Showing posts with label Book Fairs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book Fairs. Show all posts

Thursday, January 24, 2019

Booktryst At Rare Books - LA

by Stephen J. Gertz


Booktryst makes its book fair debut at Rare Books Los Angeles, at the Pasadena Convention Center February 1-2, 2019.

With many scarcities not seen in decades if not longer, and a gathering of books and prints that will have your eyes popping out of their sockets, our Booth 704 will definitely arouse your interest and may be the most provocative of the weekend.

This is also Rare Books - LA's debut and I'm pleased to be a part of it, all the more so on my home turf and among friends in the Southern California trade and local collectors. Kudos to Brad and Jen Johnson for organizing the event

Please stop by and say hello. That is, of course, if you're not left speechless by what Booktryst has in store for you. I'll publish a partial preview tomorrow.
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Monday, April 9, 2012

"The Best Book Fair In The World" Returns To New York

By Stephen J. Gertz


The New York Antiquarian Book Fair, now in its 52d year, returns to the Park Avenue Armory April 12-15, 2012.

Sponsored by the Antiquarian Booksellers’ Association of America (ABAA) and the International League of Antiquarian Booksellers (ILAB), the 52nd Annual New York Antiquarian Book Fair promises to be its best to date.

Declared by the late Andy Rooney of CBS’ 60 Minutes as the “Best Book Fair in the World,” over 200 expert dealers from around the globe will fill the historic Park Avenue Armory with rare books, manuscripts, autographs, maps, and finely bound volumes. Ranging from history, law, philosophy, to children’s books, fashion, art, and more, great books will be found within all price ranges.

This year’s show features a record number of dealers. There’s sure to be something for everyone.

For $35, early birds can enjoy a special preview on Thursday, April 12 from 5pm – 9pm.

Regular hours will be Friday April 13 from noon to 8pm, Saturday, the 14th, from noon to 7pm, and Sunday, April 15th, from noon to 5pm. Admission is $20 daily, $30 for a two-day pass, or $45 for a run-of-show pass. Special rates for students, groups and library associations are available.

Discovery Day, A favorite tradition, provides Fair attendants an opportunity to bring their own rare books, manuscripts, maps, etc. (up to 5 items) for advice and free appraisals from Exhibitors on Sunday, April 15, from noon – 3pm.

WHEN: April 13 – 15, 2012.

WHERE: Park Avenue Armory at 67th Street, NYC.

HOURS: Friday from noon to 8pm, Saturday from noon to 7pm, and Sunday from noon to 5pm. 

ADMISSION: $20 daily, $30 for a two-day pass, or $45 for a run-of-show pass. Special rates for students, groups and library associations are available.

The Park Avenue Armory is wheelchair accessible; please call 212.777.5218 to make arrangements.

FOR MORE INFORMATION: emily@sanfordsmith.com or press@sanfordsmith.com.


Follow the New York Antiquarian Book Fair on Facebook, and Twitter.
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Of related interest: The First American Antiquarian Book Fair, about the debut of the New York Antiquarian Book Fair in 1960.
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Monday, March 26, 2012

The 2000 Year Old Man Talks Rare Books

by Stephen J. Gertz


At the recent 45th California  International Antiquarian Book Fair, the 2000 Year Old Man, the oldest rare book dealer in the history of the world, exhibited for the first time.

Booktryst had an opportunity to talk to him in the exhibitor hospitality suite.


SJG: Excuse me, Sir, is it true that you're the oldest living rare book dealer in the world?

2000 Year Old Man: Yes, I've been selling rare books since twelve.

SJG: Twelve years old?

2000 YOM: No. 12. The year.

SJG: You started early.

2000 YOM: Six months.

SJG: The year?

2000 YOM: No, age. There was no such thing as childhood when I was a kid. You were born, you were weaned, you went to work. I was an apprentice 2000 years before I went out on my own, in 12. There's a lot to learn.

SJG: So, you're actually 4000 years old?

2000 YOM: Yes, but it creeps-out the chicks so I lie. 2000 years old, they can live with.


SJG: What rare book shop did you serve your apprenticeship in?

2000 YOM: The rare book shop where I served my apprenticeship was Between the Scrolls. It was that or The Scroll Shop LLC, Lux Scrollis, Scroll Hunter's Holiday, or Scrolls R Us. I went with Between the Scrolls.

SJG: Why?

2000 YOM: Lots of action. There was always something going on.

SJG: Tell us about a typical day at Between the Scrolls..

2000 YOM: Oy, you wouldn't believe. Caesar and Cleopatra. Anthony and Cleopatra. Always between the scrolls, making out. No shame. No shame at all.

SJG: Who was the worst?


2000 YOM: Lipschitz and Cleopatra.

SJG: Lipschitz?

2000 YOM: Maximus Gaius Cornelius Murray Lipschitz. The general who became a slave! The slave who became a gladiator! The gladiator who became a dentist with a lucrative, high-end practice catering to the  patrician class! A great book collector, by the way.

SJG: What did he collect?

2000 YOM: Hammurabi first editions. Very heavy reading.

SJG: Deep intellectual content?


2000 YOM: No, two tons. They wrote on rocks in those days. You could get a hernia just turning a page. I once read Tolst-Oy bin Riten's 1782 B.C. classic, War and War, in it's first edition, on polished granite in a fine cuneiform hand, in a contemporary full coral and cobalt Travertine marble binding. A work of art. But heavy. Oy! I tore my rotator cuffs to shreds trying to flip to the index.

SJG: How were they shelved?

2000 YOM: Shelved? There were no shelves. You bought a book, it was delivered by cart, and slaves shlepped it into a pile in a corner of  your living room, next to the Barcolounger.


SJG: Who were your favorite authors in those days?

2000 YOM: Well, you know, there wasn't much to read way back then.

SJG: No?

2000 YOM: Nah. You had grainary reports, accounting ledgers,  royal victory propaganda...Nothing to read at the beach. Feh!

SJG: So, what did you read?

2000 YOM: Trash. I loved reading trash.

SJG: Why did you love reading trash?

2000 YOM: There was no shortage of it. Coffee cups, MacDonald's wrappers, bills, coupons, collection notices, empty cereal boxes, you name it. Where's there's people, there's trash.


2000 YOM: I draw the line at garbage, though. I won't read garbage. Yeccchhh!

SJG: What about later? Who did you read later?

2000 YOM: Oh, there was Pliny -

SJG: - The Younger or Elder?

2000 YOM: Younger, Elder, in between. Plenty o' Pliny. Good and Pliny. Couldn't get enough Pliny.


SJG: Did  you read Agricola?

