Showing posts with label Poe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poe. Show all posts

Sunday, March 06, 2022

Links & Auctions

- Rebecca Romney has an essay in Uncanny Magazine, "Resisting the Monolith: Collecting as Counter Narrative."

- There's a new provenance mystery for us from the Middle Temple Library.

- Over on the Cotsen Children's Library blog, "A Rare Print Makes a Poor Fan But a Great Find!" [With many thanks to John Overholt for pointing out the inclusion of a book I collect in the image!]

- From The Bookhunter on Safari, "Becoming a Book-Hunter."

- Erin Blake writes for The Collation on "18th-century watchpapers."

- Alison Flood reports for the Guardian on Susan Jaffe Tane's recent donations of Poe items to the Poe Museum in Richmond, VA.

- From Jerry Morris, "About William Strunk, Jr. and his Other Books."

Upcoming Auctions

- Books & Manuscripts including the Monsieur X Collection at Artcurial on 8 March.

- American Historical Ephemera & Photography at Hindman on 8 March.

- Books and Works on Paper at Forum Auctions on 10 March.

- Decorative and Graphic Arts with Illustrated & Antiquarian Books, Fine Press & Fine Bindings at PBA Galleries on 10 March.

- Rare Books & Ephemera at Addison & Sarova on 12 March.

- Bookworm Sale at Addison & Sarova on 13 March.

Thursday, October 02, 2014

Links & Reviews

- The DPLA has received a $999,485 grant from the IMLS to fund an expansion of the DPLA's service hubs network.

- Mozart's manuscript score of his Piano Sonata in A has been found at the National Szechenyi Library in Budapest.

- Martha Carlin writes in the TLS about a ~1643 manuscript description of Southwark which mentions Shakespeare and his contemporaries having carved their names into the panelled walls of the Tabard Inn.

- The Telegraph reports on the restoration of Mrs. Gaskell's house and gardens.

- Over at Aeon, David Armitage and Jo Guldi ask "how did history abdicate its role of inspiring the longer view?"

- A new exhibition has launched at Harvard's Houghton Library, "InsideOUT: Contemporary Bindings of Private Press Books."

- From Amanda French, "On some books in Edna St. Vincent Millay's library."

- Historian James McPherson talks books for the NYT's "By the Books" feature.

- The winners of the 2014 National Collegiate Book-Collecting Contest have been announced.

- An IMLS grant will fund the digitization of nearly 200 rare volumes from the Clark Art Institute's Julius S. Held Collection of Rare Books.

- Steve Moyer has a piece in the current issue of Humanities about artist John Gould and Ralph Nicholson Ellis, Jr., whose efforts to collect Gould's works nearly bankrupted him.

- The Boston Globe highlights the coming installation of a Poe statue in Boston, and BU professor Paul Lewis' long push to get the city to recognize Poe as a native son.

- Speaking of Poe, Susan Jaffe Tane spoke to FB&C about her collection of Poe, some of which is currently on display at the Grolier Club.

- A collection of Ray Bradbury's books, art, ephemera, &c. made $493,408 at auction last week.

- Arion Press, for their one-hundredth publication, will produce a new fine-press edition of Whitman's Leaves of Grass.

- News in June, but new to me: Bowdoin College has acquired a 328-volume collection of Sarah Wyman Whitman bindings, donated by collector Jean Paul Michaud.

- The NYT Arts Beat blog reported that some reviewers received copies of an ARC of Anthony Horowitz's new book Moriarty containing authorial back-and-forth with copy editors.

- The Royal College of Physicians will host a 2016 exhibition titled "Scholar, courtier, magician: the lost library of John Dee."

- Hannah Bailey guest-posts at The Junto about the importance of French archives for early American historians.

- Three 17th-century Japanese scrolls are now available digitally through the Princeton University Digital Library.

- First Folio thief Raymond Scott is back in the news after the prison where he committed suicide has come under scrutiny for not providing better mental health care. More coverage from the BBC and ChronicleLive.

- Also at The Junto, Sara Georgini provides an inside look at the process that goes into creating the Adams Papers editorial project volumes.

- From Jim Ambuske at the Scholars' Lab blog, "Visualizing Early America through MapScholar and Beyond."

- Author James Patterson plans to donate £130,000 to more than 70 independent bookshops across the UK. The funds will be used to promote programs designed to "inspire children to become lifelong readers."

- From Rare Books Digest, "Rare, Signed and Forged," in which the author lays out some suggested criteria for buying (or selling) signed books.

