This Week's Acquisitions
Just two review copies this week (and due to the impending move, the flow's going to need to start going in the opposite direction now!):
Just two review copies this week (and due to the impending move, the flow's going to need to start going in the opposite direction now!):
The final round of the sale of the James S. Copley Library will be held at Sotheby's New York on 20 May, in 252 lots.
Labels: Auctions
Labels: Acquisitions, Auctions, Audubon, Digital Humanities, Digitization, Paul Collins
New this week:
Doyle New York's Books, Photographs and Prints sale was held yesterday, in 506 lots. The big seller, and a surprise one, was a manuscript music album compiled by Arnold Wehner, Director of Music at the University of Gottingen (1846-1855). Presale estimates pegged it at $8,000-12,000, but it was hammered down for $158,500!
Labels: Auctions
Labels: Acquisitions, Bookselling, Digitization, Marginalia
The new pile:
Before I even get into my review of Nathan Larson's The Dewey Decimal System (Akashic Press, 2011), let me just simply point out that if you are planning to read it because you think it has something to do with books, or libraries, it doesn't. The main character happens to live in the abandoned main branch of the New York Public Library, for which he has earned the nickname "Dewey Decimal." That's the only connection.
Labels: Book Reviews
Swann held a Fine Books and Manuscripts sale on 7 April, in 136 lots, of which all but 25 found buyers. As expected, the top lot here was indeed the deluxe copy of the Golden Cockerel Press Gospels, one of twelve copies printed on vellum and this copy inscribed by Eric Gill to Virginia Woolf. The hammer price of $132,000 nearly doubled the presale estimates of $60,000-75,000.
Labels: Auctions
Yesterday I had a good but much too short trip to New York for the 51st Annual New York Antiquarian Book Fair, held at the Park Avenue Armory. While there was much else going on, including a book auction at Heritage Auction Galleries and the "shadow show" downtown (more on this at the Fine Books blog), I decided I'd better focus on the main event since I had only about five hours on the ground in New York.
Labels: Book Fairs, Bookselling
Labels: Auctions, Bookselling, Digitization, Early Printing
Sarah Vowell's newest is Unfamiliar Fishes (Riverhead, 2011), in which she continues her practice of combining history, travelogue, and a healthy dose of snark. Here those ingredients are blended well to create a funny, fascinating, and always enjoyable history of Hawaii from the time of the arrival of the first American missionaries in 1820 to the islands' annexation by the United States in 1898.
Labels: Book Reviews
Labels: Auctions
Labels: Book Fairs, Bookselling, Digitization, Early Printing
Here's what arrived this week:
It's been languishing on library shelves for more than half a century and was thought lost to scholarship, but now a graduate student has stumbled upon Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's manuscript translation of Dante's Divinia Commedia, a find sure to result in world-wide media coverage, along with a publication deal for the scholar.