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The Days of Judgment
February 3, 2008
I have been a longtime book design judge for the Benjamin Franklin Awards that are given out by the Publishers Marketing Association. This is an organization for small publishers that helps them grow by providing advice, workshops, seminars, newsletters and marketing opportunities through industry trade shows.
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Frank X. Roberts returns with a history on the origins of bookmarks. What the earliest ones might have been is pure speculation, but the development of reading matter from clay tablets to papyrus sheets to scrolls to the codex surely marked the rise of the bookmark as a device useful to finding particular passages quickly. In this week’s On Marking Books you’ll find this fascinating account. The ancient worlds of Greece and Rome were culturally rich. Education and thought were valued. This week, in Readings, Henry Carrigan looks at three new books that offer unusual views into those cultures through their professions, through a case of domestic violence, and through a look at the Byzantine empire’s government, art, and education to world history (including the story of a woman’s own own Odyssey-like historical epic, the Alexiad). Patricia Nell Warren grabbed the literary world by the throat in 1974 when she published her book, The Front Runner, a love story between two gay men. Her impetus was her own experience in the sports world. Her experiences, background and her writing since then makes for incredible, compelling reading as Daniel Jaffe sits down with her this month in Talking Across the Table. It can be no surprise that Lisa Guidarini, who is earning her degree in Library Science, has passionate views of the role of librarians. She takes on a couple of the myths (and not just the sensible shoes myth) surrounding librarians when she asks, “If this profession doesn’t exist to guide readers toward books with literary merit that are genuinely worth reading, what profession is?” Find out this week in Reviews & Reflections. Being sick is not fun especially if one is hospitalized. But books can bring a time out from the illness as they offer “a source of hope and pleasure and comfort.” They are, as she notes in Seasoned Lightly, “good medicine.”
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Until next week, read well, read often and read on! Lauren |