Reviews

- Michael Farquhar's Secret Lives of the Tsars; review by Hank Cox in the WaPo.

- Ellen T. Harris' George Friedrich Handel: A Life with Friends; review by Weston Williams in the CSM.

- S.C. Gwynne's Rebel Yell; review by Allen Guelzo in the WSJ.

- Robert Darnton's Censors at Work; review by Felipe Fernández-Armesto in the WSJ.

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Links & Reviews

- Your must-read for today, and I mean that, is Lorne Blair's post from this week, "Why the New York Book Fair Matters - To You, Me, and Everyone We Know."

- Big news this week from Britain: the British Library has paid £9 million for the St. Cuthbert Gospel, called Europe's oldest intact book.

- Brown University's Richard Noble talked to NPR this week about the recent (re)discovery of a rare Paul Revere engraving inside an old medical text.

- Michael Sims has a piece in the NYTimes about the 60th anniversary of the publication of Charlotte's Web. Sims' book, The Story of Charlotte's Web, is a wonderful read.

- Via Bryan Waterman, news that students at the University of Maine at Machias are preparing a new edition of Julia and the Illuminated Baron, one of the first American gothic novels. It'll be published as part of the Library of Early Maine Literature later this spring.

- Mike Widener's posted on the Yale Law Library Rare Books Blog about his additions of dealer descriptions to book catalog records.

- Matthew Heintzelman of the Hill Museum & Manuscript Library writes about the challenges of cataloging books without title pages.

- The BBC covered the sale of the first part of the Birmingham Medical Institute's rare book library.

- The latest bookseller profiled in FB&C's "Bright Young Things" series is Zoe Mindell of Philadelphia Rare Books & Manuscripts.

- Clunes, Australia has been designated the first "book town" in the southern hemisphere.

- Jordan Goffin's made a neat find in a George Washington book at the Providence Public Library.

- At The Browser, Ann Blair recommends five books on the history of information.

- Some previously unexhibited Poe letters and a manuscript poem will go on display at Richmond's Poe House Museum this week.

Reviews

- Christopher Benfey's Red Brick, Black Mountain, White Clay; review by Adam Goodheart in the NYTimes.

- Katherine Frank's Crusoe; review by Claude Rawson in the WSJ.

- John D'Agata and Jim Fingal's The Lifespan of a Fact; review by Justin Moyer in the Washington Post.

- Paul French's Midnight in Peking; review by Fergus Bordewich in the WSJ.

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Links & Reviews

- Released this week, a tremendous new resource on the history of paper, based on research by Tim Barrett and others: Paper Through Time. The background essay and other materials make for fascinating reading.

- Also new, the Cranach Digital Archive.

- Ann Trubek went inside Cleveland's bibliophilic society The Rowfant Club (one of the few remaining all-male biblio-organizations), and tells the tale.

- From bookseller Ken Karmiole, an essay on "Collecting the Physical Book in the Digital Age."

- A new exhibition at Cambridge University, Shelf Lives: Four Centuries of Collectors and Their Books. [h/t Mike Widener]

- Sarah Werner has posted her syllabus for her class "Books and Early Modern Culture."

- The Harvard Gazette reported this week on the launch of WorldMap, a new open-source mapping platform.

- In the Harvard Magazine, a look at Brontë juvenilia in the Houghton Library collections.

- Rebecca Rego Barry's essay "A Rare Book Collector's Guide to the College Library Book Sale" is now online at The Millions.

- Over at Past is Present, Tracey Kry highlights the Cardiff Giant, quite a good hoax from 1869 (which happened near where I grew up, and now resides at the wonderful Farmers' Museum in Cooperstown).

- The Poe Toaster failed to make an appearance in Baltimore for the third year in a row; observers now believe that the tradition has probably come to an end.

- A National Churchill Library and Center will be founded at The George Washington University, as part of an $8 million gift to the university from Chicago's Churchill Centre.

- From Ed Pettit at Ed and Edgar, a literacy quiz that he gave this week to a college class.

- The Collation has begun a series of guest posts by Folger interns: the first, by Ashley Behringer, examines the origins of a particular manuscript collection.

- Given the events of this week, if you read one review today, make it Caleb Crain's The Nation piece on William Patry's How to Fix Copyright and Patricia Aufderheide and Peter Jaszi's Reclaiming Fair Use. Joseph Adelman's Publick Occurrences blog post is also a must-read.

Reviews

- Michael Dirda's On Conan Doyle; review by David Mikics in TNR.

- Ian Donaldson's Ben Jonson: A Life; review by Charles Isherwood in the NYTimes.

