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Links & Reviews

Hervé | July 16, 2008
- An important dispatch from Travis: in the Brubaker case, he reports that the government has filed a Motion for Order of Forfeiture, and will be publishing information about how libraries who believe Brubaker stole from them can claim their missing stuff. So, if you work at one of these libraries and haven’t yet done anything, the time for waiting has ended.

- In the Boston Globe today, an investigation into the business connections of the trustees of the Boston Public Library. Donovan Slack finds that three of the trustees who voted last fall to oust Bernie Margolis as president “have substantial business ties with the city, raising questions about their independence from Mayor Thomas M. Menino’s administration.” The trustees “also failed to disclose those ties as required by the state conflict-of-interest law.” Slack adds “The outgoing library president, whose last day was June 30, said in an interview shortly after the vote that some trustees told him they could not vote to keep him for fear of jeopardizing their relationships with City Hall.” The mayor’s office maintains that “no one at City Hall attempted to use those financial relationships to sway library trustee votes.”

- From BibliOdyssey, images from fencing master Achille Marozzo’s 1536 work Opera Nova dell’Arte delle Armi, described as “the most important fencing manual of the 16th century and the first serious work to establish uniform rules for the use of weapons.” Also, engravings from the “odd” Frauenzimmer Gesprechspiele (1646) by Georg Philipp Harsdörffer (including an interesting reworking of Arcimboldo’s “Librarian.”

- Via LISNews, a list of “100 Unbelievably Useful Reference Sites You’ve Never Heard Of” (you’ve probably heard of some of them, but it is definitely a good list).

- The Austin American-Statesman has a column on the Texfake saga, with some interesting backstory on old John Jenkins and his shenanigans. I’ve been meaning to write something up about Jenkins and his Union connection, which I will do upon my return from vacation. Apropos of this, another story in the A-S reports that two documents from the period of the Texas Revolution have been ordered returned to the state archives; they’ve been in private hands for some time after being “improperly removed” from the archives.

- This week’s “Information Please” episode, from 1939, features writers Rex Stout and Moss Hart. I’m been enjoying these, they’re witty and very amusing. This one includes write-in questions from Upton Sinclair and Ellery Queen, among others.

- From the new issue of College & Research Libraries News, a sampling of summer reading for various incoming college classes.

- In the LATimes, Louis Sahagun has an essay on Jefferson’s Bible.

- Richard Cox comments on the recent debate over editing the papers of the ‘founding fathers.’ He writes “We have confusion here between scholarly historical research generated by documentary editors and access to the documents; one doesn’t necessarily require the other. Assertions about the problems of the “limited accessibility of the published volumes” (limited because of cost and residence in research libraries) still begs the question about just what degree the public wants access to such documents and confuses the needs of the public with that of scholars. … Holding onto the continuing fiction that every American wants to read the entire correspondence of a Jefferson or Adams actually undermines the potential contributions of modern documentary editing.”

- On NPR, author Edward Dolnick discusses his new book The Forger’s Spell, about famed art forger Han van Meegeren.

- Paul Collins teases his new Believer article, “Bite Me: A Brief History of Dentistry and Music.”

Reviews

- In the Christian Science Monitor, Joseph Wheelan’s Mr. Adams’s Last Crusade is reviewed.

- Ted Widmer’s Ark of the Liberties: America and the World is reviewed by David Oshinsky in the NYTimes.

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Austin American Statesman, Backstory, Boston Globe, Boston Public Library, Business Connections, Business Ties, Conflict Of Interest, Conflict Of Interest Law, Dell Arte, Fencing Master, Financial Relationships, Georg Philipp, John Jenkins, Library President, Library Trustee, Mayor Thomas, Opera Nova, Substantial Business, Uniform Rules, Use Of Weapons
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Links & Reviews

Hervé | May 20, 2008

- Over at Weekend Stubble, Paul Collins discovers an absolutely hilarious letter to the editor from 1922. Poor Mrs. Sackett.

