Year-End Reading Report 2010
Once again the year has passed by much more quickly than I would have ever thought possible, and it's time to compile the annual reading statistics.
Once again the year has passed by much more quickly than I would have ever thought possible, and it's time to compile the annual reading statistics.
Arthur Ransome's Swallows and Amazons (first published 1930; my edition David R. Godine, 1985) is a wonderful little children's story set in the English Lake Country during the early decades of the 20th century. The four Walker children set off on a grand journey of sailing and exploration, filled with pirates, sharks, talking parrots, plank-walking, buried treasure, and all sorts of fascinating things like that. It's a good adventure story, and for anyone who spent their childhood camping, playing outside, building forts, and leading "expeditions" (even if it wasn't in the English Lakes), I suspect it will ring true.
Labels: Book Reviews
Jed Rubenfeld's The Death Instinct (Riverhead, 2011) runs in much the same vein as his 2006 book The Interpretation of Murder. Set in New York (but this time with some stretches of international travel thrown in), with cameo appearances by a whole bunch of real historical characters (from Freud and Marie Curie - hence the international travel - to Bill Flynn and Sen. Albert Fall), this novel is set in 1920 but the style and pacing make the book read like a contemporary thriller.
Labels: Book Reviews
Labels: Digital Humanities, Digitization
A farewell party at MHS was the source of the majority of this week's new arrivals (it's a tradition in the library that departing staff members receive, well, many books):
Some exciting personal news before I head off for holiday travels (wish us clear roads, please!): as of 3 January I'll be starting work at LibraryThing, working on a whole range of great projects, including the Early Reviewers program, State of the Thing, LibraryThing for Publishers, LibraryThing for Authors, the LT Facebook and Twitter feeds, and everything else involving member projects and outreach, as Tim notes in the announcement. I'll also continue to manage the Legacy Libraries and Libraries of Early America projects, and will be working to coordinate with the rare book/special collections community on new features and other ways we can work together (so if anybody has any thoughts, please don't hesitate to let me know!)
Labels: LT
I've just finished a post over on the MHS blog with some interesting (to me, anyway) new findings about William Jenks' wonderful 1808 pamphlet Memoir of the Northern Kingdom, which postulates the breakup of the Union into three sections, &c. I started writing about it in the context of an offhand remark he makes in the essay which refers to the MHS ("that valuable library of domestick history, collected by the friends and associates of Belknap and Minot"), but since a large collection of Jenks' papers were handy I started poking around, and ended up finding a really neat letter from Jenks sending the essay to the publisher, then some diary entries describing his feelings about its debut in print, &c.
"Is there anywhere on earth exempt from these swarms of new books? Even if, taken out one at a time, they offered something worth knowing, the very mass of them would be a serious impediment to learning from satiety if nothing else, which can do more damage where good things are concerned or simply from the fact that men's minds are easily glutted and hungry for something new, and so these distractions call them away from the reading of ancient authors."
Labels: Book Reviews
As soon as I finished M.R. James' The Haunted Dolls' House and Other Ghost Stories (review), the second volume of the Penguin omnibus edition of his ghost stories, I ordered a copy of the first, Count Magnus and Other Ghost Stories (Penguin, 2005). I've been enjoying one or two of the stories before bedtime every night since (with the exception of one evening when the power was off and I read a few by candlelight before dinner).
Labels: Book Reviews
John Hodgman continues the project begun with The Areas of My Expertise in More Information Than You Require (Riverhead, 2009) ... and I use "continues" literally, since the pagination here picks up where TAME left off (and will likely continue in the project third installment, That is All).
Labels: Book Reviews
Labels: Auctions, Audubon, Bookselling, Digital Humanities, Digitization, Paul Collins, Raymond Scott, Thefts
- More Information Than You Require by John Hodgman (Riverhead, 2009). Brookline Booksmith.
Yesterday afternoon Google Labs released Books Ngram Viewer, a nifty graphing tool based on a corpus of 500 billion words from 5.2 million books in Chinese, English, French, German, Russian, and Spanish (from among the 15 million books scanned by Google since 2004). The full datasets are also downloadable. This is the first time such an extensive collection of data has been made available to researchers, but still, its limitations must be considered (and are well laid out in a Guardian piece).
Today's English Literature, History, and Children's Books & Illustrations at Sotheby's London made a total of £821,813, with 131 of 247 lots selling. Fittingly, on Jane Austen's 325th birthday, the Maria Edgeworth presentation copy of Emma (1816) was the top seller, at £79,250. The second copy of Emma, with the ownership inscription of Austen's friend Martha Lloyd, made £37,250. The presentation copies to Walter Savage Landor of the first book editions of Dickens' Pickwick Papers
Labels: Auctions
Harvard's Berkman Center for Internet and Society announced yesterday that they will "host a research and planning initiative for a 'Digital Public Library of America.' With funding from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, Berkman will convene a large and diverse group of stakeholders in a planning program to define the scope, architecture, costs and administration for a proposed Digital Public Library of America."