2000 YOM: Read Agricola? I drank Agricola! It's the perfect beverage. The essence of the cola nut combined with notes of Spring crops. Very refreshing.

SJG: Carbonated?

2000 YOM: Of course, naturally. They threw a little activated carbon in there to purify it. You could die from the water back then.

SJG: Let's get back to your book shop.

2000 YOM: You have a time machine?

SJG: What was the oldest, rarest book you ever bought?


2000 YOM: The oldest, rarest book I ever bought was The Book of Moses.

SJG: First edition?

2000 YOM: Better. Original manuscript with corrections in his own hand.

SJG: I thought there were five books of Moses.

2000 YOM: There were but Moe only wrote the first one.

SJG: Really?


2000 YOM: Sure. He started the second, got a bad case of writer's cramp and that was that. You try writing with a stick. If he had a nice Bic pen, another story altogether but there you go.

SJG: Who wrote the others?

2000 YOM: Well, aside from Moe there was Larry, Curly, Shemp, and Joe.

SJG: The Stooges?

2000 YOM: Stooges of the Lord, to you. Don't be a wisenheimer.

SJG: What did it sell for?

2000 YOM: I haven't offered it until now. I've kept it in a vault since I bought it.


SJG: When did you buy it?

2000 YOM: I bought it in 452. A rich collector needed a little quick cash to get out of Rome before Attila the Hun showed up.

SJG: How much are you asking?

2000 YOM: 100 million dollars.

SJG: That's a lot of money.

2000 YOM: But free shipping and passes to Disneyland included!

SJG: What, if you don't mind my asking, did you pay for it back then?

2000 YOM: Back then I paid 500,000 shekels.

SJG: What's that in today's dollars?

2000 YOM: $17.50.

SJG: My goodness, that's not very much money for the original manuscript to the first book of the greatest work ever written, one that's influenced millions and millions and millions of people since it first came out.


2000 YOM: I could of done better. If I'd known it was going to be such a great big huge success I could have gotten it direct from Moe for practically nothing.  It was originally rejected by  all the publishers;  too many begats, not enough sex and violence. He never thought it would catch on. I could have gotten his desk, too. A robe. Who knew? I could kick myself.

By the way, who do you have to shtup to get a piece o' rugelach around here? They got pretzels up the keister, nuts, candy, some kind of mystery canapé but not a single prune rugelach.

SJG: Did you have any celebrity clients?

2000 YOM: Oh, yes, yes, yes, indeed, of course, I had many, many celebrity clients.

SJG: Who was your most interesting celebrity client?

2000 YOM: My most interesting celebrity client was King Solomon.

SJG: The King Solomon?

2000 YOM: There was another one? First time he came in, he was with a real geszunta moid, a very healthy maiden, if you know what I mean. Zaftig. Such a punim. He says, "I'm King Solomon." I couldn't believe it.

My wife says, "Right, and I'm the Queen of Sheba."

And the gezunta moid says to her, "No, I am. Really."


SJG: Wow, that must have really been  something.

2000 YOM: Oh, boy! You don't know the half of it. They both wanted the same book.

SJG: What book was that?

2000 YOM: When Bad Hittites Happen To Good Hebrews. A cautionary tale with a message.

SJG: What happened?

2000 YOM: They were fighting over it. Finally, I took an axe, chopped the book in two, and gave them each half.

"You should be so wise," Sheba said to Sol.


SJG: Speaking of wisdom, why, after all these years, are you only now exhibiting at an antiquarian book fair"

2000 YOM: I saw the sign outside, Antiquarian Book Fair. I figured,  I  sell books; who's more antiquarian than me? I'm the most antiquarian bookseller you'll ever meet.

SJG: You certainly are, Sir. 4000 years old.

2000 YOM: Shhhh! Keep it down. I got my eye on that chick over there. She reminds me of one of my ex-girlfriends.

SJG: Who was that?

2000 YOM: The Empress Messalina. I love it when women wear glasses.

SJG: Why is that?

2000 YOM: When they take them off, it sends me.

SJG: Let's not go there.

2000 YOM: Why not? I'm still vital. I'm a very vital guy.

SJG: You're certainly an inspiration, Sir. Do you have any advice for book collectors?

2000 YOM: Yes! My advice to book collectors is to not buy rare books on rocks.

SJG: Do you have something against geology?


2000 YOM: I love geology! Geology's wonderful. It's my favorite of all the ologies. But rare rock books? You could give yourself a rupture. Who needs it? Feh!
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Apologies, respect and admiration to Carl Reiner and Mel Brooks, who began as writers and whose early 1960s improv routine for friends at parties developed into a textbook on comedy. Individually and as a team they are American Treasures.

Here's a classic bit:


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Tuesday, March 6, 2012

The First American Antiquarian Book Fair

by Stephen J. Gertz


The first American antiquarian book fair was held in 1960, eleven years after the founding of the Antiquarian Booksellers Association of America (ABAA) in 1949.

It took place at Steinway Hall, in an unair-conditioned showroom space on the 3d floor measuring 1,000 square feet.

Twenty-two antiquarian book dealers exhibited in twenty booths. The booth fee was $250.

Tickets for the public were free.

Hours were 5PM - 10PM opening day; remaining days 10AM - 10PM. The fair ran for six days, April 4-9 1960. That's five twelve hour days following a five hour evening.

A small keepsake-souvenir directory of dealers and their specialties was printed for distribution during the Fair. ABAA ashtrays were also available as souvenir gifts.

The cost for mounting Book Fair #1 was $4,750. Some dealers questioned the need for so high an expenditure.

"Its modest scale was in inverse proportion to its success" Madeleine B. Stern reported in The Professional Rare Bookman (No. 4 1982, pp. 3-11; reprinted from AB Bookman's Weekly, May 4, 1981). "Fair No. 1 was as memorable as it was influential."

Steinway Hall, 109 W. 57th St., Manhattan NYC.

Madeleine B. Stern (1912-2007) was, with her partner,  Leona Rostenberg (1908-2005),  a legendary antiquarian bookseller and respected scholar. Her discovery of Louisa May Alcott's early, pre-Little Women, pseudonymously written stories and novels "forever altered Alcott scholarship" (New York Times obit). At the time of her report she was a past-President of the ABAA and current ILAB representative. Madeleine B. Stern was Chair of the Book Fair committee for this, the first antiquarian book fair held in the United States and what would evolve into the New York International Antiquarian Book Fair, now entering its fifty-second year and occurring April 12-15, 2012.

Its genesis was right out of a Mickey Rooney-Judy Garland movie.