- John M. Barry's Roger Williams and the Creation of the American Soul; review by Scott Martelle in the LATimes.

- John Matteson's The Lives of Margaret Fuller; review by Mary Beth Norton in the NYTimes.

- Julia Flinn Siler's Lost Kingdom; review by Sara Kehaulani Goo in the WaPo.

- Richard Bailey's Speaking American; review by John McWhorter in the NYTimes.

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Links & Reviews

- Stuart Kelly blogged for the Guardian about reading by candlelight.

- Over on the SHARP blog, Leslie Howsam asks for the "most innovative monographs in the field of book history published in the past 20 years"? It's prompted some good discussion (don't forget to read the comments).

- Lisa Jardine comments on the history of information overload in "Why didn't Harry Potter just use Google?"

- A new Biblio-tumblr from Brooke Palmieri, BIBLIOGUERILLA. I've also added a link on the sidebar.

- In a followup blog post to her recent piece on Matt Kirschenbaum's project on the history of word processing, Jennifer Schuessler reports that authors have been coming out of the woodwork to stake their claims.

- Paul Collins points out the 1850s Philadelphia magazine "Bizarre" (sample contents here).

- The BBC reports on the annual cleaning of the chained library at Hereford Cathedral.

- From The Collation, a wonderful idea of allowing readers who've taken reference images of Folger materials to pool them in a Flickr group. Other institutions where reference photography is allowed: this is a step worth exploring at the very least!

- Over at Echoes from the Vault, some very nice inky fingerprints in a 1473 book.

- Some nifty resources on the English book trade, tweeted by @mercpol recently: The English Provincial Book Trade Before 1850 and The London Booktrades: A Biographical and Documentary Resource.

- The Poe Foundation of Boston has released three finalists for a Poe-related public art installation in Boston, and have set up a website soliciting comments on the designs.

- In the Washington Post, Raymond M. Lane looks at the connections between Poe and Dickens.

- A fascinating discussion sprang up on ExLibris this week, about whether ebook collections should be allowed as entries into book collecting contests. Nate Pedersen summarized the issues in a Fine Books Blog post.

- Seven wonderful booksellers have collaborated on a collective catalog of items available at the upcoming San Francisco and Pasadena fairs.

- Over at Notes for Bibliophiles, Jordan Goffin highlights some recent work on whaleship reading.

- In the Telegraph, Robert Douglas-Fairhurst writes about the new BBC adaptation of The Mystery of Edwin Drood (airing in the US in April). And, for more on Dickens, Christopher Hitchens' posthumous Vanity Fair piece, "Charles Dickens's Inner Child," is a must-read.

Reviews

- Elizabeth Dowling Taylor's A Slave in the White House; review by Jonathan Yardley in theWashington Post.

- Cullen Murphy's God's Jury; review by Edward Peters in the Washington Post.

- P.D. James' Death Comes to Pemberley; review by Kenneth Turan in the LATimes.

Saturday, October 01, 2011

Auction Preview: October

- On 6 October, PBA Galleries will sell Fine Literature & Books in All Fields, in 406 lots. The expected high spot is a (somewhat restored) first edition Leaves of Grass with an (unconnected) postcard written by Whitman (est. $60,000-90,000). A Jessie Bayes illuminated manuscript of two Shelley poems is estimated at $25,000-35,000, while a first edition of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz could fetch $20,000-30,000.

- Also on 6 October, Bloomsbury holds a Bibliophile Sale, in 413 lots.

- At Bonhams on 10 October, Fine Books and Manuscripts, in 271 lots. A 1776 John Adams letter to William Cooper about the construction of Navy vessels rates a $50,000-80,000 estimate, while a first edition of McKenney and Hall is estimated at $40,000-60,000. A copy of the leaf book A Noble Fragment with the original Gutenberg Bible leaf is estimated at $30,000-50,000. Rating the same estimate is a suite of Robert Furber's 1730 Twelve Months of Flowers. A Nuremberg Chronicle could sell for $20,000-30,000. A second edition of William Wood's New Englands Prospect (1635) rates the same estimate.

- Swann has a sale of Early Printed, Medical and Scientific Books on 17 October, in 304 lots.

- Bonhams will sell The Robert H. and Donna L. Jackson Collection Part I: 19th Century Literature on 18 October, in 251 lots. Expected top sellers include an autograph manuscript leaf of The Pickwick Papers ($70,000-100,000); a rare complete copy of Trollope's Ralph the Heir in parts ($50,000-80,000); a first edition Middlemarch in parts ($50,000-70,000); complete sets of Pickwick Papers and David Copperfield in parts ($30,000-50,000); a copy of Audubon's Quadrupeds in the original parts ($45,000-55,000); and George Eliot's brother's copy of her Scenes of Clerical Life ($20,000-30,000).

