Raymond Scott Cleared of Stealing Shakespeare Folio

Raymond Scott found guilty of handling stolen goods and removing stolen property from the UK

An eccentric would-be international playboy was facing a lengthy prison sentence last night, despite being cleared of stealing a priceless Shakespeare volume from Durham University.

A jury at Newcastle Crown Court found self-styled rare book dealer Raymond Scott not guilty of stealing the Shakespeare First Folio from Palace Green Library in December 1998.

But he was found guilty of handling stolen goods and removing stolen property from the UK in relation to the book.

Adjourning the case for reports, Judge Richard Lowden remanded the 53-year-old into custody, telling him: “There will, in due time, be an inevitable substantial custodial sentence.”

Scott was accused of stealing the 1623 folio and concealing it for nearly a decade before producing it at the Folger Shakespeare Library, in Washington, US, in June 2008, when he ran out of money.

He claimed to have acquired the book in Cuba – home of his fiancee, Heidi Garcia Rios, a 23-year-old nightclub dancer upon whom he had lavished thousands of pounds. He denied it was the Durham Folio.

But, despite the book being “damaged, brutalised and mutilated”, experts at the Folger quickly recognised it as the stolen copy and called in the FBI.

Scott was arrested in a raid on his home in Washington, Wearside, three weeks later and charged.

A jury of seven women and five men took just under a day to reach their unanimous verdicts.

Scott, of Manor Grange, Wingate, County Durham, will be sentenced next month.

The folio has been returned to Durham University.

After yesterday’s hearing, Detective Constable Tim Lerner, of Durham Police, said: “I’m extremely happy that the book has been returned to Durham.

“From the very start of the investigation, he has been difficult.

He is a liar. His whole story from start to finish was a complete lie and he launched a desperate attempt to sell the Folio because of the serious financial position he was in.”

Bill Bryson, chancellor of Durham University and a popular travel writer, said: “Shakespeare’s First Folio is arguably the most important book in English literature. It is fantastic that Durham’s copy is coming home at last.”

The folio included 36 of Shakespeare’s plays and helped establish his reputation as the greatest dramatist in the English language.

About 750 copies were printed and sold, of which about 230 survive – with the largest collection, 79, held at the Folger Shakespeare Library.

The folio was part of Cosin’s Library, created by the 17th Century Bishop of Durham John Cosin, who is thought to have bought it new.

The so-called Cosin copy is the only one known to have stayed in the same personal library since its original purchase.

It was previously distinguished by a shelfmark of Peterhouse College, Cambridge, proving Cosin owned it before 1644. In the past, it was said to be worth £15m.

However, following its theft it was vandalised, with its title page – which bore the Cambridge shelfmark – removed.

It is now thought to be worth about £1m.

The folio was stolen while on display in Durham University’s Palace Green Library, on December 17, 1998.

It was the highlight of a 50- piece exhibition charting the progress of English literature from the Middle Ages to the 20th Century, staged to coincide with an academic conference.

The 380- year-old treasure was kept in a g l a s s - topped cabinet, protected by three mortice locks.

Librarian John Hall rec a l l e d : “ A t some point somebody broke into the case.

“As soon as that was discovered, I was informed. I can remember being in a meeting with one of the Durham (University) colleges and being pulled out of that to be told. It was a sinking feeling.”

Also stolen were six exceptional manuscripts and early printed books, which remain missing.

They included two late 14th or early 15th Century manuscripts.

Final Passages of The Great Gatsby, Penned By F Scott Fitzgerald, Appeared at Sotheby's

Source: Paul Fraser Collectible - a great resource for collectors of all types.

The final passages of the Great Gatsby, penned by F Scott Fitzgerald, appeared at Sotheby's

image 300 400 gatsby 1 Final Passages of The Great Gatsby, Penned By F Scott Fitzgerald, Appeared at Sothebys

A passage of text described by experts as "one of the most memorable and resonant endings in American literature" sold for nearly three-times its $35,000 estimate at Sotheby's, earlier this week.

Bearing the signature of author F Scott Fitzgerald, the final four sentences of his masterpiece The Great Gatsby (1925) are handwritten below a pen and ink portrait of the writer by Robert Kastor.