"At a MAC [Mid-Atlantic Chapter] meeting," Stern recalled, "the suggestion was first proposed: 'Why don't we have a book fair?'"

The success of English antiquarian book fairs was the spur. A few ABAA members, impressed by what the British had accomplished, were confident that ABAA colleagues could pull it off: no event organizer was employed. "Every detail thus decided was implemented by Committee members," to the extent that one Committee member, Ann Klein, hired her carpenter to build display cases after a failed expedition to the Bowery to inspect what vendors had to offer. (For 20 they paid the carpenter $400). Every necessity was considered and implemented, and the decisions made then established the pattern for every Book Fair that has followed.

Total sales were $40,000 - $50,000. "Today we add a zero or two," Ms. Stern wrote in 1982.

"No one knew whether it would attract any visitors," she continued. "Very few believed that it would...[Shortly before opening] Leona decided to duck out to see if anyone had come. She returned - her expression a mixture of radiance and disbelief. 'They're standing in line to get in! There are crowds outside!!' Despite rain and storm, the jams of people on opening night filled us with incredulity and exuberance. Publicity had paid off."

AB (American Bookman's Weekly, May 2, 1960) reported, "No count was kept of persons attending, with estimates running from 3,000 - 5,000 for the week. On opening night the Fair was so jammed that there was a waiting line in the adjoining cloak-room."

Steinway Hall Recital Room.

 "As a result of this long week of togetherness," Stern wrote, "we developed a genuine fondness for one another and missed our colleagues sorely after the week was over."

Everyone was sore after five twelve hour days. "We all realized the folly of that time schedule which was promptly humanized the following year," Stern dryly noted.

"Many dealers remarked that they had a fine time, enjoyed themselves hugely, better than a Broadway show, got to know one another during the week, swapped stories - and customers, and had pleasure and profit, too!" the AB article said.

Sol. M. Malkin, the legendary bookman's bookman, summed it up in AB. "The Fair was the best single incitement to book collecting and book-buying. Every major city should examine its potential for a similar Antiquarian Book Fair." Every major, and a few minor, cities in the United States did so, and now rare and antiquarian book fairs, whether ABAA-sanctioned or independent, are a staple of American metropolitan culture.

Along with the crowds, one celebrity attendant, pianist Artur Rubinstein, was very pleased. He bought two musical manuscripts.

But not everyone was thrilled with the Book Fair.

"A genuine prima donna swooped majestically into her concert hall," Madeleine Stern recalled,  "saw the alien purpose to which it had been rededicated, and exclaimed:

"'What have they done to Steinway Hall? -

"'Books!!'"
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The participants in the First Antiquarian Book Fair in America were:

• J.N. Bartfield
• Robert K. Black
• Caravan Book Service
• Emily Driscoll
• Burt Franklin
• Goodspeed's Book Shop, Inc.
• K. Gregory
• House of Books, Ltd
• House of El Dieff, Inc. [Lew D. Feldman]
• Maurice Inman, Inc.
• Howard S. Mott
• Alfred W. Paine
• Bernard Rosenthal, Inc.
• Leona Rostenberg - Rare Books
• Walter Schatzki
• Schulte's Book Store, Inc.
• The Scribner's Bookstore
• Seven Gables Bookshop
• Stechert-Hafner, Inc.
• Geoffrey Steele
• Richard S. Wormser
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Monday, February 13, 2012

Rudimentum Novitiorum Sells For $1,150,000 At California International Antiquarian Book Fair

by Stephen J. Gertz

Map of the Holy Land, from Rudimentum Novitiorum, 1475.

A scarce, contemporaneously hand-colored copy of Rudimentum Novitiorum, the first printed history of the world, published in 1475, and the first printed book to feature maps, sold for $1,150,000 at the 45th California International Antiquarian Book Fair this past weekend in Pasadena, CA, as did "The World's Worst Copy of Gatsby," a first edition, first printing train wreck  with a significant remnant of the $175,000 dust jacket pasted within, for $500. Some thought it was worth twice that, a true silk purse stitched from a sow's ear.

That those sales occurred within the Fair's opening hours was a harbinger of good things to come. While walking recon on Friday night I observed invoices being written and written often, eye music that continued throughout the weekend and calmed this anxious heart. Following the economy, the last few years have been rough on the rare book trade. "It is not the end. Nor is it the beginning of the end. But it is the end of the beginning." A new day is dawning. It's Morning in Booktown. Suddenly, it's Spring. Optimism cliches are beginning to flower.

But let's not get carried away. The sunny psychosis can cloud judgment. There were dealers who did not do as well as hoped.  Yet every single bookseller had a great time.  And, to be sure, no hope no life. We each need to be a little psychotic to get through it.

Attendance for this California International Antiquarian Book Fair was the best since 2004*. Of particular note was the large number of young people seen walking the aisles. Those wondering through despairing whether a younger generation would become book collectors should take heart. They are, perhaps, in the embryonic stage of the passion, looking around, seeing what's what, but will, the book gods willing, grow into neonates and further develop as their interest matures and budget allows.

Each of the special programs - Library of Congress Director of Rare Books and Special Collections, Mark Dimunation, on Thomas Jefferson's book collection (the cornerstone of the LOC);  Personal Stories of Noted Collectors, a panel featuring academy-Award-winning producer, Tony Bill, Los Angeles Times film critic Kenneth Turan, renowned gemologist Mary Murphy, and moderated by L.A. Times columnist and Southern California TV/radio personality, Patt Morrison; the always popular Rare Books 101; and Discovery Day, where the old books from the attic are examined by a panel of experts to see if there's a reason for hope - was standing-room only.

Everyone was extremely pleased with the new venue. The Pasadena Convention Center - spacious and well-lit, with all the amenities dealers could hope for to make life easy for them - will remain, for the forseeable future, the California International Antiquarian Book Fair's home when in Southern California (it alternates annually with San Francisco).

As for book lovers and collectors - they were over the moon. And why not? The best rare books exhibited by the best rare booksellers in the world, the opportunity to see and hold historic volumes, the books that have given meaning to our lives, the old books with engaging and compelling back-stories that beg to be on your bookshelf, from the stunning beauty and often scathing satire of eighteenth and nineteenth century hand-colored engraved illustration albums through a pristine copy of J.D. Ballard's scarce Why I Want To Fuck Ronald Reagan, and everything in between and centuries before, the wonderful ones you didn't know about, all under one roof - it's a book lover's three-day weekend in Disneyland, an E-ticket ride.

