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Category Archives: Libraries
Rare Book Discovery
I have a hazy recollection of a brief visit to Canterbury’s The Beaney House of Art & Knowledge many decades ago on one of my first trips to England, but I was intrigued by a story about its current special … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Europe, History, Libraries, Museums, Writing
Tagged Aphra Behn, Britain, Canterbury, Rare Books
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James Baldwin: Mountain to Fire
James Baldwin // “The world changes according to the way people see it, and if you alter, even by a millimeter, the way people look at reality, then you can change it.” To celebrate what would have been the 100th … Continue reading
Posted in Books, History, Libraries, USA, Writing
Tagged African American Literature, American Authors, James Baldwin
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Weeding out some stuff
“My relationship with cats has saved me from a deadly and pervasive ignorance. I prefer cats to people, for the most part. Most people aren’t cute at all, and if they are cute they very rapidly outgrow it.” William S. … Continue reading
Posted in Animation, Books, Libraries, USA, Writing
Tagged Franz Kafka, Hermann Hesse, Pulp Fiction, William S. Burroughs
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Reading Room
The British Museum in London has reopened its famous circular Reading Room for visitors with free tours .The historic Reading Room was built between 1854 and 1857 to a design by Sydney Smirke using cast iron, concrete, and glass. Much of … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Europe, History, Libraries, Museums, Tourism
Tagged Arthur Conan Doyle, Bram Stoker, British Library, British Museum, London
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“Ricordare è rivivere” (“to remember is to relive”)
Sigmund Freud returned again and again to the problem of memory as he formulated his theories of psychoanalysis during the 1890s. “What is essentially new about my theory,” Freud wrote in this letter to fellow physician and confidante Wilhelm Fliess, … Continue reading
Anthropodermic bibliopegy is not cool
Harvard University Library has reported that it has removed a volume bound in human skin from its collection. A copy of the 19th-century book Des Destinées de l’Ame — or Destinies of the Soul, a meditation on life after death … Continue reading
Lucifer’s Big Book
The Codex Gigas (or Devil’s Bible) is a large 13th-century manuscript from Bohemia, one of the historical Czech lands. Renowned for its size and its striking full-page rendition of the devil (found on page 577), it contains a number of … Continue reading
Ban This Book book actually banned
Who could have imagined that an award winning children’s book titled Ban This Book would actually be banned and in the state of Florida of all places. The Indian River County School Board voted to remove “Ban This Book” by Alan Gratz from … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Freedom of Speech, Libraries, USA, Writing
Tagged book bans, censorship, Florida
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Have a summer reading adventure
To celebrate 75 years of the National Book Awards, the National Book Foundation has launched the Summer Reading Adventure for adults 18 and older “to lean into the nostalgic, prize-filled fun of summer reading.” Reading activities include visiting a local bookstore … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Bookstore Tourism, ebooks, Libraries, USA
Tagged Reading, summer reads
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Collecting Memories
I’m hoping to get to see the manuscript treasures including Abraham Lincoln’s handwritten draft of the Gettysburg Address, a map from the Lewis and Clark Expedition, and lyrics from The Sound of Music are among more than 120 items in the new Library … Continue reading
Posted in Art, Books, History, Libraries, Maps, Museums, Tourism, USA
Tagged Abraham Lincoln, Lewis and Clark, Library of Congress, Washington D.C
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