Friday, February 25, 2011

Cramps Back And Ovaries

Pearls


Con cada edición de la Feria del Libro Antiguo y de Ocasión, la Universidad de Sevilla tiene de unos años a esta parte la loable costumbre de publicar un libro que, presentado como un complemento más de la cita, enriquezca la misma con nuevas investigaciones o visiones de la historia sevillana relacionada en mayor o menor medida con el mundo del libro. Al publicado en la edición anterior, el interesante Enfermos del libro, Miguel Albero, now joins this A world of books, anthology llamésmola, bibliophiles, since the charge of the edition, Professor Yolanda Morato-author also of a chapter-brings together pages on their travels different authors for the libraries of old and antique half the world.
Following a foreword by Juan Manuel Bonet, which also offer their scrupulous investigation by the juicy backroom Parisian quixotic journey, something feverish, begins in the city of Seville, with a long tradition in the world of old book. The oldest Fernando Ortiz traces the vision of the libraries were, while Juan Bonilla designs the contours of which follow, a path encouraged by his usual antics and memorable episodes. In Madrid, Jesus Marchamalo dedicated dive into the books, while the essential Andrés Trapiello greets regular suppliers almost as one of the house. In fact, if you wander through the Cuesta Moyano, create shadow always guess the writer Leon. The European tour continues with the invaluable Iwasaki, checking if they are true legends and myths circulating about the Shakespeare and Company, continues to prowl Morató letraherido of London, with the protective embrace feels Emilio Quintana in bookstores Stockholm and culminates with the exciting ride Eva Diaz Perez for the fascinating Prague and Budapest, owners of unknown places steeped in nineteenth-century beauty.
crossed the pond and came to America with a fun trip Bonilla Latin American libraries seeking hidden treasures at bargain prices, and an equally hilarious story of another seeker, José María Conget, which is almost always ahead of the antiquarian bookseller by excellence of our country, Abelardo Linares. This odyssey of ink spent and yellow paper culminates with the visions of Morató about New Orleans, Garriga Vela on Caracas and Miguel Alberto on Buenos Aires. All of them offer clues and places that we can not ignore, and remind us that sometimes a good edition of this book we thought was lost is well worth allowing ourselves a little life.

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