If you love to read, and appreciate art, craft, and the test of time as a measure of what's true from what's false, have an aversion to the artificial, a preference for content in the form that has yet to be improved upon, from the sacred to the profane and in the big middle, rare books are truly the coolest collectible. And when the California International Antiquarian Book Fair is in town, the cool gets red hot.
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* For SoCal.
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The California International Antiquarian Book Fair is sponsored by the Antiquarian Booksellers Association of  America.

Visit the 45th California International Antiquarian Book Fair website.

Stop by the 45th California International Antiquarian Book Fair's Facebook and Twitter. pages. Fair updates continue.
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Monday, February 6, 2012

The 45th California International Antiquarian Book Fair Comes to Pasadena

by Stephen J. Gertz


200 members of the Antiquarian Booksellers’ Association of America (ABAA) and the International League of Antiquarian Booksellers (ILAB) from around the globe will exhibit their  wares at the largest rare and antiquarian book fair in the world this coming weekend, February 10-12, at the 45th California International Antiquarian Book Fair, held in the new Pasadena Convention Center in Pasadena, California.

The  fair provides book lovers and collectors with the opportunity to see, learn about and purchase the finest in rare and valuable books, manuscripts, autographs, graphics, prints, maps, photographs and more. There are books to satisfy almost every conceivable interest and within every budget.

It's Destination: Pasadena to enjoy the Book Fair and the city's many cultural attractions and great restaurants. And to discover books, prints and ephemera you weren't aware of, from all over the world, all under one roof. That's still the primary purpose of Book Fairs, which began in Franfkort, Germany in the sixteenth century. They continue to be critical to book lovers and collectors in the 21st century. The Internet is great if you know what you're looking for but does not provide the opportunity for book-hunting adventure, serendipitous encounters, and social interaction with booksellers and fellow collectors from around the globe. The California International Antiquarian Book Fair is action-central.

For those whose budget has vast breathing room, a copy of Lucas Brandis' Rudimentum Novitiorum (Handbook for Beginners), the first chronicle of the world, based upon medieval theology and the first work to contain printed maps, is being offered by Daniel Crouch Rare Books of London. Published in Lubeck in 1475 and now a great rarity in the marketplace, the asking price is $1,150,000. Want a leaf from the Gutenberg Bible? $85,000.

On the lower end of the scale, Vagabond Books is offering a post-production script for Stanley Kubrick's The Shining, signed by Kubrick, Stephen King, Jack Nicholson, and Shelley Duvall for $750. And there are many other desirable items for less.

“It’s impossible to walk through the aisles of the Book Fair without being wowed by the visual beauty and cultural significance of the volumes on display,” said Michael R. Thompson, Book Fair Chair of the Southern California Chapter of the ABAA, which organizes the event.  “First time visitors are amazed that they can browse, touch and even go home with items that they imagine could only be found in a museum or special collections library.”

The Fair's theme is A Love Affair With Books: Personal Stories of Noted Collectors, featuring a colorful, wide-ranging exhibit that examines the avid pursuits of rare book collectors past and present -- from legendary library builders such as Henry Huntington and William Andrews Clark to contemporary Southern California book lovers like actress Sarah Michelle Gellar and Academy Award-winning producer Tony Bill.

On Saturday, February 11 from 3PM - 4PM, a panel discussion will be held, A Love Affair with Books, featuring L.A. Times film critic Kenneth Turan, Tony Bill, respected gemologist Mary Murphy, and moderated by Los Angeles Times Columnist, author and TV/radio personality Patt Morrison.

Just prior to that, from 1:00 – 2:00 PM,  the Bibliographical Society of America sponsors Thomas Jefferson's Legacy:  Building the Rare Book Collections at the Library of Congress  a talk by Library of Congress Chief of the Rare Book and Special Collections Division Mark Dimunation.

On Sunday, February 12,  Book Collecting 101, a panel with leading booksellers Katy Carter, Brad Johnson and Carol Sandberg, explores the basics of starting, building and protecting your collection. Held from 11:30 AM - 12:30 PM, Q&A follows.

Always a favorite, Discovery Day, on Sunday 1:30- 3:00 PM, warmly invites Book Fair attendees to present up to three items to experts for free examination and appraisal.

Also on Sunday, February 12, from 12:15 - 1:15 p.m. Do You Need An Appraisal?, a panel with experts Samuel Hessel and Sheryl Jaeger, will discuss whether or not your collection should be appraised for sale, estate, or tax purposes.

The California International Antiquarian Book Fair is one of the world's great book events. If you love books be good to yourself and attend.

See you there.

WHEN: Friday, February 10 from 3 p.m. to 8 p.m.; Saturday, February 11 from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. and Sunday, February 12 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

WHERE: Pasadena Convention Center, 300 East Green Street, Pasadena, CA.

ADMISSION: Friday tickets are $25 and provide three-day admission; proceeds benefit the Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens. Tickets Saturday or Sunday tickets are $15 and include return entry throughout the remainder of the Book Fair.  All tickets also include admission to the Huntington.

FOR MORE INFORMATION: visit labookfair.com or call 800-454-6401. Connect with the Book Fair through its pages on Twitter and  Facebook.
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Full disclosure: I am the current Chairman of the Southern California Chapter of the Antiquarian Booksellers Association of America, the Book Fair's host.
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Thursday, January 12, 2012

A Rare Book Dealer Collective

by Stephen J. Gertz

The illustration is from a poster by Albert Sterner (1863-1946)
advertising a lending library for modern literature in 1903 .

From each according to their inventory, to each according to their needs, The Collective, a group of seven ABAA members, has just issued its first catalog. While it is not unusual for two dealers to team-up, it is extraordinary for a group to do so.

The Gang of Seven - The Book Shop LLC, Lux Mentis, Tavistock Books, Book Hunter's Holiday, Anthology Books, Ken Sanders Rare Books, and B&B Rare Books - is a  cabal recently organized, I believe, during secret meetings at the home of Brad and Jen Johnson, proprietors of The Book Shop LLC. The Johnsons run a flophouse for rare booksellers of their acquaintance visiting Southern California, and I imagine that the plan for The Collective was hatched during a meeting of lively mood and ardent spirits. As Ian Kahn of Lux Mentis is an evangelical gourmand, there is no doubt that delicacies were served and savored.


Created especially for the San Francisco Book Fair and the 45th California International Antiquarian Book Fair in Pasadena, CA, there are a few delicacies from all concerned served up in this catalog for you to consider.

Lest there be any doubt, The Collective is a commune of hard-core capitalists. This is the rare book business.