- Sotheby's has just one book sale this month, but it's a whopper. The Library of an English Bibliophile, Part II (my report on Part I is here) comprises 155 lots, eight of which are estimated at more than $100,000. The Shakespeare First Folio, not surprisingly, rates the top estimate, at $600,000-700,000 (a Third Folio could fetch $350,000-400,000). A particularly lovely first edition of Joyce's Ulysses with presentation inscriptions by publisher Sylvia Beach could sell for $450,000-500,000, while a first printing of Poe's Tales (1845) rates a $200,000-250,000 estimate (The Raven and Other Poems, published the same year, is estimated at $140,000-180,000). Joyce's Dubliners could sell for $150,000-200,000. A first printing of The Great Gatsby in a second-state dust jacket is estimated at $150,000-180,000, and a first issue Leaves of Grass could reach $140,000-160,000. That's just a teaser of all the goodies in this sale, which one hopes will realize some really impressive figures (it certainly has the potential to).

- Also on 20 October, Bloomsbury sells Books from the Library of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, in 171 lots. The expected high spot is Johannes Kip's Nouveau Theatre de Grand Bretagne (1713-1728), in three volumes (est. £30,000-40,000).

- PBA Galleries will sell Nevada, California & Americana: The Library of Clint Maish, with additions, on 20 October. No preview yet available.

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Links & Reviews

- On 25 August one of four volumes of Harbottle Dorr's collection of early American newspapers will be sold at auction in Maine. The volume is from the collections of the Bangor Historical Society; the other three are at the Massachusetts Historical Society. From the Kennebec Journal article on the upcoming sale: "Lippitt [Dana Lippitt, the curator] said the Bangor Historical Society's board considered a private sale to the Massachusetts Historical Society to complete its collection. 'That's where we'd prefer they end up,' Lippitt said. But the need for the most money possible convinced board members to put the newspapers up for auction." This is incredibly unfortunate, and not the way decisions about our cultural heritage should be made. I seriously hope that an institution is able to obtain the volume, so that it doesn't end up in the hands of a dealer and get broken up for piecemeal sale.

- It had been expected, but the news nonetheless is sad: the British Museum closed the Paul Hamlyn Library on Friday

- From The Cataloguer's Desk, Laura Massey looks at a fascinating example of forgery, fakery, and false provenance in a 1793 copy of Shakespeare Illustrated.

- In the Chronicle this week, an excerpt from Alan Jacobs' recent book The Pleasures of Reading in an Age of Distraction.

- This week J.L. Bell looked at two recent books which maintain the American Revolution was a mistake. First post; second post.

- NPR Books got a facelift this week.

- A.N. Devers writes about the trials and tribulations of Poe's houses, for The Book Bench.

- David Orr has an essay in the NYTBR on George R.R. Martin's Song of Ice and Fire series and how it's reshaping modern fantasy. I'm greatly enjoying my trip through A Dance with Dragons just now! And speaking of fantasy, The Millions has an interview with Lev Grossman, whose The Magician King was released this month.

- Frida Kahlo's annotated copy of Poe's works, which includes handwritten notes, paintings, and collage, sold for $24,400 at auction in Chicago this week.

- At EMOB, Eleanor Shevlin looks at open access and subscription databases, using the Aaron Swartz case as a jumping-off point.

- Another interesting take on crowdsourcing from the photo archive Magnum, which combines social networking and gaming with photo identification.

- Very glad to see that the Providence Public Library's Occasional Nuggets publication will continue!

- James McAuley talks to Maya Jasanoff about her book Liberty's Exiles, which I enjoyed very much earlier this spring.

- From the NYT's Disunion blog, a look at James Garfield's early career and entry into the Civil War.

- Perhaps not new (I'm not sure) but Harvard in the 17th and 18th Century is a fantastically detailed guide to the holdings of Harvard's archives on a wide variety of topics.

- An employee of Hartford's Mark Twain house admitted to embezzling more than $1 million from the museum's coffers.

- Over at 8vo, a look at Innerpeffray's lending library, the oldest in Scotland. Great pictures and background!

- A copy of the 9 May 1754 Pennsylvania Gazette, containing Ben Franklin's famous "Join or Die" political cartoon, will be sold at Heritage Auctions in September, with an estimate of $100,000-200,000 (which may be rather low).

