This past February, librarians at the Russian State Polytechnical Museum Library in Moscow were preparing their collection for relocation to a temporary depository when they made a surprising discovery. Behind one of the emptied stacks a librarian noticed a plywood wall that sounded hollow when knocked upon. The cover was moved aside and revealed a number of books. As librarians dug deeper and removed the entire wall, they uncovered a 6.5 foot long hiding place that housed 30,000 books printed before the Russian Revolution in 1917. The books were almost exclusively in foreign languages. Svetlana Kukhtevich, deputy director of the Polytechnic Library, explained that "scientists and generally educated people of the 19th century spoke several languages and there was no need to publish books in Russian." The majority of the books were printed in the late 19th and early 20th century, but the oldest book in the collection, "Description of Picteresque Areas Occupied by Germany", was published in 1706. (Don't you love the titles of 18th century books?!) The state fund was responsible for all book collections nationalized during and following the revolution, and most of the hidden books were transferred to the Polytechnical Library from the fund. A number of volumes still contained bookplates, which indicate the original owners. The best part is that librarians later discovered another hollow sounding plywood wall within the archives that revealed two additional niches stuffed with 19... [more Secret Wall in Russian Library Reveals Hidden Trove of Books]

A rare watercolor of the Brontë sisters is scheduled to be auctioned on Thursday by JP Humbert Auctioneers in England. The painting was originally set to be sold last month, but was pulled at the last moment as auctioneers tried to establish a more direct link to the supposed artist, Sir Edwin Landseer. The painting had been previously attributed by the National Portrait Gallery after four years of research by the vendor, but the auction house wanted to make certain that the link between the artist and the Brontë sisters was as solid as it seemed. John Humbert, of JP Humbert Auctioneers, says that experts have now confirmed the painting was done by Sir Edwin Landseer and is strongly believed to be of the famous sisters. "We have spent quite some time trying to establish a link between Landseer and the Brontes and after cross referencing with other known pictures by Landseer, we are confident that we have a strong argument that this picture is as important as we hoped," Humbert said. Mr. Humbert went on to say that thre has been international interest in the item and it is expected to raise between �20,000 and �30,000 ($31,580-$47,370). Brontës watercolour up for auction [more Watercolor of Brontë Sisters to be Auctioned]

The ABAA's Pacific Northwest Chapter is pleased to announce that it will be sponsoring a Rare Booksellers' Seminar on Digital Tools and Tricks for the Bookselling Trade. The seminar will be held in Seattle on Thursday, June 28 from 9am-4pm. ABAA members and booksellers in the Pacific Northwest region are invited to attend this free event, but space is limited and pre-registration is required. Digital Tools and Tricks for the Bookselling Trade Featuring via Skype: * Joel Silver, Associate Director and Curator of Books, The Lilly Library, Indiana University: My Favorite Reference Sources for Researching Rare Books * Dan Gregory from Between the Covers Rare Books: Rare Book Photography for the Busy Book Professional * Luke Lozier, from Bibliopolis: Don't Trust the Cloud: Maintaining Control over your Digital Assets * Joachim Koch, from Books Tell You Why: The Ins/Outs and Importance of Social Media for the Rare Bookseller: Twitter, Blogs, Facebook, et al. Thursday, June 28th: 9am to 4 pm Reception courtesy of the PNW Chapter to follow. Seattle Public Library, Level 4, Conference Room 2 (also known as the Howard S. Wright Family and Janet W. Ketchum Conference Room) For directions and parking information: http://www.spl.org/locations/central-library/cen-getting-there-and-parking To register for the seminar, please contact Priscilla Lowry-Gregor at rarebooks@lowryjames.com. Remember, space is limited, so register now! [more Seattle Rare Booksellers' Seminar, 6/28/12]

