"When we go back, we shall be able to identify a face, a personality, with their signatures; signatures that are often known of colleagues with whom we have often done business and already esteem but whom we shall now know in a new light."(André Poursin)
The ABA welcomed the ILAB booksellers to their Third International Conference in London in 1949 where they enjoyed a week full of discussions about the future of the League and full of delightful events including dinners and dance and the entrance of a strange looking person who welcomed Ernest Maggs as "Tovarisch". ILAB Congresses are the real thing, now and 60 years ago.
Danger! Does the "Book Dust Disease" Threaten the Rare Book Trade?
Dust on the shelves. Collectors consider it romantic, dealers live with it. As early as 1900 Eduard Fischer von Röslerstamm published an empirical analysis on the life expentancy of antiquarian booksellers, librarians and book collectors. His question was: Did they suffer from dust in the lungs?
The Polar Regions: Chilling Tales From the Icy Wastes
They have always had a huge attraction on mankind and its explorers. What lay in or beyond those icy wastes? An open sea? The way to Asia? Gold? Hell? Paradise? Many set out to find out, never to return. Most of the gruesome tragedies in the icy reaches will never be known or told, but several made it into print from the 16th to the 20th century. Frank Werner's top ten of chilling tales from the polar regions.
Asia: Playing Cards in Japan
For many people mention of Japanese woodblock prints brings to mind the beautiful single sheet colour examples by artists such as Hokusai and Hiroshige. Immense pleasure can also be gained from discovering the plethora of games, decorative papers, books, calendars, news-sheets, maps, and advertising that was published using woodblock printing methods during the Edo and Meiji periods. A collecting tip by Sally Burdon.
Africa: Early Adventures on an Unknown Continent
Printing with movable type was being introduced in the same century as European travellers were setting out to explore Africa and the New World. The three areas first discovered and hence written about in sub-Saharan Africa were west Africa, an area extending for some considerable area around the mouth of the Congo river, and the Land of Prester John: Abyssinia or Ethiopia. How the Europeans learned about Africa: Michael Graves-Johnston describes the most beautiful early printed travel accounts.