- Slate asks a series of authors, editors and critics to name the "great books" they think are most overrated. I quite like, and strongly agree with, Elif Batuman's comment: "My view is that the right book has to reach you at the right time, and no person can be reached by every book. Literature is supposed to be beautiful and/or necessary—so if at a given time you don't either enjoy or need a certain book, then you should read something else, and not feel guilty about it."

- Bookride looks at some of the best printing errors in history.

- Via @john_overholt, a mini-documentary on marginalia.

- Charles C. Mann talked about his new book 1493 on NPR this week.

- The Paul Fraser Collectibles newsletter has a profile of David Rumsey and his famous map collection.

Reviews

- Brook Wilensky-Lanford's Paradise Lust; review by Laura Collins-Hughes in the Boston Globe.

- Several new editions and works about John Donne; review by Robert Fraser in the TLS.

- Julian Barnes' The Sense of an Ending; review by Lidija Haas in the TLS.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Links & Reviews

- The Massachusetts Archives has recovered a 1775 Joseph Warren letter probably stolen decades ago. It had ended up in the James S. Copley library, and when archivists noticed the listing in the auction catalog, they arranged to purchase the letter for $8,000. J.L. Bell notes that the postscript, instead of referencing Henry Knox as suggested in many of the news articles, probably refers to "General Thomas" (Dr. John Thomas, commanding the troops at Roxbury when Warren wrote).

- More from Ed Pettit on the potential closure of the Poe House in Baltimore. If you haven't yet, make sure you sign the petition calling for a restoration of funding.

- New carbon-dating tests suggest the mysterious Voynich Manuscript was written on parchment dating from ~1404-1438, about a hundred years earlier than previously thought. More from the Daily Mail.

- Lots of wonderfully bookish things going on on the West Coast this week. Rebecca Rego Barry has dispatches from the California Book Fair (Day 1, Day 2); Ian Kahn's had a series of posts covering the Pasadena Book Fair, the CODEX Foundation Symposium, and the CA Book Fair in San Francisco (start here, then go here and here); Richard Minsky posted about CODEX on the FB&C blog (Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4); and Chris Lowenstein has another Pasadena report here.

- Whitney Trettien did a great job with the Google/Bing search kerfuffle, noting that publishers of dictionaries, maps, and other reference books have often done things similar to what Google did in order to identify copyright thieves.

- Bob Fleck at Oak Knoll has a fascinating post about the process he went through to reprice all of his books after running them through vialibri to find out today's "going rate."

- The Bibliotheca Alexandrina was profiled in the WSJ this week. In other Egypt news, reports this week indicated that thefts from the Egyptian Museum may have been worse than previously reported.

- Another fond remembrance of Brian Jacques, from Alison Flood in the Guardian.

- The National Library of Finland has launched a new game-based crowdsourcing effort for text verification of its digitized newspapers and periodicals.

- Also on the crowdsourcing front, the Transcribe Bentham project has added 1,200 more documents to the queue for transcription.

- Harvard University has joined the HathiTrust.

- Sad news out of Portland, OR this week, where Powell's announced layoffs of 31 employees.

- New blog! Antipodean Footnotes, from Anthony Tedeschi in Dunedin, NZ. Link added. [h/t @john_overholt]

- From the Chronicle, a report on how e-books without page numbers were causing scholars headaches. A day later, Amazon announced that an upgrade to its Kindle software will give readers a choice between "real" page numbers and its location numbers.

- An interesting new database: London Lives: 1690-1800. Searchable transcriptions of some public records for the period. [h/t @Boston1775]

Reviews

- Ben Tarnoff's Moneymakers; reviews by Michael Washburn in the NYTimes and Carolyn See in the WaPo.

- Andrea Wulf's The Founding Gardeners; review by Jonathan Bate in the Telegraph.

- Maya Jasanoff's Liberty's Exiles; reviews by John MacKenzie in the Scotsman; Michael Kenney in the Boston Globe, and Brendan Simms in the WSJ.

- A whole slew of recent books about the King James Bible's 400th anniversay; review by Arnold Hunt in the TLS.

Wednesday, February 09, 2011

Baltimore's Poe House May Close

The city of Baltimore has cut funding to the Edgar Allan Poe House and Museum, and the site may have to close as early as next year if a solution is not found. I can do no better than to repeat the comments of "Philly Poe Guy" Ed Pettit, who told the LATimes "What a travesty, that Baltimore won't fund the house, the site in their city of the most famous American writer ever. That is just absolutely, astoundingly stupid."