I'm featuring this catalog today simply because it provides an excellent solution to the ever-spiraling cost of print catalogs, and is a sterling example of how our trade, despite being highly competitive, is absolutely dependent upon the cooperation and trust of its members.
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A print or PDF copy of The Collective's catalog may be had by contacting Brad Johnson at The Book Shop LLC.
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Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Free Tickets to 2011 California International Antiquarian Book Fair From Booktryst

by Stephen J. Gertz



Booktryst has acquired twenty-three (23) courtesy passes to the 44th California International Antiquarian Book Fair in San Francisco, February 11-13, 2011 at the Concourse Exhibition Center. Readers who wish to attend the Fair and want a courtesy pass should contact me as soon as possible.  Passes will be awarded on a first-come, first-served basis, and your request must be received by 8PM Wednesday, February 9th, 2011. If your request is received in time confirmation will be sent to you. Your passes to be left at the Will-Call desk at the entrance.

The theme for this year's Fair  is Music. In addition to book-related lectures and seminars,  a stunning special exhibit of rare musical books and manuscripts from the Jean Gray Hargrove Music Library of the University of California at Berkeley will be exhibited. All exhibiting booksellers have been encouraged to showcase their collections related to music.

Over 200 members of the Antiquarian Booksellers Association of America (ABAA)and the International League of Antiquarian Booksellers (ILAB) - the most respected rare booksellers in the world - will offer books on the history of music; travel & exploration (including maps); early science and medicine; technology & manufacture; law and commerce; fine bindings; childrens books; Americana; history of California and the West; literature and the arts; and so much more.

Visitors will be able to browse and purchase items ranging from medieval illuminated manuscripts to 20th century modern literature, and everything in-between. The California International Antiquarian Book Fair routinely offers a cornucopia of books in all areas of interest. Chances are, if you can't find it here, it can't be found.

And if you seek to discover a book that you didn't know existed, book fairs (and this one in particular) remain, despite the Internet, the only way to stumble across buried treasure unearthed  and available.
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Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Two Gals, Two Guitars, & Rare Books

by Stephen J. Gertz


Above, a nightclub-lounge act, two ladies clearly aiming for the  Gina Lollobrigida look. The time: 1955-1958, the years that Fender produced its 3/4 scale Duo-Sonic electric guitar finished in Desert Sand with maple fretboard and gold anodized pickguard, the ax in the gals' hands.

Jeepers creepers, who are these ladies who appear to have been slipcast into their gowns, the contours of their guitars so lusciously conforming to the contours of their bodies, the embodiment of pure, fretted pulchritude?

We don't know. Though obviously a publicity shot the photo is completely without identification.

Yet in a reverie inspired by Gina Lollobrigida in any movie 1955-1961, I imagine them as Belle and Bonita, The Book Sisters, strumming and singing the praises of rare books, the lyrics telling their tale in a stirring medley that begins deep in the Mississippi Delta and migrates to Tin Pan Alley and The Great White Way:

Woke up this morning,
Looked 'round for my shoes,
You know I had them mean ol' rare book blues.
Woke up this morning,
Looked 'round for my shoes.
Boy, you know I had them mean ol' rare book blues.

People tell me
Rare book blues ain't bad.
Ooh, it's the worst ol' feeling
I ever had.
People tell me rare book blues ain't bad.
Boy, it's the worst ol' feeling
Ooh, chile', I ever had.

But...

They'll be swell, they'll be great,
All ancient rare books, color-plate.
Startin' here, startin' now,
Baby, everything's coming up rare books!

Stop the press! Here's the news!
You've got nothing to do but peruse.
Baby, everything's coming up rare books!

To be winning buy that book while a chance.
Head is spinning,
In-san-i-ty's just beginning!

Title page! Colophon!
From the first leaf to last it's a hon!
I can read. I can see.
Has no flaws: Whoopteedee!
To snag that book would be an awesome coup!
Baby, everything's coming up rare books for me and for you!

Yet...

How much is that rare book in the window?
The one that says First Audubon.
How much is that rare book in the window?
I hope it won't cost us a ton.

We may pool our dough for this rare book
And forget our expenses, like rent.
This book looks so forlorn and lonesome.
We must take it home, heaven-sent.

Yikes, we just had a bold revelation.
The money involved is too swank.
To mortgage the house is of no use;
We'd still have to rob a large bank.

Oh...

The book I love
Is in your eyes.
A book so rare, I prize.


The book I love...
Is bidding so much more than you

A crime to answer for?
Yet when the hammer fell,
Well, it knocked me to the floor.

I can hardly wait to hold it,
Feel my paws upon it.
How long I have waited,
Waited just to own it
And now that I have found it...

It's


S'wonderful! S'marvelous!
Rare books are made for me.
S'awful nice! S'paradise!
Rare books I love to see!

They've made our lives so glamorous,
Life used to be so sulfurous, scabrous.

S'wonderful! S'marvelous!
Rare books are made for,
Rare books are made for,
RARE BOOKS ARE MADE FOR US!

Yup, that's the world of rare books: Glamorous for all concerned, a universe of glitz and  glitter with all edges gilt. Rare booksellers dressed in gowns and tuxedos (though generally not at  once), posh collectors wet with money sipping dry martinis to prevent accidental damp-stains to their books, and rare book librarians constantly rubbing shoulders with The 400 in the course of their daily lives. 

Ain't rare books grand?
__________

N.B.: Isn't it about time that rare booksellers hire trade show models to pitch their wares at Book Fairs? If still alive, well-preserved and active, I suspect The Book Sisters can be booked for the occasion. Or, Vanna White, should her current job end its run.
__________

Apologies to Robert Johnson, Stephen SondheimBob Merrill, Hal David, and Ira Gershwin.
__________

Image courtesy of Fretted Americana, Inc., with our thanks.
__________

Anyone with knowledge of the true identity of these gorgeous guitar proto-glam-rock gals are is encouraged to contact Booktryst.
__________
__________

Monday, September 13, 2010

Mars Needs Lawyers! (A Rare Book Adventure)



SCHACHNER, Nat. Space Lawyer. NY: Gnome Press,1953.
Cover by Ric Binkley.
“Nat Schachner’s first science fiction novel in book form is delightfully different reading for the thousands of readers who are becoming tired of the many involved and stereotyped stories of science fiction being published today. With deft skill and an irresistible humor he tells an intriguing story of the legal problems that are bound to crop up when man has finally opened up the new frontier out in space; but it is essentially the captivating tale of the space lawyer’s ingenious use of legalism in space to triumph over his opponent, Old Fireball” (Dust jacket blurb).
“Old Fireball” is space lawyer Kerry Dale’s former employer, Simeon Kenton, owner and president of Space Enterprises Unlimited whose “spaceships fastened their flags on the spongy marshes of Venus, on the desolate wastes of Mars, on rocky asteroids and mighty Jupiter itself.” It’s torts on Titan, litigation, and petitions on Pluto from Gnome Press. But it is one of the ironies of the space lawyer’s lot that in space no one can hear oral arguments, much less scream. The upside, however, is a minimum of solar windbags. The downside? Undue hardship on Uranus; the space lawyer’s job is a pain in the ass. The exclusionary rule, alas, prevents further disclosure of the plot, leaving me in forma pauperis as a book reviewer.

