Did you know that the Folger Shakespeare Library has its own YouTube channel? Theres a variety of interesting videos on there, definitely worth checking out. Below Ive included links to two videos I found particularly relevant to our trade. The first is an instructional video on handling rare materials, and the second is a demonstration of how a Renaissance-era printing press works. Enjoy! Handling Rare Materials http://youtu.be/5NWyruNYILw Printing 101 http://youtu.be/lX6e8Q2nc5A [more Videos from the Folger Shakespeare Library's YouTube Channel]
Blog posts by Susan Benne
Susan is the Executive Director of the ABAA. She collects material on Brooklyn as well as ephemera and vernacular photography. Susan is focused on making the book trade diverse and equitable.
The Rare Book School had some wonderful course offerings this year (as they do every summer!). ABAA member and past President Tom Congalton of Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. was there as instructor for his fourth year, co-teaching Printed Books since 1800: Element of Description and Analysis. He wrote a great blog post reviewing his course and experience. Click here for a very enjoyable read! [more Read Past ABAA President Tom Congalton's Report on the Rare Book School]
New to the rare book world and need to brush up on some important trade related jargon? Check out the ABAA's abbreviated Glossary of Terms on abaa.org! [more Abbreviated Glossary of Rare Book Terms]
This year the Caxton Club published Other People's Books: Association Copies and the Stories They Tell, a collection of essays about the stories behind a number of association copies. (An association copy is a book signed by an author and inscribed either to a personal friend or relation of the author, a colleague, or a famous figure.) The book is being distributed by Oak Knoll Books. From their website: Other People's Books provides stories of fifty-two presentation copies from 1470 to 1986, narrating how each book came to be inscribed. Containing 112 illustrations, this work is a lively historical account of the journey of twenty-four books from institutional collections and twenty-eight from private hands. Set in England, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, The Netherlands, Sweden, and the United States, these books range in topics from a... [more "Other People's Books: Association Copies and the Stories They Tell"]
Review: Aun Aprendo: A Comprehensive Bibliography of the Writings of Aldous Leonard Huxley
By Susan BenneThe following review of ABAA member David Bromer's Aun Aprendo: A Comprehensive Bibliography of the Writings of Aldous Leonard Huxley was written by fellow member Brian Cassidy. It appeared in the ABAA Spring 2011 e-Newsletter. Kudos, David! ********************************* Review: Aun Aprendo: A Comprehensive Bibliography of the Writings of Aldous Leonard Huxley by Brian Cassidy Aldous Huxley is primarily rememberedin the popular imagination at leastfor one book, his classic dystopia Brave New World. This is unfortunate. Huxley was one of the most prolific and versatile British writers of the twentieth century. He wrote on everything from philosophy to psychology, history to the paranormal. He was a pioneer in the field of drug literature, clearing the way for Timothy Leary, Allen Ginsberg, and other seminal figures of the countercult... [more Review: Aun Aprendo: A Comprehensive Bibliography of the Writings of Aldous Leonard Huxley]
UPDATE: The book has been recovered. The following item has gone missing during shipping between NYC and Toronto: GALILEI, Galileo. Dialogo di Galileo Galilei… sopra i due massimi Sistemi del mondo tolemaico, e copernicano. Florence: Batista Landini, 1632. Octavo, late 18th-century full vellum, burgundy morocco spine label. Identifying characteristics: Bauman Rare Books inventory #82805 Frontispiece in the fourth state (of four), as usual, with artist’s signature present. With pasted cancel slip correcting the shoulder note on page 92 and manuscript addition of letter H to diagram on page 192, both as usual. With errata leaf Ff6; without final blank leaf only (Kk4), often not present. Quires Bb3 and Bb4 misnumbered as Bb2 and Bb3, respectively. Paper repair to verso of dedication page; dedication and “Al discreto lettore” leaves r... [more UPDATED: Galileo Book Gone Missing During Transport]
Gordon, Grant. Story of the Ship. McLoughlin Brothers Inc: 1919. First edition. In very good condition. If you have any information regarding this book, please contact ABAA Headquarters at 212-944-8291 or hq@abaa.org. [more Stolen: Story of the Ship]
Watts-Dunton, Theodore. Christmas at the Mermaid, Flowers of Parnassus - XI. London & New York: John Lane, 1902. Leather bound. The book is inscribed to Thomas Hardy (from the author). If you have any information regarding this item, please contact ABAA Headquarters at 212-944-8291 or hq@abaa.org. [more Stolen: Inscribed Copy of "Christmas at the Mermaid"]
Bibliofile, Yale's dedicated site for Book History, has announced the publication of “Rare Book Photography: An Introduction”. This free guide “explains the handling and photographic practices that support libraries' preservation aims and the needs of researchers in clear language accompanied by many illustrations from Yale's Medical Historical and Law Libraries.” Click here to view or download the guide. Bibliofile notes that a larger pdf version is available if anyone would like to have copies printed professionally; email photo.design@yale.edu with your request. Training Manual: Rare Book Photography [more Yale's Free Introductory Guide to Handling & Photographing Rare Books]
Dr. David Culpin of St. Andrew's University came across a rare piece of travel literature while studying at the library of Sir George Grey, who was governor of Cape Colony (today's Capetown) between 1854 and 1861. The book was written in French by Charles-Etienne Boniface and published in South Africa in November 1829. The title has been paraphrased as Account Of The Wreck Of The French Ship The Eole In April 1829; as the title states, it tells the story of the Eole, a French merchant vessel that sank off Africa's coast, and of its eight survivors, who were forced to walk barefoot for three weeks in search of safety. After months of research, Dr. Culpin was able to confirm that the story was true and based on the survivors' accounts. The Eole was a French trading ship which sank during its return voyage from Calcutta. Eight of the 20 pass... [more Rare South African Book Discovered]