Hopefully there's a solution here, whether it's national park status, restitution of city funding, or something else entirely.

More on what the loss of funding means for the site here, and there's an online petition for the house as well. I've signed; you should too.

Tuesday, February 02, 2010

Upcoming Poe Events in Boston

The curators of "The Raven in the Frog Pond: Edgar Allan Poe and the City of Boston," on display now at the Boston Public Library, will lead tours of the exhibit on Thursday, 4 February at 6 p.m. and Saturday 13 February at 3 p.m. (each led by Paul Lewis); Saturday 21 February at 3 p.m. (led by Rob Velella), and Saturday 6 March at 3 p.m. (led by Paul Lewis). The tours will last about 45 minutes. The exhibit is in the Cheverus Room (third floor, McKim Building).

Also, on Thursday 18 February at 6 p.m. New Yorker cartoon editor Robert Mankoff will join Paul Lewis for "What's So Funny About Edgar Allan Poe?", an"exploration of humor by and about Edgar Allan Poe. Beyond his dark tales, in which humor is frequently mixed with fear or madness, Poe wrote satires, parodies, and putdowns, some of which were aimed at Boston and its writers. As a familiar figure in New Yorker cartoons, Poe (like the Grim Reaper) provides occasions for joking about things that go bump in the night." That'll take place in the BPL's Abbey Room (second floor, McKim Building).

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

No Poe Toast This Year

The AP is reporting that the Poe Toaster did not leave the traditional cognac and rose offering at the gravesite of Edgar Allan Poe last night, for the first time since 1949. Jeff Jerome, curator at the Poe House, admits he doesn't know what's up.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Boston Wins Poe Debate!

Last night's Boston round of the Great Poe Debate went off wonderfully, before a packed Rabb Lecture Hall at the BPL. I snapped this picture of the combatants before the debate began: from left, moderator Charlie Pierce, Boston's Paul Lewis, Philly's Ed Pettit (pictured below making his dramatic entrance in the now-famous "Philly Poe Robe"), and Baltimore's Jeff Jerome.

The group gave opening statements about the relative importance of their city to Poe, then Charlie had some amusing questions for each of the four, they took some audience questions, and summed up their arguments. A good discussion, very meaty but hilarious at the same time. It was, obviously, quite a Boston-centric crowd, but the discussion about Poe and his legacy transcends location, of course. Boston poet laureate Sam Cornish, called in as celebrity judge, said it would be unfair to award a prize, and gave each debater a stuffed raven.

Before the debate, "The Raven in the Frog Pond: Edgar Allan Poe and the City of Boston" exhibit opened in the Cheverus Room on the third floor of the library - that'll be up through the end of March, so do make sure you get up there to see it. It's a well-crafted selection of Poe highlights focusing on his connections with Boston over the course of his life. There's even a Tamerlane, courtesy of Susan Jaffe Tane, a private collector. Don't miss the show!

Many thanks to the BPL folks, Paul Lewis and his team, Ed, Jeff and Charlie for their participation last night.

Monday, December 14, 2009

It's Poe-Time in Boston!

"The Raven in the Frog Pond: Edgar Allan Poe and the City of Boston," a new exhibit at the Boston Public Library, will open at 6 p.m. this Thursday, 17 December. At 7 p.m. that evening, the Boston round of the Great Poe Debate will kick off, featuring our good friend Ed "Philly Poe Guy" Pettit, BC professor Paul Lewis (curator of the exhibit) and Jeff Jerome from the Poe House in Baltimore. It'll be moderated by Charlie Pierce.

Paul Lewis does a pre-debate Q&A with Kathleen Burge in the Boston Globe.

If you can't make it to the events on Thursday evening, the exhibit will run through 31 March 2010.

Saturday, December 05, 2009

Media Coverage of Auction Records

Some of the coverage of yesterday's two sales (summarized here and here):

Reuters notes that the Tamerlane sale broke the record for a 19th-century book of poetry, and the "For Annie" fragment set the new mark for a 19th-century literary manuscript. The AP calls the buyer of the poetry mss. "an American collector."

The AP also notes that Cormac McCarthy has invited the winner of his typewriter to join him for lunch at the Sante Fe Institute, the NM-based nonprofit to which the proceeds from the typewriter sale will be given.

A short Washington Post piece on the Washington letter says that the bidding war came down to two telephone bidders.

Friday, December 04, 2009

Poe Record @ Christie's

The Tamerlane just sold for $662,500 at Christie's, setting a record for Poe. I'm working on a full report on the entire sale and will have it up very shortly.

