Rare Books in the News

Channel 2 news ran a top story highlighting the recent donation to the Rare Books Division. Watch the clip below from the link below.

Rare Copies Of 2 Beloved Books Donated To U Of U Library

Featuring appearances from: Luise Poulton, Managing Curator of Rare Books

Daily Utah Chronicle Article – Alice in Wonderland

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The Daily Utah Chronicle reported on the recent donation to the library.

Lewis Carroll books donated to Marriott

 

More Wonderful Donations

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This December, for the third year in a row, the Rare Books Division received a wonderful donation from Dr. Ronald Rubin of New York. Thanks to his generosity, copies of John Russell Bartlett’s Personal Narratives of Explorations and Incidents in Texas, New Mexico, California and Chihuahua, London, 1854 and Edwin Welles Dwight’s Memoirs of Henry Obookiah, A Native of the Sandwich Islands, New York, 1819 have been added to the division’s assets.

In December 2011, Dr. Rubin donated a copy from the first edition of Ethan Smith’s View of the Hebrews, Poultney, Vermont, 1823.

In December 2010, Dr. Rubin donated a copy from the first edition of Isaac Weld’s Travels Through the States of North America and the Provinces of Upper and Lower Canada, During the Years 1795, 1796, and 1797, London, 1799. The Rare Books Division used this book to introduce its 2011 exhibition, “Are We There Yet?: Westward Exploration and Travel in North America.” 

Dr. Rubin is professor of political science at the City University of New York, a noted Americana antiquarian collector and philanthropist. He has also donated rare and valuable books to Yeshiva University, his alma mater. When asked by an excited but timid managing curator, “What made you think of us?,” he replied, “I’ve heard good things about you.”

The Rare Books Division is grateful for Dr. Rubin’s interest in helping us fulfill our commitment to serve Utah students, faculty and community with exceptional collections.

Book of the Week – Common Sense

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Common Sense
Thomas Paine (1737 – 1809)
Philadelphia, 1776; reprinted Newburyport
probably a sixth printing
E211 P124

Thomas Paine called for the separation of the colonies from the mother country in his pamphlet, Common Sense.  Paine’s writings paved the way for the American colonists’ final break with Great Britain.

Common Sense, a persuasive argument for independence, was a best seller immediately upon publication. First printed in Philadelphia by Robert Bell on January 9, 1776, in an edition of one thousand copies, it was read by everyone in the Continental Congress and George Washington, who commented on the effect it had on his troops. It was read by nearly everyone in the colonies who was literate, and read aloud to nearly everyone who was not.

Paine had planned to give his share of the profits to the cause of independence, but when Bell told him there were no profits, Paine dismissed Bell and hired Bradford to publish a new, enlarged edition. Bell published an unauthorized second printing on January 27, and Bradford’s enlarged edition was published on or around February 14. The pamphlet quickly sold 150,000 copies.

Paine refused to copyright the work and gave permission to all to reprint it. The earliest printings outside of Philadelphia used the text of Bell’s first printing. Later printings used the text of Bradford’s February printing. Twenty-five editions were published in thirteen cities in the year 1776, reaching nearly half a million copies printed in that year alone. At that time, the colonial population was about three million, including slaves, women, and children. It was this pamphlet that moved mass public opinion toward the cause of the revolution.

Fox 13 News – Uniquely Utah: Rare book collection

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Fox 13 news featured a segment highlighting the recent donation to the Rare Books Division. Watch the clip below.

Uniquely Utah: Rare book collection

Featuring appearances from: Greg Thompson, Associate Dean for Special Collections and Alison Conner, Rare Books Curator

The Salt Lake Tribune – Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland

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Read The Salt Lake Tribune’s article about the recent donation to the Rare Books collections.

U.’s Marriott Library lands rare “Alice” editions from anonymous donor

‘”We all had grins on our faces the rest of the week,” said Luise Poulton, rare books manager for the library. Make that Cheshire grins.’

Daily Utah Chronicle Article – Faculty Club Presentaion

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The Daily Utah Chronicle joined the Faculty Club for a visit to learn more about the rare book collections and how they are used.

See the front-page article:
Rare book collection preserves treasured publications

“Why do you want a museum? It’s exactly the same,”  [Donna] Gelfand said. “It protects and maintains historical material that would just be lost.”

Book of the Week – The First and Second Volumes of Chronicles

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The First and Second Volumes of Chronicles
Raphael Holinshead (d. 1580?)
London: 1587
Second edition
DA130 H6 1587

A monumental history of England, Ireland, and Scotland, the profusely illustrated first edition of Chronicles was published in 1577. The second, enlarged edition was published in 1587. It is in three folio volumes (usually bound as two). The type is black letter in double columns. The pages are standard folio size, and the second edition is without illustrations. The text runs to about 3.5 million words, roughly equal to the total of the Authorized Version of the Bible, the complete dramatic works of Shakespeare, Boswell’s Life of Johnson, and War and Peace combined. The Chronicles are remembered not for themselves but for one of their readers – William Shakespeare.

The Chronicles were an important source for thirteen of Shakespeare’s thirty-seven plays. It was the 1587, second edition which Shakespeare read.

Engraved title-pages. Rebound ca. 1982 in a full conservation binding of modern three-quarter levant and unbleached linen. Geometric blind stamping to leather spine and corner pieces. Title hand tooled on spine in gilt.

Shakespeare is coming! The First Folio will arrive at the City Library in October.

Rare Books Exhibition: Nahuatl Spoken Here

New Exhibition

Nahuatl Spoken Here, 2013

Nahuatl Spoken Here, 2013

January 18–March 3

Exhibition: Nahuatl Spoken Here

Curator: Luise Poulton

Location: Special Collections Gallery, J. Willard Marriott Library, level 4

Gallery hours: Monday–Friday, 8:00–6:00; Saturday, 9:00–6:00; Hours differ during University breaks and holidays.

The exhibition is FREE and open to the public.

Weller Book Works, Collectors’ Book Salon: Luise Poulton, University of Utah Special Collections

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Join Managing Curator, Luise Poulton at Weller Book Works, Collectors’ Book Salon.
 
http://www.samwellers.com/events/
  • Date: Friday, January 25, 2013
    Time: 6:30 PM
  • Location:
    Weller Book Works
  • Address:
    607 Trolley Square
    Salt Lake City, UT 84102

Weller Book Works, Collectors’ Book Salon speaker this month will be Luise Poulton, Managing Curator of the Rare Books Division, Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah. Her talk is entitled “Where Did All These Book Come from? Collecting Books with a History”.

The Collectors’ Book Salon occurs on the last Friday of each month from 6:30 until 9:00 PM. They are semi-formal but playful affairs with music, snacks, and drinks. At 7:30, guests gather for brief bibliographic presentations.

This event is free and open to the public.