UPDATE: This item has been recovered. The following photograph album has recently gone missing from a customer's collection. If anyone is offered this album (or parts that sound suspiciously like it) please contact John Kuenzig at (978) 887-4053 or orders@kuenzigbooks.com SIXTY-SIX ORIGINAL IMAGES FROM THE LANDMARK HARVARD-BOSTON AERO MEET OF 1910, THE FIRST MAJOR AVIATION EXHIBITION ON THE EAST COAST. THERE ARE IMAGES OF PRESIDENT TAFT, WILBUR WRIGHT AND GLENN CURTISS (HARVARD-BOSTON AERO MEET OF 1910). The Harvard-Boston Aero Meet was held from September 3rd to 13th, 1910. The Harvard Aeronautical Society was formed in 1909 and they held the next year the second aviation meet in the United States; the first one was held in Los Angeles earlier in 1910. The local citizens raised $50,000 to fund the event and put up $40,000 in prize money, including contests for endurance, speed and altitude. The publisher of The Boston Globe put up $10,000 for a thirty-three mile race around the Boston Light. Some of the great early aviators who participate were Wilbur Wright, Glenn Curtiss, Claude Grahame-White, A.V. Roe, Walter Brookins and Ralph Johnstone. President Taft and his family attended. It is estimated that one million people saw a plane during the meet, and it still was not enough to satisfy the crowds, since the flyers continued two days after the official end of the meet. The result was to convince hundreds of thousands of Americans that flying was safe and possible. Photograph... [more UPDATE: Missing Materials Related to 1st Aviation Exhibition]

In the 1960s, Richard Booth had an idea: turn his small hometown of Hay-on-Wye in Wales into an international attraction by filling it with bookshops. (A bibliophile's dream!) He opened his first second-hand bookstore in an old movie house in 1961, and it was such a success that other residents took his lead and began opening their own shops. Over the years, when a business closed in Hay the space was often converted into a bookshop and the town slowly became filled with bookstores. Converting the businesses in this manner left a number of bookshops in unusual locations, like an old hair salon, a fire hall, a hardware store, and even a castle. Part of Mr. Booth's dream for Hay was to have a number of small specialist bookshops, a goal that has been realized with stores like the Poetry Bookshop, which focuses entirely on- you guessed it- poetry; Outcast Books, which specializes in applied social sciences, psychology, and psychotherapy; Murder and Mayhem, a shop filled with crime fiction; and C. Arden Bookseller, a "Natural History and Gardening Bookshop". Today, Hay is home to approximately 1,300 people and boasts a whopping 30 bookshops. Its reputation as the "Town of Books" grew along with every bookshop that opened and in 1988 Hay appropriately launched a book festival, the Hay Festival of Literature & the Arts. This year's festival will take place from May 31-June 10 and will feature readings, workshops, book signings, and "endless entertainment". The Hay Festival has attr... [more Hay-on-Wye: A Small Welsh Town with a Decidedly Bookish Character]

Member Bob Topp of Hermitage Book Shop was recently named a 7Everyday Hero by ABC Denver for his volunteer work with children. For the past eighteen years, Bob has been visiting Bergen Valley Elementary School to read to children, grades 3-5. He began volunteering when his own children attended the school, but he enjoyed encouraging children to read so much that he continues to do so to this day. "I cannot describe it," Bob says. "Everybody says how much the kids enjoy it. It doesn't hold a candle to how much I enjoy it." The children Bob reads to are equally delighted by his visits. "A lot of schools don't get it, so we're really cool that we get him to come to our school," says Lily Urban, 3rd grade. "When he reads a story he always picks out a book almost as if he has a kid's mind." Congratulations on the award, Bob, and thank you for inspiring future generations of readers! Volunteer Shares Love Of Books In The Classroom [more Member in the News: Bob Topp, Hermitage Book Shop]