The framed sheet measures approximately 11 x 9 inches, and was believed to have been dawn and written in Paris in the late 1920s.

The final four sentences of The Great Gatsby, handwritten by
F Scott Fitzgerald himself

In the novel's final two pages, protagonist Nick Carraway visits the eponymous Gatsby's now-empty estate and reflects on the latter's tragic reflection of the American Dream...

"Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgasmic [sic] future that year by year receeds [sic] before us. It eluded us then, but that's no matter—tomorrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms farther.... And one fine morning— So we beat on, boats against the currents, borne back ceaselessly into the past[.]" - from the Great Gatsby

Notable quirks in Fitzgerald's handwritten copy include use of the word "orgasmic", instead of "orgastic" as it appears in the novel's First Edition and virtually all others, and the misspelling of "receeds".

The historic and one-of-a-kind manuscript realised a final price of $98,500, including buyer's premium.

Other high profiles sales at Sotheby's New York included a tribute handwritten by Mark Twain to his daughter following her death, aged just 24, from spinal meningitis.

Over 64-pages long, the manuscript sold for $242,500 (£164,000).

Elsewhere, for collectors who missed out on the Sotheby's sale, a one-of-a-kind handwritten personal note of thanks signed by Twain is currently for sale on the market.(For a surprisingly affordable $3,500 - Debra)

pt79 mark twain 410 Final Passages of The Great Gatsby, Penned By F Scott Fitzgerald, Appeared at Sothebys

The Future of Books - The Collectible Future

There is much discussion about the "future of books". Opinions vary widely. The following article is both well written and interesting. I will include a few paragraphs here but suggest you will want to visit The Globe and Mail to read the entire article.

"The book may be doomed in the digital age, but a first edition of The Great Gatsby still costs $150,000.

In the waning years of the last century, Thomas Cahill scored an international success with How the Irish Saved Civilization. It wasn't about the brewing of the first pint of Guinness, but rather the story of how, in the wake of the collapse of the Roman Empire and the destructive rise of the Visigoths (“Aristotle? We don't need no stinking Aristotle!”), groups of plucky Irish monks in isolated monasteries “took on the great labour of copying Western literature – everything they could lay their hands on.”

Had it not been for these dedicated, flea-ridden scribes and the Catholic missionaries who then carried their works and words to Europe's scrofulous hordes, the world would have been entirely different. It would have been a world without … books!

Today, 550 years after Gutenberg's invention of mechanical movable type, not a few pundits believe we are on the verge of undoing what those Irish clerics did – that is, establishing a world without books."

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future03bk1 JPG 740461gm a The Future of Books   The Collectible Future

Lurid Story of Book Dope and Lives Twisted By Mad Desire

Stephen Gertz is one of my favorite writers about the book world. I have read his work quite a few times but a recent post to is hands down my favorite for this favorite. Be sure Booktrystto go to the site to read the entire piece. It is GREAT. He is writing about posters like the ones below that are being sold by Heldfonds Book Gallery in San Francisco - a place I must get to the City to visit soon. I just ordered one of these great Bibliopulp images. You can visit online HERE. Hard-boiled dames caught in the grip of a habit beyond their control; corrupt dolls seeking cheap thrills between the sheets of a book; innocents ensnared into the rare book racket, underage girls seduced by slick blurbs, and grown men brought to their knees by bibliographical points that slay dreams in a depraved world.

It's rare book noir, the dark underbelly of collecting. Human wreckage litters the streets of Booktown, the vice-ridden gotham that kicks its victims into the gutter margin, slaves to their twisted desire and lost in a sick world where condition is everything, obsession is the norm, and compulsion the law.

That first book seen in a window display, an Internet image, held in the hands - soon, you're furtively ducking into dens of iniquity with bookshelves and rarities behind a bamboo curtain; you've got the shakes and you need something, bad, right now. The rent is due, the kids need food, mama needs a new pair of shoes but let 'em all go to hell, you're a quarto low, you need your shot of heaven, a mainline hit straight to the pleasure centers to bathe in a flood of dopamine unleashed by a new acquisition and sink into careless ecstasy.

