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Category Archives: Books
Look for the Book Label
Over the many years that I have been collecting and selling antiquarian and secondhand books, I have been intrigued by the small booksellers’ labels that were once a fixture in the book trade. These are typically diminutive, usually small rectangles … Continue reading
Posted in Art, Books, Bookstore Tourism, Europe
Tagged book labels, booksellers, London, Paris, Venice
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Let This Darkness Be a Bell Tower
Let This Darkness Be a Bell Tower Rainer Maria Rilke Quiet friend who has come so far, feel how your breathing makes more space around you. Let this darkness be a bell tower and you the bell. As you ring, … Continue reading
Best Bookstore of the Year
Literati Bookstore in Ann Arbor, Michigan has been named PW‘s Bookstore of the Year. Literati which opened in 2013 celebrated the store’s fifth anniversary last April. Brooklyn transplant co-owners Hilary and Michael Gustafson posted on Facebook: “When we opened Literati we … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Bookstore Tourism, USA
Tagged Ann Arbor, Bookselling, Michigan, Reading
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Wordless Novel (no fooling)
To follow-up on my recent post about Lynd Ward’s wordless novels, I would like to introduce the German wordless novel, Die Sonne (the Sun), created by Franz Masereel (1889-1972), and published originally in 1919. This copy was re-issued in 1926 by Kurt … Continue reading
Posted in Art, Books, Europe, Writing
Tagged Art Books, Expressionism, Germany, Lynd Ward, woodcuts
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Everything was beautiful, and nothing hurt
Today marks the 50th anniversary of the first publication of Kurt Vonnegut’s masterwork Slaughterhouse-Five. Part autobiographical, part science fiction, part satire, Slaughterhouse-Five was Vonnegut’s first bestseller and remains a revered literary classic of the 20th century. After the real-life Vonnegut … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Europe, History, USA, Writing
Tagged Dresden, Kurt Vonnegut, Slaughterhouse Five, World War II
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Literary Infographics
Back in the olden days when I was a student some of my peers would avoid assignments by reading Cliff Notes rather than full books. If you’re not familiar, Cliff Notes were commercially produced summaries of full length books that … Continue reading
Posted in Art, Books, Writing
Tagged 1984, Anna Karenina, Friedrich Nietzsche, George Orwell, infographics
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My Kind of Library
Lochal is a new public library and city forum in Tilburg, Netherlands. The building offers space for the public library, co-work spaces, conference rooms, spaces for arts education and a large city hall for public events, exhibitions and debates. Lochal is … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Books, Europe, Libraries, Public Transport
Tagged Netherlands, railways, Tilburg
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Bookseller Woes
You don’t have to be a bookseller to grok the exasperating experiences that bookstore owner Anne Barnetson hilariously explores in her ongoing comic series called Customer Service Wolf. The online comic documents the frustrations that most retail workers suffer through every day, … Continue reading
Rick Steves Wants To Set You Free
If you live in the United States and have ever watched PBS television, or if you’ve ever visited the travel section of any bookstore, then you know exactly who Rick Steves is and what he’s all about. But if you’re … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Europe, Hotels, Tourism, Travel Writing
Tagged European travel, PBS, Travel Guidebooks
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Perpetually Awaiting A Rebirth of Wonder
Today is the 100th birthday of America’s most loved living poet. If you spend any time at TBTP, you have by now likely noticed my fondness for Lawrence Ferlinghetti. In fact, the first poetry books that I bought were his A … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Bookstore Tourism, Freedom of Speech, USA, Writing
Tagged Coney Island, Far Rockaway, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Poetry, San Francisco
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