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---PARKINSONS OF SOUTHPORT---
BOOKSELLERS, NATURALISTS & ANTIQUARIANS THE FOURTH GENERATION OF FAMILY EXPERTISE |
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OUTLINE GUIDE TO
OVER 500 SPECIALIST ON-LINE CATALOGUES ANTIQUARIAN & FINE ANIMAL HUSBANDRY ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES ARCHAEOLOGY & HISTORY ARCHITECTURE ARTS/CRAFTS/DESIGN ASTRONOMY BIOLOGY BOTANY BUILDING TECHNOLOGY CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL ENGINEERING COMMERCE COMMODITIES PRODUCTION EARTH SCIENCES ECONOMICS EDUCATION ENGINEERING FOOD/DRINK/HOUSEHOLD GARDENING & PLANT CROPS GEOGRAPHY & TRAVEL GOVERNMENT/ADMINISTRATION |
LAW LANGUAGE(S) LITERATURE MATERIALS PROCESSING MATHEMATICS MEDICINE MUSIC PALAEONTOLOGY PERFORMING ARTS PHILOSOPHY PHYSICS POLITICS PRIMATES PSYCHOLOGY SCIENCE IN GENERAL SOCIOLOGY SPORTS & GAMES TECHNOLOGY IN GENERAL THEOLOGY TRANSPORT: SYSTEMS TRANSPORT: VEHICLES WARFARE / MILITARY ZOOLOGY |
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[[1dinn]] DINNERSTEIN / THE ROCKING OF THE CRADLE AND THE RULING OF THE WORLD ♦ £30 or $49 or 33 Euros Postfree-By-Airmail Worldwide ♦ [ , The Rocking Of The Cradle and The Ruling Of The World.] REVIEW COPY with publisher's dated slip within, along with an A4 sheet of brief extracts from other positive reviews. A 'Condor Book' published by Souvenir Press, London, 1978. "Very Good plus" or better blue HARDBACK with gilt titling in "Good" or better blue/white/gilt pictorial DUSTWRAPPER which (as shown in accompanying image) is a little rubbed/chipped along lower edge and backstrip. FULLEST DETAILS of publication, publisher's synopsis, pagination, contents, condition and size, in both inches and centimetres, and sample text all shown in ACCOMPANYING COMPOSITE IMAGE. ***** Decent exemplar of a much-cited work now rarely encountered in hardback. ****** |
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THANK YOU FOR READING THROUGH TODAY'S REVISION OF THIS PAGE HEREWITH OUR CLICKS & MORTAR JOTTINGS FOR THE DAY For a bookseller in a sea-side town can be dreary on a wet December day. Not so dull though for our local newsagent, Bob Mentha, who has his working breakfast delivered daily by a Swedish blonde. "The Library" By Andrew Lang ...As to the shape of the bookcases, and the furniture, and ornaments of the library, every amateur will please himself. Perhaps the satin-wood or mahogany tabernacles of rare books are best made after the model of what furniture-dealers indifferently call the Queen Anne or the Chippendale style. There is a pleasant quaintness in the carved architectural ornaments of the top, and the inlaid flowers of marquetry go well with the pretty florid editions of the last century, the books that were illustrated by Stothard and Gravelot. Ebony suits theological tomes very well, especially when they are bound in white vellum. As to furniture, people who can afford it will imitate the arrangements of Lucullus, in Mr. Hill Burtons charming volume The Book-hunter (Blackwood, Edinburgh, 1862).Everything is of perfect finish,--the mahogany-railed gallery, the tiny ladders, the broad winged lecterns, with leathern cushions on the edges to keep the wood from grazing the rich bindings, the books themselves, each shelf uniform with its facings, or rather backings, like well-dressed lines at a review. The late Sir William Stirling-Maxwell, a famous bibliophile, invented a very nice library chair. It is most comfortable to sit on; and, as the top of the back is broad and flat, it can be used as a ladder of two high steps, when one wants to reach a book on a lofty shelf. A kind of square revolving bookcase, an American invention, manufactured by Messrs. Trubner, is useful to the working man of letters. Made in oak, stained green, it is not unsightly. As to ornaments, every man to his taste. You may have a pallid bust of Pallas above your classical collection, or fill the niches in a shrine of old French light literature, pastoral and comedy, with delicate shepherdesses in Chelsea china. On such matters a modest writer, like Mr. Jingle when Mr. Pickwick ordered dinner, will not presume to dictate. Next to damp, dust and dirt are the chief enemies of books. At
short intervals, books and shelves ought to be dusted by the amateur
himself. Even Dr. Johnson, who was careless of his person, and of
volumes lent to him, was careful about the cleanliness of his own
books. Boswell found him one day with big gloves on his hands beating
the dust out of his library, as was his custom. There is nothing so
hideous as a dirty thumb-mark on a white page. These marks are
commonly made, not because the reader has unwashed hands, but because
the dust which settles on the top edge of books falls in, and is
smudged when they are opened. Gilt-top edges should be smoothed with
a handkerchief, and a small brush should be kept for brushing the tops
of books with rough edges, before... [continuing tomorrow] |