Forgive the following statement; there’s no way around it: Gnome was a small publisher. Established in 1948 by science fiction fans Martin Greenberg and David A. Kyle in New York, it survived a hand-to-mouth existence for fourteen years before ceasing publication in 1962. In its early years Gnome published books by authors who would become giants in the genre, ogres if you will, including Isaac Asimov’s Foundation trilogy (1951-53), Robert A. Heinlein's Sixth Column (1951),  Robert E. Howard’s Conan series (1950-55), L. Ron Hubbard's Typewriter in the Sky (1951), and Arthur C. Clark’s Sands of Mars (1952) and Against the Fall of the Night (1953). Gnome Press published screenwriter Leigh Brackett's The Starmen (1952), and books by L. Sprague de Camp, and Frederik Pohl.


Nathaniel Schachner (1895-1955) was an attorney and chemist who compounded Space Lawyer for Astounding Stories  in 1941. His first published work appeared in Wonder Stories Quarterly in 1930. In addition to writing under his own name he used the pseudonyms Chan Corbett and Walter Glamis. Schachner, when not lost in space, could be found writing non-fiction historical titles, including Aaron Burr, A Biography (1937); The Medieval Universities (1938); Alexander Hamilton (1946); The Price of Liberty (1948), an unofficial history of the American Jewish Committee; and Thomas Jefferson (1951), a biography in two volumes.

Space Lawyer is not a great book. It is barely good. Chromo-spectrograph analysis revealed little color and less humor frequencies than advertised. But it does address a major lacuna in science-fiction literature, the near complete absence of personnel beyond space warrior, space doctor, space systems analyst, spaceship captain, etc. etc. After finishing Space Lawyer you will slap your head with the of course! realization that, not only does outer space need lawyers, it needs accountants, dentists, plumbers, real estate agents, insurance salesmen, tailors, taxidermists, day-traders, and, perhaps the most egregious of omissions, space librarians and rare book dealers and collectors in space. Attention budding science-fiction writers: Opportunity knocks (but in space you can't hear it).

•••

The saga of finding Space Lawyer provides an object lesson in the value of book fairs. I’d have never discovered the book had I searched for it on the Net; you can't find what you don't know exists. But this past weekend, at the Santa Monica Book Fair, it delivered itself unto me via display in the booth of Vic Zoschak’s Tavistock Books. My eyes were arrested by the title, I picked the book up, marveled at its loopiness, chuckled, and put the book back on its easel.

I brought three people over to check it out and urged them to buy it. I walked that aisle another six or seven times, and stopped by the booth to look at the book another six or seven times before I realized I was hooked; this book was a keeper and I was powerless to resist its wacked-out charm. Zoschak, perhaps because he had an elephant-sized frog in his throat secondary to a horse-sized case of  hoarseness, did the sage thing, salesmanship-wise, and kept quiet to allow collector-neurosis  to run wild and consume me. The buy hawk on my left shoulder went toe to toe with the buy dove on my right shoulder and plucked him, but good. Space Lawyer was Circe and I succumbed to her song. I shoulda ducked the sucker punch.

Yet I do not regret my temporary insanity; every time I look at the book my brain breaks out into a smile that spans both cerebral hemispheres. It’s the satisfying reward of a book collector who found gold in an octavo-sized slab of lead, the alchemy of book collecting - high-brow, low-brow, no-brow - at its best.

A publisher's logo worth the price of the book: 
Reader-astronaut riding a book-rocket blasting into Outer Space.

__________
__________

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Book News Notes From The ABA -U.K.


The July issue of the newsletter of the Antiquarian Booksellers' Association, the trade organization of Great Britain, has just passed under our notice. The aroma is always pleasing, with notes of ripe tartness, irreverence, and, gulp, reverence when appropriate. A few news items:

Dubious Lemonade Out of Lemons

Two 19th century albums with blank leaves were recently presented to a U.K. dealer for appraisal. In poor condition, their value was reckoned at more than nothing but less than zero. Taken aback, their owner beseached, "But surely, the blank pages would be very useful to forgers?"

• Take Yer Anglo-Saxon Approach and Shove It!

The bookshops in the Latin Quarter of Paris are under siege. Unfortunately, not by customers. Rather, by escalating rents. Many have closed, others to follow. But this is Paris, so City Hall has gotten busy, buying up vacant properties to let them out at reasonable rents to small bookshops and publishing firms.

Mayor Bernard Delanoe declared that "these local shops are the economy, the employment, but also a way of life." The Anglo-Saxon solution - presumably to let 'em die a natural death by market strangulation - he declared to be "an insult to our soul, an insult to our identity and our economic interests."

Book lovers, Anglo-Saxon or otherwise, who, in reaction to France's criticisms of the U.S.'s Iraq invasion, eschewed all things French may now chew French fries once again in support of this action.

France: Love her or livre, the dame has class.

• Is The Premium Primo?

A lengthy piece is headlined: "Joint Buying At Auction."

Whether at Christies, Sotheby's, Bloomsbury, Swann, etc., we eagerly await the auction catalog for that sale. The buds, uh, bids, should be of interest . How high will they go?

The article is actually about secret auction rings. ("Yes! Here's my cereal box-top and 50¢ RUSH my secret auction decoder ring to me pronto so I can immediately enjoy the benefits of illegal collusion!").

• PBFA Cricketeers Triumph Over ABA

I've just spent twenty minutes reading a two page report on the recent cricket match between members of the PBFA and ABA.

It was a delight. Yet I have no idea what I just read. Amongst other things, somebody's "4 overs went for 34 runs." Don't tell his mother.

The final score: PBFA: 197 runs for 6, 28.5 overs. ABA: 196 runs for 3, 30 overs.

Heavy, ongoing runs, apparently, remain an issue.

Afterward, "a fine tea was consumed." Bought at auction? 

• Final Numbers on 2010 Olympia Antiquarian Book Fair

The averaged-out take for total number of exhibitors was £3,269,645 ($4,910,887).