Volunteers working for the CBC Calgary Reads book sale made an exciting discovery this week as they were sorting through the tens of thousands of donated booksa first edition of Hemingway's classic The Old Man and the Sea. An advisor on rare books for the sale, Gerry Morgan, says of the found copy, "The dust jacket is in very good condition which is fairly uncommon for a book from 1952 or 1953. It is not price-clipped, the price is still on the book. I think it's $3.30. And the only marking inside is a light pencil previous owner signature." He estimates it's worth to be between $1,000 and $1,200. The Old Man and the Sea was the last major work of fiction published by Hemingway (1952). It was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 1953 and it was cited by the Nobel Committee as a considering factor when Hemingway was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1954. The book will be offered in the CBC Calgary Reads book sale, which opens this Friday at noon. Rare Hemingway found among book sale donations [more Hemingway First Edition Found Among Book Donations]

Yesterday we were faced with the very sad news that beloved author and illustrator Maurice Sendak died at the age of 83. We're big fans of Mr. Sendak here at ABAA HQ, and it's difficult to find the right words to pay tribute to such an important literary figure. So, in lieu of a more personal eulogy, I've provided links below to several interviews and profiles. (He had so many interesting things to say, it really is worth taking the time to read a few.) We've lost a legend, but there's some consolation in the following quote. Mr. Sendak said, "There are so many beautiful things in the world which I will have to leave when I die, but I'm ready, I'm ready, I'm ready." Rest in peace, Mr. Sendak. NPR's Fresh Air has put together a wonderful compilation of interviews with Sendak over the years: Fresh Air Remembers Maurice Sendak Maurice Sendak Is Remembered Fondly by Author and Filmmaker William Joyce NY Times Obituary Maurice Sendak: 'I refuse to lie to children' Maurice Sendak on the First Book He's Written and Illustrated in 30 Years V.F. Portrait: Maurice Sendak Desperately Seeking Sendak (A Conversation Between Dave Eggers & Spike Jonze) If you've never seen the Colbert Report interview with Sendak, take a moment and have a laugh. Colbert Interview, Part I Colbert Interview, Part II [more Maurice Sendak (1928-2012)]

The Charleston Library Society, the oldest library in the South, has been conducting a muti-year search and cataloguing project to record the multitude of volumes it contains in its vault. (The library has been moved a number of times over the years and collections have been integrated, thus necessitating the project.) Recently the search unearthed a rare, 270-year-old book on political parties, Henry St. John Lord Bollinbroke's Dissertation Upon Parties. Published in 1743, the book was one of 800 volumes donated to the College of Charleston by John Mackenzie, a planter and diplomat in the 1700s. His library was housed at the Charleston Library Society until the college could erect its own library, but after a terrible fire in 1778 all but 77 of Mackenzie's donated books were thought to be lost. This newfound 78th volume, which is embossed with Mackenzie's name, will be returned to Charleston College in a special ceremony today. The book is quite rare; only 15 other copies remain in existence and most of them are held in academic libraries. A limited number to be sure, but the survival of that "many copies of a book that's almost 270 years old shows it was popular at the time". The search has turned up some other exciting discoveries, including two letters penned by Alexander Hamilton and "a unique third letter written by John Marshall, chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, to South Carolinian Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, who helped draft the Constitution", on the day that... [more 270-year-old Book and Other Valuable Documents Unearthed in the Charleston Library Society Vault]

After a friend showed Thom Adorney, a retired Colorado schoolteacher, an antique whaling journal written by an ancestor in the 1850s, Mr. Adorney had a great idea: why not give students at the local Ute Meadows Elementary School the unique opportunity to unlock history for themselves? For over a year now, that's exactly what students have been doing. The entire journal was photographed and students have been diligently transcribing its contents and recreating a map of the three year journey by entering navigational points onto Google Earth. The students expect to finish the transcription and map by the end of the month and, upon completion, their work will be published by the New Bedford Whaling Museum in Massachusetts. (The museum notes that over 14,000 whaling journals were created but most were lost over time.) Mr. Adorney is ecstatic that the children have been so engaged in the project and that they are actually participating in history rather than just learning about it. "Teachers always struggle to make history come alive for kids," he said. "It doesn't get any more real than this unless we're able to transport them back to the time and put them on the deck of the ship." You can watch a video report of this story below. Students work to document 155-year-old whaling journal [more Elementary School Children Bring History To Life with an Antique Whaling Journal]