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The dates for Chelsea 2013 are 1st and 2nd November.    Please visit us at Olympia in June too!   www.olympiabookfair.com

About a Book

Everyone has a story to tell about a book they have owned, loved, hated or perhaps never found, so we have asked the 2012 Exhibitors to send us their stories and anecdotes, which you can read below.

Stand
41

Neil Summersgill

Neil Summersgill

I have an interest in the Battle of Trafalgar, and I collect autographs and manuscripts from the 19,000 plus sailors from the British side who were there on that day. Too obvious a choice of subject for someone constantly looking for the unobvious perhaps, but as a schoolboy I was once Captain of Nelson House and it’s stuck.

Recently at a fair, Sarah Key pointed me towards an autograph letter I’d lazily ignored, written by Nelson’s chaplain, friend, and translator, the man in whose arms the Admiral expired, Rev. Alexander John Scott. The letter was unexceptional, written from Catterick in Yorkshire in 1819 but Scott, a bibliophile whose books Nelson borrowed, had left an amusing postscript:

“Went to Richmond on Tuesday last to buy a horse – went into an old book shop – bought books & left the horse – Books do not eat anything”.

Later that night at home, I lifted out my rare 1842 copy of “Recollections of The Life of the Rev. A.J.Scott,D.D. Lord Nelson’s Chaplain”, written by Scott’s daughter, the authoress Margaret Gatty. The book is a Scott family copy which I bought years ago, it has some annotations, and the ownership inscription of one Horatia Johnson. Read more »

Stand
50

Simon Beattie

Simon Beattie

Sometimes I really can’t believe the extraordinary serendipity involved in finding books. A couple of years ago, I went into a bookshop in Germany and came across an attractive sketchbook of around 30 drawings made by an Englishman (or woman) in Italy, 1817–37. One drawing was signed ‘F.B.’, but there were otherwise no marks of provenance. I bought them, as they were appealing, and well-executed, the majority done in Frascati, depicting a number of the great papal villas and other places in and around Rome. Just over three weeks later, now back in London, I happen across a volume of, as it turns out, excessively rare privately published photographs: Views of Rome and the Environs, photographed from the original Drawings taken from Nature by Frances Baroness de Bunsen (no date). I open the book and my eyes grew wide: these are photos of the drawings I bought only weeks before. What are the chances? Read more »

Stand
46

Keith Fletcher

H M Fletcher

Whether it was my first book I do not know, but it is certainly the earliest to have survived. It is called All the Mowgli Stories in other words Kipling’s Jungle Book in a large-print children’s edition. I was brought up on these stories - my father used to read them to me in bed every night; but there was always a problem, he would insist on starting a new story each night even though we hadn’t finished the previous one. It was my mother who finally solved it. She came in one evening and said “What are you doing, still reading, can’t you see he’s fast asleep?” - “Yes I know” said my father “but I wanted to finish the story.”

One of my habits in gathering books is to read a book perhaps in a paperback edition and having ‘assessed’ it, either put it back into stock, keep it on my shelves, find a hardback edition to replace it, or, ultimate accolade, find a first or fine edition. [André Gide summed it up when he said “Book collectors do not buy books to read - they buy books because they have read them”]. Some twenty-five years ago in the Carnegie Bookshop in New York Dave Kirschenbaum showed us the finest pair of “Jungle Books” any of us had ever seen. Read more »

Stand
58

Janette Ray

Janette Ray Rare and Out of Print Bookseller

Is it a book?

One of the nicest things about having a bookshop is that just sometimes a customer will make a chance remark about some family item they want to sell and it turns out to be something really interesting.

Recently just such a thing happened to me. I had just purchased a collection of modern books on Stained Glass Windows and someone walked into the shop whilst they were still piled on the floor by the door. He asked if I bought older material on glass as one of his relatives, from the 19th century, had been a salesman for stained glass and he had inherited one of his sale brochures that he thought he might sell. Read more »

Stand
24

Christopher Edwards

Christopher Edwards

Have you read The Hundred and One Dalmatians? If you’ve only seen one of the various gloopy films that Disney has made of it over the years, you won’t have any idea of its charm. Dodie Smith also wrote I Capture the Castle, which I didn’t read until I was an adult – it’s really a novel for young women, but can appeal to all ages and genders. I then went on to read Valerie Grove’s biography, published in 1996, and was specially struck by the account of her affair with Ambrose Heal, initiated by Dodie herself when she was working at his shop in the Tottenham Court Road in the early 1920s. The liaison continued for several years – even when Dodie suddenly became a successful West End playwright (‘Shopgirl writes play’) – but petered out when she met her future husband, Alec Beesley, in the 1930s. Nobody except the three of them knew about the intrigue.

I was surprised and delighted, therefore, to find some years ago – in a junk shop in Henley, marked £2 – a copy of the first edition of Rose Macaulay’s The Pleasure of Ruins, with a shaky italic inscription inside: ‘Given by Dodie Smith to Ambrose Heal. Xmas 1953’. Read more »

Stand
11

Graham York

Graham York Rare Books

Some years ago a colleague in the trade, knowing my interest in Gypsy books, showed me a sixteenth century folio in full contemporary vellum; Albert Krantz's history of Saxony, in Latin, containing one short paragraph mentioning the appearance of a wandering tribe of Gypsies in the fourteenth century. It's a pretty rare book and he was asking quite a lot of money for it, so given the limited appeal, I took details and mentioned it to my best customer. He knew the book but had never even seen a copy and was desperate to buy it. I delivered it to his house the next time I was in London and he cursed me because of its size; it was too big for his shelves and it would have to go on the spare room bed.

Some years later, after his death, his son asked me to buy the library. Every room in the house was full of books of quality; duplicates or unmentionables were boxed in the garage, and there, on the second floor, on the spare room bed, was Albert Krantz's history of Saxony...

I failed to find another Gypsy customer so enthusiastic for that one small paragraph, and the book ended up in the shop on the bottom shelf of a cabinet with other old and unwieldy tomes...until one morning. Read more »