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tart1 Lurid Story of Book Dope and Lives Twisted By Mad Desire

theymademe1 Lurid Story of Book Dope and Lives Twisted By Mad Desire

Bookshelf Porn - Site For Booklovers

Hi, all. I just found a great site for booklovers. It has page after page of bookshelves. Neat bookshelves. Chaotic bookshelves. Famous bookshelves (see image of Shakespear and Company bookstore). Libraries. Art installations and much more. All can be found at Bookshelf Porn

Here are a few of the great images -

tumblr l2f8vcecO11qzn34eo1 r1 500 Bookshelf Porn   Site For Booklovers

tumblr kyia20DXDz1qzupj0o1 500 Bookshelf Porn   Site For Booklovers

“Books in Libraries, Libraries in Context” English Tour

“Books in Libraries, Libraries in Context”England, March 26-April 10, 2011

Jonathan and Barbara Hill are offering an English tour group for book collectors, librarians, and book dealers on March 26-April 10, 2011. The price for this unusual tour seems quite reasonable to me. Their website gives the following information (as well as daily schedule, registration forms, etc):

"This two week tour in England will have a special appeal to all those who love books and their history, and who are interested in the evolution and variety of libraries. It will also appeal to those who wish to see and travel in particularly beautiful parts of England, and to enjoy tranquil landscapes, ancient cathedrals, splendid mansions and rural hotels. It will appeal equally to the general traveler, the librarian, the collector, the conservator, the academic, or the book-dealer.

We shall view books in a range of different kinds of libraries from various historical periods, in cathedrals, universities, colleges, and historic mansions. Each stop and site visit will offer a rich context of history, culture, architecture and gardens. At many of the places we visit we shall have on site talks and introductions. Throughout, we shall provide a running commentary on all aspects of the itinerary, from history and culture to horticulture and cuisine. The final two days of the tour will be spent in London, where, in addition to libraries, participants will be able to enjoy all the culture and diversions of this national capital and global city."

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Book Thief Jailed Again For Stealing Rare Books

Source: Guardian.co.uk

A Cambridge graduate who stole more than £1m worth of rare books during his career as a professional book thief was today found guilty of stealing £40,000's worth of books from a celebrated library.

William Jacques, nicknamed "Tome Raider" after stealing hundreds of rare books in the late 1990s, drew up a "thief's shopping list", targeting the most expensive books that he could access.

He used a false name to sign in to the Royal Horticultural Society's Lindley library in London before hiding valuable books under his tweed jacket, Southwark Crown Court was told.

Detective Constable Paul Howitt said Jacques, the son of a farmer from Selby, North Yorkshire, was an "extremely arrogant man, a very greedy man who was obsessed by money" and was "responsible for the biggest ever raid of our leading libraries".

The Cambridge graduate began selling stolen books at auction houses in the late 90s. The haul that led to his previous conviction, some 500 rare antiquarian books and pamphlets from the British Library, Cambridge University Library and the London Library, was one of the biggest of its kind in British legal history, and many of the works were damaged in an attempt to disguise their origins.

Jacques was jailed for four years in May 2002 by a judge at Middlesex Guildhall Crown Court for 21 counts of theft. He now faces a similar time in jail after his most recent offences.

Judge Derek Inman told Jacques he had hidden behind a "shabby cloak of respectability" as he spent years systematically plundering valuable collections without anyone noticing.

Jacques had been a member of the three libraries for years, ironically informing the British Library that he needed their facilities for "economic research". He has a extremely high IQ and used his knowledge of the antiquarian book trade to cheat police, the court heard.

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Autographed Books by Allen and Patricia Ahearn

Thanks to Allen and Patricia Ahearn for their permission to post this article from their site at Quill and Brush Their site is very informative and an excellent resource for book collectors.

Author's autographs in a book may be considered in various categories, including signed limited editions, signed trade editions, and association copies. We've discussed limited editions elsewhere on the site.

Signed trade editions are copies of the regular trade first edition signed by the author, with or without an inscription. These signed books will usually sell for at least twice as much as an unsigned copy, but the real determinant of price will be the value of the author's signature. Some authors are very generous in signing their books; as a result, their signatures may be worth only $10 or $15, representing the price difference between a signed and an unsigned copy of a first edition, or the price of a signed later printing. On the other hand, some authors very rarely sign a book and their signatures alone may be worth $50 or more; again, this would establish a price. Further, some authors are very free with their signatures but very rarely inscribe copies of their books, and therefore inscribed copies, even if the recipient is unknown, will command a premium.

