Month: August 2009

Banned Books Week Coming Up!

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Banned Books Week is celebrated during the last week of September by booksellers, librarians, authors, readers, students and other friends of free expression.

Banned Books Week was started in 1982 by the American Library Association, the American Booksellers Association, the Association of American Publishers and the National Association of College Stores to raise awareness of censorship problems in the United States and abroad. For the past 25 years, it has remained the only national celebration of the freedom to read.

Book censorship of all kinds – even book-burning – continues today. Challenges may come from parents, teachers, clergy members, elected officials, or organized groups, and arise due to objections to language, violence, sexual or racial themes, or religious viewpoint, to name just a few. In 2008, the ALA counted 513 challenges. Many other cases go unreported. One high school principle recently tore pages out of a book of poetry! An organization in Fayetteville, Arkansas is trying to ban 55 books - primarily on religious grounds. This one hits close to home for me as I attended vollege at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville and lived in that lovely Ozark town for a number of years.

The following is a list of some recent authors and books which have been the subject of banning or attempted banning. This is going on TODAY folks!

Banned Books Week - September 26 - October 3, 2009

Alphabetical by Author
A
Paula by Isabel Allende

How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents by Julia Alvarez

Go Ask Alice by Anonymous
The Inferno by Dante Alighieri
Bless Me Ultima by Rudolfo Anaya

I Know Why the Caged Bird Sing by Maya Angelou

B
One More River by Lynne Reid Banks

Am I Blue? Coming Out from the Silence? By Marion Diane Bauer

Arming America: The Origins of a National Gun Cultureby Michael A. Bellesiles
Girl Goddess, #9, I Was a Teenage Fairy and Weetzie Bat by Francesca Lia Block

Deenie and Forever by Judy Blume

Doing It by Melvin Burgess

Family Values: Two Moms and Their Son by Phyllis Burke

Tarzan by Edgar Rice Burroughs

C
My Father’s Scar by Michael Cart

The Homo Handbook--Getting in Touch With Your Inner Homo by Judy Carter

Stonewall: The Riots That Sparked the Gay Revolution by David Carter

Dance on My Grave by Aidan Chambers

Postcards from No Man’s Land by Aidan Chambers

The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky

The Awakening by Kate Chopin

Ricochet River by Robin Cody

Lords of Discipline by Pat Conroy

The Chocolate War by Robert Cormier
I am the Cheese by Robert Cormier
We All Fall Down by Robert Cormier
Skull of Truth by Bruce Coville

Stuck Rubber Baby by Howard Cruse

Athletic Shorts and Ironman by Chris Crutcher

Stotan! by Chris Crutcher

Whale Talk by Chris Crutcher

D
Krik? Krak! by Edwidge Dandicat
The Teenage Guy’s Survival Guide by Jeremy Daldry

My Brother Has AIDS by Deborah Davis

Lost Prophet: The Life of Bayard Rustin by John D'emilio

Between Lovers, Cheaters and The Other Woman by Eric Jerome Dickey

Deal With It! by Esther Drill

Daughters of Eve by Lois Duncan

E
Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel
F
Eight Seconds by Jean Ferris

The Sissy Duckling by Harvey Fierstein
Life is Funny by E.R. Frank
The Trouble With Babies by Martha Freeman

My Heartbeat by Garret Freymann-Weyr

G
Good Moon Rising and Holly’s Secret by Nancy Garden

Grendel by John Gardener
Julie of the Wolves by Jean Craighead George
The Drowning of Stephan Jones by Bette Greene

H
King & King by Lindade Haan and Stern Nijland

Don't You Dare Read This, Mrs. Hunphrey by Margaret Peterson Haddix

Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson
It's Perfectly Normal by Robie Harris
Hey, Dollface by Deborah Hautzig

The Misfits by James Howe
GLBTQ: The Survival Guide for Queer and Questioning Teens by Kelly Huegel

J
How to Make Love Like a Porn Star: A Cautionary Tale by Jenna Jameson

Breaking Boxes by A.M. Jenkins
K
Pinkerton, Behave! by Steven Kellogg
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest by Ken Kesey