Labels: Digitization
The first in Walter Moers' series about the fictional continent of Zamonia is The 13 1/2 Lives of Captain Bluebear (Overlook, 2006), which serves as something of a geographical overview of Moers' universe in the form of a travelogue. Narrated by the eponymous Bluebear (a blue bear), the story tracks Bluebear's adventures through the first half of his 26 lives: from his rescue by the hilarious darkness-fearing, peg-legged Minipirates to his time spent in Professor Abdullah Nightingale's Nocturnal Academy to his stay in the middle of a tornado to his time as the champion liar of Atlantis ... and those are just four of the 13 1/2 lives he covers here.
Labels: Book Reviews
Labels: Digital Humanities, Digitization, Thefts
The last major book auction of 2010: on 16 December, Sotheby's London will sell English Literature, History, and Children's Books & Illustrations, in 246 lots. A presentation copy (to Maria Edgeworth) of the first edition of Jane Austen's Emma (1816) rates the top estimate, at £70,000-100,000 (another copy of Emma, with the ownership inscription of Austen's friend Martha Lloyd, is estimated at £30,000-50,000). A fabulous, 49,000-page manuscript compilation of the Journals of the House of Commons in 75 folio volumes (with one volume covering the House of Lords), covering almost the entire seventeenth century, is estimated at £50,000-70,000; Jane Austen's brother Edward's Wedgwood dinner set rates the same estimate. The Duke of Northumberland's copy of the Fourth Folio is estimated at £40,000-60,000, while a presentation copy of the first book edition of Dickens' Pickwick Papers rates a £30,000-50,000 spread. Other interesting items include a first edition of Boswell's Life of Samuel Johnson in the original boards (est. £10,000-15,000) and much militaria.
Labels: Auctions
This week's big news (aside from the new auction records set at Sotheby's) was the unveiling on Monday of Google eBooks (formerly to be known as Google Editions), with some 3 million titles now available. Coverage of the launch has been fairly steady all week long, and has included some really fascinating perspectives. For some good general summaries, see Jennifer Howard in the Chronicle, the Washington Post, Jeffrey Trachtenberg and Amir Efrati in the WSJ, and Julie Bosman in the NYTimes (the latter two being the most comprehensive of the major stories). For Google's own overview (with videos), go here.
Labels: Digitization
Here's what appeared on the shelves this week:
Labels: Auctions, Thomas Jefferson
I'm still collecting sources for the soon-to-come post about Google eBooks (formerly to-be-known as Google Editions), but in the meantime I wanted to mention Robert Darnton's NYRB piece "Three Jeremiads," which in which he lays out three major areas for action in today's research library world: skyrocketing journal costs, the need for open-access publications, and the case for a national digital library (some of this piece was in an NYRB blog post that I linked to a couple weeks ago). It's a good essay, touching on a whole range of issues and aspects of these debates that should be of interest to all.
I'll have a full report on today's Hesketh sale at Sotheby's London later on, but in the meantime, the big news: the Shakespeare First Folio sold for £1,497,250 ($2,360,947), and the elephant folio of Audubon's Birds of America (drum roll please) made £7,321,250 ($11,544,553). That figure surpasses the $8.8 million benchmark set at Christie's in 2000 (for the last complete Birds of America to come up at auction), and should be a new record price for a printed book.
Robert Darnton's latest book is Poetry and the Police: Communication Networks in Eighteenth-Century Paris (Harvard University Press, 2010). It is classic Darnton: having found an intriguing episode in the archives, he follows the trail wherever it may lead. In this case he came upon a series of dossiers in the French police archives pertaining to "l'affaire des Quatorze," ("Affair of the Fourteen") a 1749 dragnet which resulted in the arrests of fourteen men (mostly priests, students, and clerks) for disseminating six salacious poems about Louis XV, his government, and his unpopular mistress, Madame de Pompadour.
Labels: Book Reviews
- Big news out of Harvard this week, where a seismic shift in library operations is underway. Read the announcement in the Crimson, coverage in the CHE (emphasizing the centralization of digital services), an interview with the leaders of the task force charged with implementing the changes from the Harvard Gazette, and provost Steven Hyman's letter to the Harvard community (PDF).
Labels: Digital Humanities, Digitization, Exhibits
An absolutely fantastic new digital offering from the New York Society Library: their earliest surviving charging ledger, covering the period July 1789 and April 1792. This is a true delight, since you can not only browse or search by borrower (and they've got some good ones, like George Washington, John Jay, Rufus King and Alexander Hamilton), but also find short sketches of each borrower, see who else borrowed each book (here's Jefferson's Notes on the State of Virginia, for example), and see the listing for each book in the library's early catalog (or in the OPAC if it's still in the collections).
Labels: Library History
Here's what joined the shelves this week:
Labels: Auctions, Declaration of Independence, Maps
The December Fine Books Notes is out, and contains pieces by Jonathan Shipley on comic book collecting, Jeffrey Murray on mapping the Northwest Passage, Ian McKay on recent auction results, and Rebecca Rego Barry's review of Audrey Niffenegger's The Night Bookmobile.