Books Damaged in Flood at Scottish Library
I thought this was a timely post since last night our roof started leaking in about ten places. Fortunately, I have nowhere near the collection the National Library of Scotland has.
A sprinkler failed last Thursday evening at the library, damaging around 1,000 books and keeping staff members working all night to save the drenched volumes. This is the second flood to plague the library in the last 18 months.
Concerned patrons are beginning to wonder about the dependability of the sprinkler system and the “cosmetic approach” taken to maintain the old building. “I have nothing but admiration for the library staff. The Board of Trustees, however, have undertaken some highly questionable renovations in recent years,” said Edinburgh historian Owen Dudley Edwards.
The National Library of Scotland houses precious works by Lord Byron, Charles Dickens, Emily Brontë, and Jane Austen, plus an original manuscript of Darwin’s The Origin of Species. Complaint of the Black Knight, published in 1508 and the first printed book in Scotland, and the last letter written by Mary Queen of Scots are also part of the library collection. Thankfully, none of these were harmed in Thursday’s flood.
According to the library, damage was slight. Some books needed to be dried out using fans and dehumidifiers and will require further reconstructive work. A spokesman for the library said the accident will receive a thorough investigation.
Man, I can so relate. Right now, I have a book in the oven drying out. Thank God it’s just my copy of Vanna Speaks and not Mary Queen of Scots’s last letter.
Story Source Times Online via Rare Book News | Image Source Edinburgh Architecture
Blago Scores Book Deal
OK, pardone mi Francais por minuto, but what in the fuckity-fuck-fuck-fuck is happening in the publishing industry? First we hear Dubya is shopping for a book deal. Then we get word Laura “Pickles” Bush has nabbed one herself. Ditto Karl Rove. Just recently we learned Condi had landed herself a three-book contract. And now Rod Blagojevich (see him vogue-ing above left), the dethroned, scary-haired Illinois governor, has apparently landed a six-figure deal; his first book will be published by Phoenix Books in October.
WTF???!!!??? Don’t writers actually write books anymore? Look, I’m all for reading books on politics, but c’mon! Books on and by interesting political figures are right up my alley. But what the hell is Condi going to write three books about? What could Blago possibly have to say that he hasn’t already vomited up all over the airwaves?
Well, according to his publicist, his book will be about “the dark side of politics”. Heh. Makes sense.
The book is also expected to cover how Balgojevich named President Obama’s successor in the Illinois Senate, which Blago still says he never tried to sell to the highest bidder. In fact, he’s planning on sharing with us exactly what went down, to the point that it “will at times be embarrassing to himself as well as to others.”
Please. Like anything could be more embarassing than that hairdo.
Story Source Yahoo | Image Source College Media Network
Hooray for Cheap(er) Books
A1Books.com, one of the largest online book retailers, is now offering a bonus point program for loyal customers. The A1 Points Program rewards returning buyers by assigning points to their account, based upon the dollar amount spent (e.g. $10.55 equals 10.55 points). When customers come back to A1 to make another purchase, they have the option of applying their points to their order total. Points can be redeemed for 1% of the total price.
The program automatically keeps track of customers’ points and is free to join.
A1Books CEO Shinu Gupta plans to add further incentives to the program in the near future, like chances to earn double and triple points.
A1Books.com also sells DVDs, games, and electronics.
Cheap books? I’m there! Maybe now I can afford my copy of La Dotta Mano.