Animal Dreams by Barbara Kingsolver

The Bean Trees by Barbara Kingsolver

L
What I Know Now by Rodger Larson

To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee

One Fat Summer by Robert Lipsyte

Anastasia Again by Lois Lowry

The Giver by Lois Lowry

Extreme Elvin by Chris Lynch

M
All the Pretty Horses by Cormac McCarthy

Bringing Down the House by Ben Mezrich

Gays/justice: A Study of Ethics, Society, and Law by Richard D. Mohr

Beloved, The Bluest Eye, and Song of Solomon by Toni Morrison

Fallen Angels by Walter Dean Myers

Monster by Walter Dean Myers

N
The Alice Series by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

P
Choke by Chuck Palanuik

Mick Harte was Here by Barbara Park
Bridge to Terabithia by Katherine Paterson
Captain Underpants by Dav Pilky
Hot Zone by Richard Preston

R
On the Bright Side, I'm Now the Girlfriend of a Sex God by Louise Rennison

Coming Out in College: The Struggle for a Queer Identity by Robert A. Rhoads

Freaky Friday by Mary Rodgers
Running: La Vida Loca: Gang Days in L.A. by Luis J. Rodriguez
Harry Potter series by J.K. Rowling
S
The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger

Rainbow Boys and Rainbow High by Alex Sanchez

Push! by Sapphire
Shadow Club by Neil Shusterman
Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress by Dai Sijie
What My Mother Doesn't Know by Sonya Sones
Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck
America (The Book) by Jon Stewart

Double Date by R.L. Stine
Sophie's Choice by William Styron
T
The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan
Roll of Thunder Hear My Cry by Mildred D. Taylor

Stuck in Neutral by Terry Trueman
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain

V
My Two Uncles by Judith Vigna
W
Peter by Kate Walker

Montana 1948 by Larry Watson

This Boy's Life by Tobias Wolff

Black Boy by Richard Wright

LITERARY TASTE - HOW TO FORM IT BY ARNOLD BENNETT 1914

The following is Public Domain and remains as interesting today as when it was printed in 1914, I believe. I hope you will find it so. Please feel free to give feedback on this and other information you find on this blog.

We all began to collect books for a wide variety of reasons. Hopefully not for the reasons outlined at the beginning of this article... but whatever the reason, the love of books and reading unites us all. Enjoy the article!

THE AIM

At the beginning a misconception must be removed from the path. Many people, if not most, look on literary taste as an elegant accomplishment, by acquiring which they will complete themselves, and make themselves finally fit as members of a correct society. They are secretly ashamed of their ignorance of literature, in the same way as they would be ashamed of their ignorance of etiquette at a high entertainment, or of their inability to ride a horse if suddenly called upon to do so. There are certain things that a man ought to know, or to know about, and literature is one of them: such is their idea. They have learnt to dress themselves with propriety, and to behave with propriety on all occasions; they are fairly "up" in the questions of the day; by industry and enterprise they are succeeding in their vocations; it behoves them, then, not to forget that an acquaintance with literature is an indispensable part of a self-respecting man's personal baggage. Painting doesn't matter; music doesn't matter very much. But "everyone is supposed to know" about literature. Then, literature is such a charming distraction! Literary taste thus serves two purposes: as a certificate of correct culture and as a private pastime. A young professor of mathematics, immense at mathematics and games, dangerous at chess, capable of Haydn on the violin, once said to me, after listening to some chat on books, "Yes, I must take up literature." As though saying: "I was rather forgetting literature. However, I've polished off all these other things. I'll have a shy at literature now."

This attitude, or any attitude which resembles it, is wrong. To him who really comprehends what literature is, and what the function of literature is, this attitude is simply ludicrous. It is also fatal to the formation of literary taste. People who regard literary taste simply as an accomplishment, and literature simply as a distraction, will never truly succeed either in acquiring the accomplishment or in using it half-acquired as a distraction; though the one is the most perfect of distractions, and though the other is unsurpassed by any other accomplishment in elegance or in power to impress the universal snobbery of civilised mankind.
Literature, instead of being an accessory, is the fundamental *sine qua non* of complete living. I am extremely anxious to avoid rhetorical exaggerations. I do not think I am guilty of one in asserting that he who has not been "presented to the freedom" of literature has not wakened up out of his prenatal sleep. He is merely not born. He can't see; he can't hear; he can't feel, in any full sense. He can only eat his dinner. What more than anything else annoys people who know the true function of literature, and have profited thereby, is the spectacle of so many thousands of individuals going about under the delusion that they are alive, when, as a fact,
they are no nearer being alive than a bear in winter.