[Update: Whoa. The manuscript of the first eight stanzas of "For Annie", estimated at $50,000-70,000, just sold for $830,500 (breaking the Poe record set just moments before with Tamerlane)]

Thursday, December 03, 2009

Auction Report: Christie's 12/4 Preview

Two major sales at Christie's New York tomorrow could bring in some pretty spectacular results. Just a very brief preview of the anticipated high spots, and I'll chime in as the hammer comes down tomorrow (or as soon thereafter as I'm able):

First up, at 10 a.m. will be the William E. Self Library of Important English and American Literature. Fourteen lots (of 197) have presale estimates of $100,000 or more.

The expected big seller is Lot 155, one of the twelve (yes, twelve) copies known of Poe's first book, Tamerlane and Other Poems (Boston: Calvin F.S. Thomas, 1827). This is one of only two copies still in private hands, and one of seven still in the original wrappers. Known as the "black tulip" of American literature, this copy is expected to fetch between $500,000 and $700,000 tomorrow. The sale description also includes a handy census of known copies.

A spectacular presentation copy, Lot 51, is also expected to sell well. It's Hans Christian Andersen's copy of Charles Dickens' The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club (London: Chapman and Hall, 1845). The estimate is $200,000-300,000.

More Dickens and Poe make up the expected big sellers, along with a first edition of Darwin's Origin (London: Murray, 1859). That, Lot 40, is estimated at $80,000-120,000.

An AP story focuses on the Tamerlane, but touches on other aspects of the sale and of Mr. Self's collection.

In the afternoon session, beginning at 2 p.m., 257 lots of Fine Printed Books and Manuscripts, Including America go on the block. Ten lots are estimated at more than $100,000.

The big seller is expected to be the very last lot of the day. Lot 257, called the "most important George Washington letter ever to come to auction," is a four-page letter of 9 November 1787 by Washington to his nephew Bushrod, in which the future first president makes the case for ratification of the Constitution. The letter has been in the possession of Washington family members. It is expected that this letter could set a record for a Washington letter (set in 2002 with a $834,500 sale).

Other major lots in Friday's sale include:

- Lot 95, the manuscript (on index cards) of Vladimir Nabokov's unfinished novel The Original of Laura, published this fall by Knopf. This is the first Nabokov manuscript ever at auction, and presale estimates are set at $400,000-600,000.

- Lot 222, a Stone engraving on parchment of the Declaration of Independence (1823). Est. $300,000-500,000.

- Lots 255 & 256, two additional George Washington autograph letters (also to Bushrod Washington), each estimated at $200,000-300,000.

- Lot 76, a signed limited edition of Ulysses (Paris: Shakespeare and Company, 1922), also estimated at $200,000-300,000.

- Lot 164, a copy of the second folio edition of Audubon's Birds of America (New York: Roe Lockwood & Son, 1860). Estimated at $150,000-200,000.

- Lot 174, a complete (20-volume) set of the text of Edward Curtis' The North American Indian ([Cambridge, MA], 1907-1930), along with the scarce prospectus, est. $100,000-150,000.

- And another Darwin: Lot 175, a first edition presentation copy of Origin from Darwin to French zoologist Henri Milne-Edwards. It's also estimated at $100,000-150,000.

Tomorrow promises to be very exciting; these lots are only just the tip of the very interesting iceberg in this pair of sales. Both catalogs are a recommended browse, and stay tuned for updates tomorrow!

Thursday, October 15, 2009

New Issues

The October Fine Books Notes and Common-place are out, for your reading pleasure. The former features door-to-door book salesmen, Basbanes on the Getty library, and a roundup of upcoming Poe-related events (among other things). In the latter, Carolyn Eastman discusses "sexing up the pirates," Mark Peterson asks why Hollywood can't seem to get the American Revolution right, and the journal unveils a comments feature.

Sunday, October 04, 2009

Links & Reviews

- The October Americana Exchange Monthly is up, here. Lots of good offerings as always, including a report on the "Books in Hard Times" conference drawn from my recap of the event.

- A WHYY Edgar Allan Poe short film which our guy Ed was involved won a Mid-Atlantic Emmy for Historic/Cultural-Program Feature or Segment. You can watch the short here.

- BookTV has an interview with Allison Hoover Bartlett about The Man Who Loved Books Too Much, her new book about book thief John Charles Gilkey. You can watch online, or check the CSPAN2 listings for air times.

- Writing for Publishers Weekly, Andrew Albanese asks "Can the Google Book Settlement Be Saved?" And in the NYTimes, Kenyon College professor Lewis Hyde writes the most cogent essay I've seen throughout this debate on the question of orphan works. This is the must-read of the bunch.