The averaged-out take for total number of exhibitors at the California and New York Antiquarian Book Fairs? Consult the oracle at Delphi. The actual, definitive results of these fairs continue to be an  ongoing mystery (like cricket) but the simple yet extremely important collection of sales data so we know exactly what occurred - as opposed to cryptic, vague and non-committal verbal reporting - has yet to be implemented.

Really, this has become silly and something of an embarrassment. Wake up, this is a business. What could possibly be an issue when sales report forms would be - as in the U.K. - anonymous?

• A Book Is Not a Gadget

Nobel Prize laureate Nadine Gordimer presented a rousing speech at the opening of the Olympia Fair. An excerpt:

"There is no substitute for the book and it would be a great deprivation and danger if the book should disappear and be replaced by something with a battery...with a gadget you are always dependent on power. A book won't fall apart, you can read it on a mountain or in a bus queue. The printed word is irreplaceable and much threatened... reading the image is different from reading the text in a book."
__________

Header logo is a registered trademark of the ABA.
__________
__________




Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Underground Library Goes Experimental


A Bookworm In An Erlenmeyer Flask Is The Logo For The Chicago Underground Library's: Son Of Science Of Obscurity Festival.

Is your kitchen table buried under so many rough drafts it doubles as a recycling bin? Do you have one or two (or a dozen) short stories that have needed "a final polish before publication" for the last 15 years? Do you find "Science" in "Library Science" becoming an ever more distant and foggy memory? Would you like to launch your latest novel (or somebody else's) into the literary stratosphere? If you answered "Yes" to any of these questions, The Chicago Underground Library wants you.


The Windy City's most avant-garde library is hosting its Son of Science of Obscurity festival on July 10, 2010. This is a two-for-the-price-of-one experimental and far-flung literary celebration, part Dr. Science and part Medieval Times. And the deadline is looming to submit your textual alchemy to the judges.

Part One of the fiendish festival is a new-fashioned bibliophile's version of a Science Fair. Published or unpublished authors, as well as book artists, editors and publishers, are invited to submit their fiction or non-fiction works in any form, style, or genre to this talent-seeking showcase. The only catch--and there's always a catch--is that the work must be "repurposed science-fair style as a diorama, poster, or tri-fold board." If that last bit has left you scratching your head, the library has kindly provided some instructions and examples on their Facebook page:

Instructions:
  • Baking soda volcanoes are welcome, colorful graphs encouraged.
  • We have near-unlimited room for wall poster displays. Out-of-town writers are encouraged to submit posters, rather than moping at home all night on Facebook.
  • We'll need a short proposal for any table-top display, due by June 1st. A couple sentences are just fine.
Examples:
  • Plot the effects that prolonged exposure to an audio recording of your poetry has on cattle grazing patterns over a six month period.

  • Place a page of your manuscript in three different kinds of potting soil: plain (control), loved (variable 1), and unloved (variable 2).

  • Design the ideal underwater adventure suit for your novel's hero, whether or not your novel at any point occurs underwater.
Now if that isn't enough to get your inner Dr. Jekyll to dust off his chemistry set, never fear. Part Two, the throwback (or in this case throw-forward) to ye olde Middle Ages, may be just the literary lift you're looking for. The Chicago Underground Library is ready to (literally) launch your book.

Reconstruction Of A Medieval Counterweight Trebuchet At Chateau des Baux, France.
(Image Courtesy Of Wikipedia Commons.)

The Library will provide a "trebuchet," (which, as far as I can tell, is a $5.00 word for "catapult," and has nothing to do with the typeface of the same name), allowing proud authors to "celebrate by launching [their] work into space--or at least halfway down the block. Read a paragraph, then release!" And in the spirit of one of the favorite uses of the trebuchet in the Dark Ages, pitching plague-riddled corpses into the enemy's castle, writers can also take this opportunity to position their less-than-stellar efforts a little higher in the heavenly firmament. Finally, disappointed readers are invited to contribute any publication whose content simply makes them want to hurl.

Eric Bartholomew's Junk Drawer, Last Year's Winner For "Best Use Of Found Objects."
(Image Courtesy of Eric Bartholomew.)

The Chicago Underground Library does not discriminate, and takes a broad view of what constitutes a "literary work." If you wrote it, drew it, or otherwise manufactured it they'll consider it. One of last year's efforts, by zine author Eric Bartholomew, was an attempt to trace the origins of various species found in his junk drawer. And to add to the fair's festive atmosphere, "food and drink will be available for sale, and you should feel free to BYOB." And one more enticement for those writers desperately seeking muses: fair entrants can volunteer as guinea pigs for "scientific speed dating."

__________

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Books Banned At Tehran Book Fair

The 23rd Tehran International Book Fair 
which opened officially at the Imam Khomeini Mosalla 
on May 4th will run until May 15. 
The fair is hosting 980 foreign publishers 
from some 90 countries. But not all their books.

Iranian news websites are reporting that only books published since President Mahmud Ahmadinejad took power in 2005 have been allowed to be exhibited at the 2010 Tehran Book Fair, one of the most important cultural events in the Islamic Republic.

The Egypian Pavilion at the book fair was shut down due to danger: One of the books it offered, Arabian Gulf Encyclopedia, was condemned because the Persian Gulf turned into the Arabian Gulf. A person could get confused, and lost at sea. There's a huge gulf between Arabs and Iranians on the subject. Sort of like Americans and Mexicans over the proper name for that pesky body of water we share, the Gulf of the United States.




Most of the books deemed biblio non-grata were those written by the regime’s political opponents, including reformist clerics. The Iran Writers Association said in a statement (in Persian) that a number of prominent publishing houses have been banned from attending the fair and the licenses of several have been cancelled. According to the statement, several exhibiting publishers were also summoned by security officials secondary to offering books offensive to the regime.


Full story at Persian Letters. Photo courtesy Payvand Iran News.

__________

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Yoko Ono Collects Rare Books: The Booktryst Interview

by Stephen J. Gertz


I had lunch with Yoko Ono during the 2010 New York Antiquarian Book Fair.

That’s a sentence I figured I’d have about as much chance of writing as, “I accept the nomination of my party for President of the United States,” but with less probability of actual realization.

At the Fair on Saturday, I noticed Yoko Ono quietly walking the aisles. I thought, I must talk to her about rare books. And immediately I thought, Gertz, you do not have the nuts to approach her. And I was right.