I will tell you what literature is! No--I only wish I could. But I can't. No one can. Gleams can be thrown on the secret, inklings given, but no more. I will try to give you an inkling. And, to do so, I will take you back into your own history, or forward into it. That evening when you went for a walk with your faithful friend, the friend from whom you hid nothing-- or almost nothing...! You were, in truth, somewhat inclined to hide from him the particular matter which monopolised your mind
that evening, but somehow you contrived to get on to it, drawn by an overpowering fascination. And as your faithful friend was sympathetic and discreet, and flattered you by a respectful curiosity, you proceeded further and further into the said matter,
growing more and more confidential, until at last you cried out, in a terrific whisper: "My boy, she is simply miraculous!" At that moment you were in the domain of literature.

Let me explain. Of course, in the ordinary acceptation of the word, she was not miraculous. Your faithful friend had never noticed that she was miraculous, nor had about forty thousand other fairly keen observers. She was just a girl. Troy had not been burnt for her. A girl cannot be called a miracle. If a girl is to be called a miracle, then you might call pretty nearly anything a miracle.... That is just it: you might. You can. You ought. Amid all the miracles of the universe you had just wakened up to one. You were full of your discovery. You were under a divine impulsion to impart that discovery. You had a strong sense of the marvellous beauty of something, and you had to share it. You were in a passion about something, and you had to vent yourself on somebody. You were drawn towards the whole of the rest of the human race. Mark the effect of your mood and utterance on your faithful friend. He knew that she was not a miracle. No other person could have
made him believe that she was a miracle. But you, by the force and sincerity of your own vision of her, and by the fervour of your desire to make him participate in your vision, did for quite a long time cause him to feel that he had been blind to the miracle of that girl.

You were producing literature. You were alive. Your eyes were unlidded, your ears were unstopped, to some part of the beauty and the strangeness of the world; and a strong instinct within you forced you to tell someone. It was not enough for you that you saw and heard. Others had to see and hear. Others had to be wakened up.
And they were! It is quite possible--I am not quite sure-- that your faithful friend the very next day, or the next month, looked at some other girl, and suddenly saw that she, too, was miraculous! The influence of literature!

The makers of literature are those who have seen and felt the miraculous interestingness of the universe. And the greatest makers of literature are those whose vision has been the widest, and whose feeling has been the most intense. Your own fragment of insight was accidental, and perhaps temporary. *Their* lives are one long ecstasy of denying that the world is a dull place. Is it nothing to you
to learn to understand that the world is not a dull place? Is it nothing to you to be led out of the tunnel on to the hill-side, to have all your senses quickened, to be invigorated by the true savour of life, to feel your heart beating under that correct necktie of yours? These makers of literature render you their equals.

The aim of literary study is not to amuse the hours of leisure; it is to awake oneself, it is to be alive, to intensify one's capacity for pleasure, for sympathy, and for comprehension. It is not to affect one hour, but twenty-four hours. It is to change utterly one's relations with the world. An understanding appreciation of literature means an understanding appreciation of the world, and it means nothing else. Not isolated and unconnected parts of life, but all of life, brought together and correlated in a synthetic map! The spirit of literature is unifying; it joins the candle and the star, and by the magic of an image shows that the beauty of the greater is in the less. And, not content with the disclosure of beauty and the bringing together
of all things whatever within its focus, it enforces a moral wisdom by the tracing everywhere of cause and effect. It consoles doubly-- by the revelation of unsuspected loveliness, and by the proof that our lot is the common lot. It is the supreme cry of the discoverer, offering sympathy and asking for it in a single gesture. In attending a University Extension Lecture on the sources of Shakespeare's plots, or in studying the researches of George Saintsbury into the origins of English prosody, or in weighing the evidence for and against the assertion that Rousseau was a scoundrel, one is apt to forget what literature really is and is for. It is well to remind ourselves that literature is first and last a means of life, and that the enterprise of forming one's literary taste is an enterprise of learning how best to use this means of life. People who don't want to live, people who would sooner hibernate than feel intensely, will be wise to eschew literature. They had better, to quote from the finest passage in a fine poem, "sit around and eat blackberries." The sight of a "common bush afire with God" might upset their nerves.