- The Morgan Library has acquired Queen Claude of France’s prayer book, 132-page manuscript volume containing illuminated religious scenes. The piece measures just 2.75 x 2 inches, and is one of a few surviving works illuminated by a master known only as the Master of Claude de France. The piece was donated by Elaine Rosenberg in memory of her husband Alexandre, a well-known New York art dealer who died in 1987.

- A brand-new book evaluation tool from Mutterings of a Mad Bookseller. Spend a little time with this one, it’s worth it.

- Houghton Library’s Modern Books & Manuscripts Collection has a new webpage, along with a blog to document new acquisitions.

- The Boston Globe’s book blog, Off the Shelf, confirms a long-standing rumor: that historians Jane Kamensky and Jill Lepore have collaborated to write a novel. Blindspot will be published in December by Random House’s Spiegel & Grau imprint. “Set in Boston just before the War of Independence and purportedly penned by ‘a Gentleman in Exile & a Lady in Disguise,’ the story concerns the murder of a prominent revolutionary, a crime blamed on his slaves. A Scottish-born painter and an African-born physician set about finding the truth. We trust that they do.” Oh boy.

- The Little Professor comments on the hazards of academic regalia. Fitting (no pun intended) advice for commencement season.

- From BibliOdyssey, images from an 1829 German surgical album.

- A rare Vinegar Bible with fascinating provenance is returning to Nova Scotia.

- In the NYTimes this week, Alberto Manguel had an essay on his library, housed in a retrofitted barn in the Loire valley. More correctly, the essay is about his libraries, as they have grown and evolved with him through time and space. Manguel is one of the world’s finest writers about books and biblio-things, so this is not a piece to skip.

- Michael at Book Patrol points out The Book Bench, a new blog by the book-folks at the New Yorker. Link added.

- Over on the Guardian book blog, Mark SaFranko writes about reading Casanova’s Memoirs. He calls the volumes “masterpieces of world literature, the paradigm for how an autobiography should be written, a match for Proust’s great novel in breadth and scope, and, frankly, a book that was vastly more entertaining and readable.”

- University of South Carolina library science professor Robert Williams and graduate student Mittie Kristina McLean have released “A Bibliographical Guide to a Chronological Record of Statistics of National Scope on Libraries in the United States, 1829-1900.” Williams writes: “This guide begins with the first identified survey of libraries in 1829 and covers all known surveys or studies of national scope to 1899. It includes informaton on: survey date; compiler; purpose of the survey; library types included; list of all variables covered in the survey (e.g., number of volumes, name of librarian, place/city, volumes added annually, value of library, etc.); method of study or survey; completeness (when known); quality (when known) and where published (usually a US government agency but also in journals, etc. of the period). … Library types covered in the surveys for this period include: social, private, subscription, public, academic, school, special, state/government, and others.” A second part, for 1900-2000, is in process.

- Over at Britannica Blog, Robert McHenry comments on “Whig History and Whig Biography,” writing “Narrative history is almost inevitably whiggish to some degree. It’s not a matter of triumphalism or partisanship so much as the unavoidable consequence of the fact that the historian, whenever he is writing, occupies the unique present moment and is highly apt to pick out from the nearly infinite number of incidents and accidents of the past those that appear to bear a particular relevance to that present.”

Reviews

- In the Telegraph, Tim Blanning reviews David Andress’ 1789: The Threshold of the Modern Age. Blanning: “Andress writes with verve, never allowing the pace to slacken, moving swiftly from one character or episode to another. The result is exciting, exhilarating even. Not one chapter fails to deliver sharp insights, illuminating details and entertaining anecdotes. What is not supplied is coherence. Sudden thematic, geographical and chronological shifts lead to a narrative disjunction that bewilders and then irritates. Nor is there any compensating conceptual framework. …. So, after more than 400 pages of scintillating images, one is left asking: ‘Where is the big picture?’”