Value of Signed vs. Inscribed Books

We are often asked about the value of a first edition that is inscribed by the author to another person versus the value of the same book just signed by the author. We understand that if the original recipient of the book is not well known, or of general interest, some collectors prefer the author's signature without the inscription. From our point of view we would always prefer an inscribed copy and think it is worth more than a copy that is just signed by the author. However, we understand that if the author is young and the collector hopes one day to meet the author at a signing, or perhaps send some of his books to get the author to sign, the collector will not want to buy a copy of the book inscribed to some unknown person. From our point of view, we know that after the death of an author, inscribed copies are always worth more than copies that are just signed, Also, from our point of view, the inscription allows us to have more of the author's handwriting to examine to assure ourselves and our customers that it is a genuine author's autograph.

Association copies are books that include a signed inscription from the author to another famous personality or someone important within the framework of the particular author's life and work. These will be valued more highly than the normal signed first edition, depending on the importance of the recipient involved.

A Rare Occurance in These Modern Times - Uncut or Unopened Books

Uncut A Rare Occurance in These Modern Times   Uncut or Unopened Books

Source: strange and random happenstance

Have you ever been reading a book and find that you can't read the next page because it has never been cut? But this surprisingly happened to me just the other day while I was reading my copy of Lark Rise to Candleford. Of course this used to be a common occurrence with older books, and it was de riguer in Austen's lifetime. Ever wondered why Mr. Bennet in the BBC miniseries has a knife whilst sitting in his study avoiding the shrill cries of his wife? And no, not just plotting on his behalf. People actually kept knives ("paperknives") nearby in order to open said pages... they weren't there to keep away book pilferers as you might have thought. So out of interest I wandered to the lovely web and looked up uncut pages only to find I have been using a misnomer for years, I should have been saying unopened pages! Also it turns out I should have used a parring knife not a regular old knife... but it turned out better than the time I tried to do it with my finger to the first volume of Pride and Prejudice that was my grandmother's when I was a teenager and it now has a very "badly opened" page indeed (ie torn and raggedy).

As the book collector's glossary explains unopened pages: "A state where the book's pages at the fore edge and/or top are still joined from the folding. This cannot occur if the book has been properly cut. At one time many books were issued unopened, and it is not uncommon to find older books still in this pristine state."

It further goes on to say: "A rare book that is unopened may be considerably more valuable than that same book opened. Therefore, one should consider carefully before opening a book. Of course, you cannot read a book that is unopened, at least not in its entirety."

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I found this article to be quite interesting. I am, however, one of those rare book collectors who actually reads her books. I know.... How could I? My reply is "How could I NOT?" My collection rose from my desire to have a personal library full of well loved books waiting to be reread and books as yet unread waiting to give me the pleasure of reading. Don't get me wrong, I love the hunt - the rare find - a lovely, rare book (especially one at a good price). I love the fine, leather bindings and gold gilt page ends - the author signature - the first edition. As strong as this love may be, however, books are all about reading for me - always have been. I read very carefully but I do read.

How about you? Do you read your treasures or place them on a shelf or behind glass and love them from a bit of a distance? I'd love your feedback...

Nobel Winning Author, Jose Saramago, Dies At 87

54420059 300x188 Nobel Winning Author, Jose Saramago, Dies At 87

Jose Saramago dies at 87; Portuguese novelist won the 1998 Nobel Prize in literature

The writer was 60 before he penned most of the works for which he was honored. He explored historical themes from unconventional angles, and society through imaginative, inexplicable events.

Source: LA Times
June 19, 2010

Jose Saramago, winner of the 1998 Nobel Prize in literature for early novels that explored historical themes from unconventional angles and later works in which inexplicable events threaten society's underpinnings, has died. He was 87.

The writer died Friday at his home in Lanzarote, one of Spain's Canary Islands, of multiple organ failure after a long illness, according to the Jose Saramago Foundation