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The Codex Seraphinianus as a rare collectible book.

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This is a rare book worth keeping an eye out for. It can be found in the $500 - $600 price range but keep your eyes open for an undervalued copy. It would be a facinating book for many collectors and collections.

The CODEX SERAPHINIANUS
The Codex Seraphinianus was written and illustrated by Italian graphic designer and architect, Luigi Serafini during the late 1970's. The Codex is a lavishly produced book that purports to be an encyclopedia for an imaginary world in a parallel universe, with copious comments in an incomprehensible language. It is written in a florid script, entirely invented and completely illegible, and illustrated with watercolor paintings. The Codex is divided into a number of sections (each with its own table of contents, the page numbers are in base-21 or base-22!) on subjects such as plants, animals, inhabitants, machines, clothing, architecture, numbers, cards, chemical analyses, labyrinth, Babel, foods... There are panoramic scenes of incomprehensible festivals, and diagrams of plumbing!
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The Codex is to that imaginary world what Diderot's Encyclopedia is to ours. Obviously, Serafini was not just attempting to create a consistent alternate world. Rather, the Codex is sort of an elaborate parody of the real world.
sera1C

The invented script of the book imitates the Western-style writing systems (left-to-right writing in rows; an alphabet with uppercase and lowercase; probably a separate set of symbols for writing numerals) but is much more curvilinear reminding some Semitic scripts. The writing seems to have been designed to appear, but not actually be, meaningful, like the Voynich Manuscript.
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At is best, the Codex Seraphinianus is really diverting and surrealist. This book was surely inspired by the Voynich Manuscript and designed with the spirit of Hieronymus Bosch in mind.

Images and text courtesy of Archimedes Lab. We thank them for permission to use their images and text on this valuable collectible book. They can be reached HEREsera_group

ACQUIRING THE CODEX Codex Seraphinianus is a rare and expensive book, a first edition is available as I write this and can be ordered from ******HERE******
Here is the description from ABE from one seller: Book Description: Franco Maria Ricci, Milano, Italia, 1993. Decorative Silk. Book Condition: New. Dust Jacket Condition: New. Serafini, Luigi (illustrator). First Edition. Folio - over 12" - 15" tall. First edition with Spanish introduction. Limited to 5,000 copies, individually numbered. Black silk binding, decorated in gilt, color pastedown. Folio. Illustrated throughout with strange and wonderful color drawings in Serafini's unique otherwordly language. Handmade paper by Cartiere Miliano Fabriano. In custom black silk covered clamshell box. New in new silk clamshell box. Limited and Numbered.
Codex Seraphinianus Several First Edition copies are available from ABE ******HERE******

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Book Collecting Software

I discovered the easiest Book Collecting Software ever. I have evaluated many collecting softwares and this is the hands-down easiest, fastest and most complete around. Here is a screen shot of the inner workings of the software: book-collecting-software You enter the title and author or the ISBN or (here is the cool part) you use a small scanner and scan the barcode - the software then goes online and searches a group of databases (Amazon, The Library of Congress and others) and brings back a picture of the cover, a summary of the plot, date of publication, publisher info and a dozen or so other facts about the book and saves it to your database!

Exclusive Online Book Database Instantly Gives You ...

• Cover Images
• Authors and Titles
• Genres, Publishers, Publication Dates
• Plots, Number of Pages, Book Dimensions
• Library of Congress Numbers (LCCN) and Dewey Classifications
• A complete database of your entire book collection
• And More!

You scan the barcodes with one of several barcode readers available on the site. My favorite is the very inexpensive Cue Cat Reader - less than $20.00 or comes bundled with some software packages. Here is an image of the handheld device: cuecat-on-mousepad

For more information or to purchase this great software at an amazingly affordable price... just click on the following banner:

You may want to sign up for my RSS feeds to stay informed about new posts and information available on this site. Feel free to share my content through your facebook, twitter or email accounts. Thanks for visitin'. See you again soon!

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Bradbury Signed Books For Sale

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