- Heather Cox Richardson reviews Walter McDougall’s Throes of Democracy: The American Civil War Era, 1829-1877 in the Washington Post. She writes “Rather than a definitive history, Throes of Democracy is a rollicking trip through historical events aimed at waking readers to America’s past self-deceptions and prodding them to be more self-critical today.” She criticizes the book for ignoring a decade’s worth of recent historical scholarship, but declares McDougall’s “laudable exploration of the American characters.”

- J.L. Bell read Mark Puls’ new biography of Henry Knox, and I’m glad he did because now I don’t have to. John rightly skewers the book for just a few of what I’m sure are a multitude of problems (if Puls’ last book was any indication). He concludes “It’s a shame that the early part of Henry Knox’s life is poorly documented. I’d love to know more about his growing up, when and how he got out of Boston during the war, and how he jumped from being an unranked volunteer to commanding the Continental Artillery. But we don’t have definite answers. Most of Knox’s biographers have been popular writers, not scholars, and have filled in the gaps in the record with legends and speculation. This new book is part of that tradition.”

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Academic Regalia, Alberto Manguel, Blindspot, Boston Globe, Commencement Season, Hilarious Letter, Houghton Library, Jane Kamensky, Jill Lepore, Loire Valley, Manuscripts Collection, Morgan Library, New York Art, Nytimes, Page Manuscript, Paul Collins, Prayer Book, Religious Scenes, S Spiegel, Surviving Works
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Update on BPL’s Stolen Maps

Hervé | January 4, 2008

The Boston Globe’s Jenna Russell has a story today providing some new details about the number of maps which still remain missing from the Boston Public Library, even as the 31 maps stolen by E. Forbes Smiley have been returned safely to the library’s collections. Russell reports that another 34 ma

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Booksellers in the News

Hervé | August 2, 2007

Don Lindgren of Rabelais Books in Maine is featured in the Boston Globe. Any shop that puts a chicken on their opening page, has my support. In fact, Don & I have exchanged chicken gossip from time to time. Any other booksellers out there with hens in the backyard? You can read about my chick

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large-rare-vellum-torah-bible-scroll-300-yrs-morocco LARGE, RARE VELLUM TORAH BIBLE SCROLL 300 YRS MOROCCO
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1789-miller-s-linnaeus-~-190-superb-colour-plates 1789 MILLER's LINNAEUS ~ 190 Superb Colour Plates
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1726-french-english-character-&-customs-scarce-1st-ed 1726 French / English Character & Customs SCARCE 1st ed
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1640-galileo-~-tycho-brahe-original-jesuit-manuscript 1640 GALILEO ~ TYCHO BRAHE Original Jesuit MANUSCRIPT
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diderot-–-encyclopédie-–-parisian-first-edition-!!! Diderot – Encyclopédie – Parisian First Edition !!!
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encyclopedie-diderot-vol-39-1779-131-plates-10-lg-maps Encyclopedie Diderot,Vol.39,1779,131 Plates,10 Lg Maps
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1675-seneca-roman-tragedies-drama-plays-latin-greek- 1675 SENECA Roman Tragedies/Drama/Plays (Latin/Greek)
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1726-french-english-character-&-customs-scarce-1st-ed 1726 French / English Character & Customs SCARCE 1st ed
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1875-pictorial-family-bible 1875 Pictorial Family Bible
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emma-smith-nauvoo-1847-mormon Emma Smith Nauvoo 1847 Mormon
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1496-incunabula-petrarch-rubricated-rare 1496 Incunabula Petrarch rubricated rare
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large-rare-vellum-torah-bible-scroll-300-yrs-morocco LARGE, RARE VELLUM TORAH BIBLE SCROLL 300 YRS MOROCCO
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1789-miller-s-linnaeus-~-190-superb-colour-plates 1789 MILLER's LINNAEUS ~ 190 Superb Colour Plates
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emma-smith-nauvoo-1847-mormon Emma Smith Nauvoo 1847 Mormon
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1740-six-concertos-by-george-frideric-handel 1740 Six concertos by George Frideric Handel
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antiques-koran-quran-islamic-manuscript-illuminated1294 ANTIQUES KORAN QURAN ISLAMIC MANUSCRIPT ILLUMINATED1294
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