Forty minutes later I was starving and, anxious to have my wallet gutted, walked over to the food concession. Buying a ham and cheese sandwich that, by its price, apparently had a 24k slice of Black Forest gold within, I looked around for someplace to sit down. Only one spot available: a chair at the table that Ms. Ono and her companion were sitting at, along with a stranger.
_______________________

"John Lennon was a lover 
and a collector of old books"
_______________________ 

I asked the stranger if the seat was taken and, answered in the negative, parked myself, kept my head down, and ate.

I’m 6’2”, 190 lbs., and not easily rattled. Yoko Ono, in contrast, is quite petite yet carries a huge rattle. She remains, at age 77, remarkably attractive; all in black with black-banded white fedora set at jaunty angle, she cut quite a dashing figure, with panache to spare. I was smitten. As soon as I could compose myself, I initiated a conversation.

Ms. Ono could not have been more gracious, and we chatted about rare books and the Book Fair for the next twenty minutes. I asked if I could pose a few questions for a formal interview via email, and she agreed.

•••

BP: How long have you been collecting rare books?

YO: My father was my influence. John Lennon was a lover and a collector of old books, as well. He was an avid reader, which is not known so much.

BP: What are your areas of collecting interest?

YO: Rare books, of course. I won't mention more than that, since I wish not to be flooded with letters from book dealers letting me know their findings. I like to find the books myself, by going to shops of old books and book fairs.
___________________________________ 

"I'm very happy that there are book fairs"
___________________________________ 

BP: Do you have any books in your collection that, from your perspective, really standout? Why? Your prize favorites?

YO: Again, I wish to not answer this question for the same reason as the above.

BP: Rumor is that you acquired some very interesting books while at the Fair. Can you tell Booktryst about them? What was it about the books that attracted you?

YO: Just something that attracted me. With very special books, I must fall in love with them to consider acquiring them. They could be very expensive, you know. I don't take that lightly.

BP: How often do you attend rare book fairs? Why? (This may seem an elementary question with self-evident answers but Why bother with book fairs has become an ongoing question within the trade as book fair attendance has dropped). I'm curious what your take is.

YO: I'm very happy that there are book fairs now. It's a nice way to experience the books of the whole world just by walking through the richly shining corridors of books. For the buyers of rare books, it is heaven! For the ones who just want to window shop, it is less intimidating than going into a shop of antique books and facing the owner of the shop, who is usually a bespectacled, intelligent looking expert of books.

BP: You began your career as a conceptual and performance artist, with roots in Fluxus, and with John Cage as a major influence. These art forms are, by nature, visual media. With the rise of visual media in the Sixites, text-based media, i.e. books, have been overshadowed and are consumed less - or so it seems. While print-on-page certainly has visual elements, do you see a conflict between visual and text-based media, the visual word vs the text word?

YO: Calligraphy is a very developed visual art in Asia. That is where I come from.
_____________________________
  
"in the beginning was the word, 
and the word was... with love."
_____________________________




Grapefruit. First edition, limited to 500 copies. 
Tokyo - Bellport, NY: Wunternaum Press, 1964. 

BP: In 1964, you produced Grapefruit, one of the seminal artists books to emerge from the second half of the 20th century, a volume that influential art critic, David Bourdon, considered "one of the monuments of conceptual art..." It was an "event score," providing instructions for a journey by the artist and reader, in the spirit of Cage's "chance music" - a score suggesting action-performance possibilities rather than a specific, concrete performance to be replicated. Do you have any plans to create other artist books?

YO: Well, I still keep writing new art scores whenever there is a need for it.

BP: The event scores in Grapefruit read as zen poetry. Was that intentional or a felicitous by-product?

YO: I think it is the influence I received from the form of Haiku. 

Ceiling Piece (Yes), 1966.
Text on paper, glass, metal frame, metal chain,
magnifying glass, painted ladder.
Installation at Japan Society Gallery, New York. Photo by
Sheldan C. Collins. Collection of the artist © YOKO ONO.

BP: With Ceiling Piece (Yes) (1966) you invited the viewer to become seeker, climb a ladder, and be rewarded at the top with a single word: Yes. (I believe it was an installation of Ceiling Piece that introduced your future husband, John Lennon, to your work, yes? - oops, there's that word!) With Instructions for Photographs words are, as in Grapefruit, used as tools to lead into a visual landscape in the imagination. Do words lead you to the visual or is it the other way around? I sense a large, informal (or is it?) religiosity in your work. In the beginning, it is still The Word?

YO: Well, let's say in the beginning was the word, and the word was... with love.

BP: You published Grapefruit through your own imprint, Wunternaum Press. Fine and small press books have a major place in the collecting world yet the general public has little awareness of their existence. Did you/do you have any other plans for Wunternaum? Can you comment upon artists books in general and, if so inclined, in particular?

YO: It's great that more and more artists are publishing their own books. In terms of artists' books, they become much more interesting than when they are edited by non-artists.  

BP: The Internet has raised many issues about artists' and writers' copyrights. One of the more provocative scores in Grapefruit appears to lay out your feelings about property rights of the creator:

"PAINTING TO EXIST ONLY WHEN IT'S COPIED OR PHOTOGRAPHED
Let people copy or photograph your paintings. Destroy the originals."

Forty-six years later, do you still feel the same way?

YO: I was exploring more possibilities of art as its form and stated as such. The birth of the Appropriation Art movement gives justice to my then statement. 
____________________

"I am very thankful for book fairs"
______________________________
 

BP: Simon and Schuster's 2000 reissue of Grapefruit contains, at the end, a collection of your writings. Do you have any plans to publish your writings in a separate edition?

YO: I did give birth to a book called ACORNS, which was only printed and performed by people as a 100 day event on internet.

BP: What is the future of books? Do book fairs still matter?

YO: Again, I am very thankful for book fairs. For a shy person like me, it does give a space to stroll around and window shop the various book shops in one space, in one afternoon.

I think there will be many people who will develop the taste and love for going to such an event. It is exciting in a way you probably don't expect when you just hear the word "Book Fair." Well, to me it is just as exciting as sitting in the dark of the theatre and watch a horror film!  This experience is not horror. But it's just as exciting!

yoko ono April 2010 nyc.
____________________

There are no copies of the first (limited) edition of Grapefruit currently being offered in the marketplace. ABPC reports no copies at auction within the last thirty-five years. OCLC/KVK report only four copies in institutional holdings worldwide: At MOMA, U.C. - San Diego, Northwestern University, and the Library of Congress. What this tells us that all remaining copies are being closely held by private collectors. The book is exceedingly scarce in the marketplace.
 __________

Of Related Interest:

Paul McCartney's Handwritten Lyrics To "Lovely Rita" Offered At $175,000.

Extraordinary John Lennon Letter To Eric Clapton: Join My New Band!
__________
__________
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