfortunate, as I am fond of the blog and have always found it one of the more interesting in the realm (granted, I am, in addition to being a recovering attorney, a geek of the highest order). What is really unfortunate is that he is not taking his break because he necessarily wants to do so, but because his employer (an unnamed rare book dealer) has made it clear that his personal blog is professionally threatening to his position.

Needless to say, many bookishly inclined bloggers are unhappy about this (see, e.g. Hugh). I agree with Hugh (and ASWR) that booksellers are colleagues, not competitors. More broadly, I concur with many of the voices that Tech Ramblings' employer was extremely short-sighted and/or misguided in his fear/concern of his employees blog (N.B. this was a private blog, but I will ignore the overt "what he was doing on his own time is his own business" issues). The major sticking point appears to have been that the Tech Rambler provided links to "other" booksellers and/or bookseller's blogs.

Personally, I would embrace an employee who was so engaged both in focus of the business *and* the niche he serves (tech) that he wanted to build a voice around the area. Personally, I would have taken the opposite approach and sought to have the blog brought under my "brand" and more closely linked to my business. I track, mostly for personal amusement, where my visitors come from and where they go when the leave. I know better than most how many people link into my site from other book sites/blogs and how many follow links on my site out to other book bloggers. I can personally and professionally attest to the *value* of linking to other's in the profession.

That said, I understand Tech Ramblings' willingness/desire to roll with his employer's request and not threaten his job. I am reminded of O.W. Holmes', "This is a court of law, young man, not a court of justice." It is fine (and proper) to talk about freedom of speech and personal blogs vs business pursuits and all the topics that this issue has opened for debate. In the end, however, I completely understand the decision to walk away from a personal blog run primarily/exclusively for personal amusement and pleasure in the face of losing a job that, one presumes, is interesting and rewarding.

To be clear, I hope Tech Ramblings returns. I suggest Tech Rambler show his boss how much traffic comes to his site through the blog. I hope his employer comes to realize his concern as to "other links" is unfounded. We are a community and are far stronger together than as islands. I will leave the link to TRftRBT in the side bar as it contains some great content...with luck he will return.

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Saturday, December 30, 2006

Top 10 List of Top 10 Lists...

NYT has a nice article on Top 10 (insert area of interest here) for 2006. It includes many links to various top 10 lists (heavy on tech and pop cult) and some for "what will 2007 bring".

Of particular note is the list of Top 10 Blogebrities for 2006...sadly, I was not included...however, my acquaintance/distant friend/brilliant twisted freak, Ze Frank took first place...well deserved as his "The Show" is, in my not-remotely-humble opinion, one of the few web shows that is fresh and worth watching every day.

Fair warning, Ze's, The Show can suck a huge number of hours from your life...and his broader site will eat dozens more. You have been warned.

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Thursday, December 14, 2006

Blog addendum...

As always, I forgot some sites that I greatly enjoy and must make amends for this gross oversight:

PhiloBiblos: Well written and fun...strong news and reviews and a wonderfully voyeuristic peek into his library (courtesy of LibraryThing...I think I may have to do this too, it is strangely entertaining).

Cuppa Joad: This Alibris sponsored blog is heavy on reviews and TWELVE contributors...an interesting one to watch for evolution. [Full disclosure: CJ recently said very nice things about this site in a post titled: Book Blogs for Bibliophiles to Pour Over, this apparent lack of judgment should not weigh against an otherwise very strong site.]

I'm certain I have still forgotten others...Please feel free to email me a quick poke with a sharp stick if I have forgotten (and/or never seen) your blog.

Apropos of nothing, I am thinking of trying to mount a web client screen in my bathroom for blog reading purposes...though clearly just for frivolous news and culture blogs...not the *important* blogs 'o books.

Also, Hugh has a great post on "Buying Books Online (Safely)". In summary, he says the same thing that ASWR said in Books & Bidders in 1926. To paraphrase both: If you want to buy books with confidence, buy from a reputable bookdealer. As I have said (ok, ranted about) before, Hugh notes that the web has made this more complex, as the "egalitarian" nature of the web makes it very difficult to tell the difference between Peter Stern, Maggs, Borders, Good Cheap Books and Devil Dan's House 'O Stolen Books when scanning the offerings of the aggregators. It is a subject that I am certain I will rant about again sometime soon...but really appreciate Hugh's eloquent analysis.

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Thursday, December 07, 2006

Blogs added to the right...

It has occurred to me that I there are several new(ish) book blogs that I have been following closely but that I may not have mentioned recently (and were not included in the sidebar). This clearly must be dealt with:

Hugh's Blog: Hugh is emerging as a book bloggin' phenom-he posts often, he writes well, he posts some outstanding "help" posts, he rarely rants and never posts video of adult toys. Highly recommended.

Bibliophile Bullpen: Dear Ms. Godsey has discovered, it appears, a means to cull more time from any given day. She posts often, she appears to run several dozen clever and creative projects and is generally a great starting place during morning coffee(s). She also has a nice list of resources. Another must read...

Book Links.info: Another project of Hugh's. The idea, when fully rolled out, is that it will be a one stop shop for any/all links for bookish sites. Not fully rolled-out, but the blog is up and running...given Hugh's track record for execution, bookmark it now.

Book Patrol: An excellent, well-written blog that has recently been eaten by the Seattle Post Intelligencer. It is, as far as I know, the first absorption of a book blog by a mainstream press vehicle. (I wager I will not suffer this fate *g*)

Biblio-Technician: Bill Guffey's excellent musings. Often as long as my rants, usually funnier and more interesting. A great read.

Tech Ramblings from the Rare Book Trade: An outstanding tech focused blog (with the occasional tacitly related post or two). He does a great job covering the bits of this and that (hardware and software) that filter into, out of and around the book world.

I am certain I am missing others. Do email me if you are profoundly offended that I missed your book blog. I certainly need *more* ways to loose time (I must remember to touch base with Godsey re her time bending methods).

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Wednesday, December 06, 2006

MECA's Long Overdue project...

The Portland Public Library and the Maine College of Art teamed up several months ago to create the "Long Overdue: Book Renewal" project. Basically, PPL took a few hundred books that were to be de-accessioned from the library and gave them to 200 artists to be "renewed". The resulting Altered Books were then re-accessioned into the library, displayed/shelved and can now be taken out (including by inter-library loan) and can be searched in their catalogues (use the keyword "altered books").

I tend to look askance at the wanton destruction of books...but this is very much a transformation. A book is very much a work of art (admittedly, some more so than others), this project effectively morphs one art form into another. The project started in early 2005 debuted early this summer...one of many reasons I am fond of Portland.

[I must admit that this was something I meant to blog about during one of my "quiet periods" (that is, I was running about too much to carve a moment or two to blog). Thanks to my friend and far more responsible blogette for reminding me of this wonderful project.]

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MS rolls out its "me too" book search tool

As most know, Google debuted a reasonably amazing plan to digitize pretty much everything out of copyright that has ever been put to print and make it searchable. This will be great, as there are a number of book reports I wrote in high school that I would love to see again. Google Book Search has been extremely interesting to watch as it evolves and grows.

Well, as imitation is the surest indicia of success/importance/covetiveness, Google should be pleased that MS is rolling out their own iteration of book search. The major difference between the two, other than the institutions playing with each, is that MS is only going to scan material out of copyright (in keeping with their rather narrow and/or draconian view of copyright) and Google is doing a whole bunch more (mostly with publisher's consent). In my not remotely humble opinion, this means Google's efforts will be far more useful...but time will tell.

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