A Running Tally of Literary Larceny

Posted on by Alex Dalenberg

​The ABAA has got its eye on book thieves.

​The ABAA has got its eye on book thieves.

By Alex Dalenberg

March 25, 2013

A few weeks ago I stumbled on the literary world’s version of the old MISSING notices that used to be printed on the side of milk cartons. Or maybe a better analogy would be the AMBER Alert.

Kidnapping is (obviously) in a different league than book theft, but, if an antique text goes missing, there’s a good chance that an alert will be posted to the Missing and Stolen Books Blog maintained by the Antiquarian Booksellers’ Association of America.

Perusing the pilfered book listings, it struck me as something of a mournful chronicle.

​A few examples.

Stolen: ‘Habits of Monks’, 36 Hand Colored plates.

This piece, circa 1850, was taken from the Pennsylvania Rare Books & Manuscripts Company and contains illustrations of the various ordained and non ordained members of various orders.

Stolen: 1611 Bible

Taken from Staniland Booksellers in the U.K.

Stolen: First Edition of Huckleberry Finn.

The entry describes it as an original 1885 copy with a green pictorial cover, taken from Lost Horizon Bookstore in Santa Barbara.

Items Missing from the San Francisco Fair

These included a First Annual Report of Central Park and Plain Facts about North Dakota, 1888.

And the listings go on.

When I talked with Susan Benne, executive director at ABAA, she told me that, because the collecting world is so small, the blog has actually been effective in helping owners track down their stolen goods. Benne said, in one case, a thief attempted to sell an antique book stolen from one side of Manhattan to a bookseller across the park on the other.

The blog itself is the evolution of a database that the trade group has maintained for years. And this isn’t the only stolen book database online. The International League of Antiquarian Booksellers keeps its own, as well as the Rare Books and Manuscripts Section of the Association of College and Research Libraries.

So I guess the point is, don’t steal books.

Also worth checking out is ABAA’s regular blog, regularly updated with news in the book collecting world, including information about conferences and fairs. We’ll be checking out the New York Antiquarian Book Fair in April, hosted by ABAA.

Holy Fabrication, Batman!

Posted on by Alex Dalenberg

Approved_by_the_Comics_Code_Authority.gif

By Alex Dalenberg

February 13, 2013

Once upon a time, our fair nation — or at least its politicians — decided to investigate an insidious threat to America’s youth: sex and violence in pop culture.

Actually, make that, any time in America, ever, but in this case I’m talking about the 1954 hearings in which a U.S. Senate subcommittee took the comic book industry to task over graphic content, as well as the presence of a pool hall in River City, Iowa.

The hearings have long been the subject of ridicule, but recently published research from a University of Illinois professor have found that the urtext of the anti-comic book crusade, Seduction of the Innocent by psychiatrist Frederic Wertham, was pretty much bogus.

H/T to comic book industry blog Bleeding Cool for digging this one up.

Dr. Carol Tilley dug into Wertham’s personal archive, which wasn’t made available to researchers until 2010 even though Wertham died in 1981. That’s pretty amazing to me, considering the impact Seduction of the Innocent had on an entire arm of the publishing industry. Congress took up the issue in large part due to widespread public outrage tied to Wertham’s book which, among other things, suggested that reading Batman comics could turn a child into a sexual predator.

Turns out Wertham distorted key quotes, left out critical contextual information and altered even basic data such as his subjects' ages while conducting his research into comic books. You can find a nice summary of Tilley’s work here at the Illinois website.

Tilley also uncovers some overlooked historical footnotes, such as letters written by young readers in defense of their comic books, some of them pointing out that works of Shakespeare, Poe and the Brothers Grimm are similarly gory.

As any comic geek knows, the committee hearings and ensuing fallout from advertisers led the industry to form the Comics Code Authority — sort of the comic book version of the Motion Picture Rating Association. Similar to the way an NC-17 rating is the kiss of death for mainstream box office success today, advertisers tended to avoid any comic book without the Comics Code Authority stamp.

Amazingly, the Comics Code Authority persisted until 2010 (ironically, the same year Wertham's archive was finally made public). The verdict is still out whether or not it achieved its mission of halting the nation's slide into decadence and moral decay.