- A malfunctioning sprinkler caused damage to documents at the Missouri State Historical Society this week, according to media reports; thankfully the documents were duplicate state files from the 1970s-90s, and can be replaced.

- Over at Boston1775, J.L. Bell notes a new issue of the online magazine History Now, all about the American Revolution. I'm looking forward to making my way through the articles.

- The Ig Nobel Prizes were awarded this week (full list of winners), and this year's list included the first award for literature; it went to "Ireland's police service (An Garda Siochana), for writing and presenting more than fifty traffic tickets to the most frequent driving offender in the country - Prawo Jazdy - whose name in Polish means ‘Driving License.'"

- The Private Library has begun a series on Bibliomania: Part I, Part II, Part III, Part IV, Part V, Part VI ...

- Christine and Robert at Colophon Books have added a subject-based index to their website, so if you just want books on forgery, wood engravings, or book auction catalogs, &c., this will be a handy way to browse their holdings.

- The National Heritage Museum's exhibit "Freemasonry Unmasked!" opened on 3 October. The show "features forty objects from the Library and Archives collection, ranging from 1700s and 1800s ritual exposures to an anti-Masonic comic book from 1978."

- Annette Gordon-Reed's The Hemingses of Monticello has won the $25,000 Frederick Douglass Book Prize for 2009, an annual prize awarded by Yale University's Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition for "the best book written in English on slavery or abolition."

- James Cummins has issued a "Books About Books" list (PDF).

Reviews

- Maureen Dowd's NYTimes review of The Lost Symbol is a must-read.

- Miranda Seymour reviews Jenny Uglow's A Gambling Man: Charles II and the Restoration in the Telegraph.

- Allison Hoover Bartlett's The Man Who Loved Books Too Much is reviewed by Christopher Beha in the NYTimes.

- In the Guardian, Philip Pullman reviews Joscelyn Godwin's Athanasius Kircher's Theatre of the World.

- Audrey Niffenegger's Her Fearful Symmetry is reviewed by Tom Adair in the Telegraph.

- Paul Collins' The Book of William gets a short review in the NYTimes.

- In the TLS, Mary Beard reviews Margaret Miles' Art as Plunder and Carole Paul's The Borghese Collections and the Display of Art in the Age of the Grand Tour.

- Frances Wilson reviews Dan Cruickshank's The Secret History of Georgian London in the Times.

- A.S. Byatt's The Children's Book is reviewed by Brooke Allen in the WSJ.

Sunday, September 06, 2009

Links & Reviews

- John Overholt notes the success of the Johnson at 300 symposium last week (my thoughts here) and points out a great article in the Harvard Gazette about the meeting.

- The Ransom Center has launched a massive (c. 4,000-item!) digital Edgar Allan Poe collection. Super cool.

- In the NYT, Sam Roberts writes on New York's "oldest murder," committed 400 years ago today.

- Paul Collins notes the death of would-be spelling reformer Ed Rondthaler. And on NPR, Paul discusses the use of invisible ink in childens' activity books.

- I missed the beginning of the series, but McSweeney's is running "Dispatches from a Hangdog Bankrupt," written by rare-book dealer Bill Cotter. I'm catching up on these now. [h/t The Millions]

- Biblio's hosting a Biblio Book Hunt on Twitter - fun!

Reviews

- In the NYRB, James McPherson reviews several new Lincoln biographies.

- Douglas Brinkley's Wilderness Warrior is reviewed by Kathleen Dalton in the Boston Globe.

- Caleb Crain is in this week's New Yorker with "Bootylicious," a review of several recent works on pirates and piracy. On his blog he provides some background and further reading (always fascinating), and has added a coda on buried treasure now, too.

- In the WSJ, Thomas Lipscomb reviews In Defense of Thomas Jefferson by William Hyland.

- David Crystal's memoir, Just a Phrase I'm Going Through, is reviewed by Henry Hitchings in the TLS.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Poe Event Recap

Last night's Ticknor Society event with Poe scholar Rob Velella was great fun - Rob's a very engaging speaker, and provided a fascinating look into the 19th-century publishing world and Poe's place within that rapidly-changing system. Turnout was excellent, and announcements were made about the upcoming Poe exhibit at the BPL as well as the Boston iteration of the Great Poe Debate, to be held in December (Paul Lewis, who'll be Boston's "man in the ring" for that event, said with the home-court advantage, we're sure to have an edge over Philly and Baltimore).