Thursday, July 14, 2011

Bookworm of Gensan collects: Harry Potter Books







The endgame is here! Harry Potter, the movie series, is at its end four years after the 7th novel (Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows) was published. I ordered in advance the first editions of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows and lined up for them in 2005 and 2007 at the National Book Store branch in Gaisano Mall, Davao City. I have seen the 7 films based on the novels, but I'm not that eager to line up to be among the first to see the last installment. I have a boxed DVD set of the first five films and I'm definitely going to get the rest to complete the collection.

I have a clear idea of how to promote Harry Potter in the future: Read the books first!

Over the years, I have collected the Harry Potter books by J. K. Rowling. At first, I completely ignored Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone. I thought it was good for kids and teenagers. But when one of my fave authors, Stephen King, started raving about it, that certainly piqued my curiosity. It was the news that the Harry Potter was encouraging kids to read and making reading cool that made me sit up and decide to buy a copy for myself.


And so I bought the first novel in trade paperback edition and had since replaced it with a hardcover edition I bought from ebay.ph. The rest of the series I bought in hardcover editions; the last two were first editions ordered in advance. When the last two novels were released worldwide, I had to travel three hours by bus to Davao City (116 kilometers from General Santos City) at 3 a.m. and waited in line in front of the National Book Store branch in Gaisano Mall with mostly kids and teeners with their parents at 6 a.m. The noise was unbelievable when a security guard opened the doors and admitted us at 7 a.m. Our wait was rewarded with freebies like Harry Potter posters and bookmarks. The three-hour bus ride home whizzed by because by then I had already started reading the first few chapters.

Other Harry Potter-related books I collected are:
This book was mentioned in the Harry Potter as a textbook in Hogwarts. J. K. Rowling wrote this using the name of the author as specified in the novels.
 
Quidditch fascinated the students of Hogwarts. J. K. Rowling also wrote this using the name of the author as specified in the novels.

The latest book by J. K. Rowling which was a book of fairy tales given by Albus Dumbledore to Hermione Granger in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hollows
These non-fiction books tackle all matters and sundry about the Harry Potter novels. I purposely did not collect books linking the novels to witchcraft and satanic rituals. I personally thinks such books as hogwarts, err, hogwash.
A pop-up book for kids
Definitely Hogwarts!

The latest pop-up book which is more elaborately crafted.
The dragon of Deathly Hallows

Diagon Alley with Harry and Hagrid
Hogwarts, again!

 
Facsimile of the admission letter to Hogwarts received by Harry.
Tri-Wizard Quidditch Tournament with guess-who in the center.

Last, but not the least, books on J. K. Rowling, the creator of Harry Potter and his magical wizarding world.





Bookworm of Gensan collects: 75 Years of DC Comics: The Art of Modern Mythmaking


75 Years of DC Comics: The Art of Modern Mythmaking by Paul Levitz is the largest and heaviest book in my collection as of today. 

It has 720 pages! It is humongous at 7.2 kilos (15.9 pounds)! It is 29 cm. (11.4 inches) wide and 39.5 cm (15.6 inches tall) tall! It is 7.62 cm (3 inches) thick, although the record belongs to another big, but that's for another blogpost to tackle! 

Taschen, the publisher for its large-format and heavy tomes, describes it as the crown jewel in the library of book collectors. And I agree!

This is one book I can't carry with me although it comes with a handy box. I can't read it on my lap because it's too heavy!




Its price is gargantuan too (even at half-price)! Click here to find out its price.




 But it contains lots of illustrations, with each chapter marked with a glossy prismatic picture! Looking at the pictures alone will take me days! With 75 years of DC Comics history and its superheroes and characters ranging from Superman to Neil Gaiman's The Sandman, this is one book I intend to savor reading one page at a time.






 It has many fold-outs reaching up to four feet!
The symbolic end page.

What lies beneath the colorful dust jacket

 

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Bookworm of Gensan goes sleuthing: Mystery of a Long-lost Book incidentally found in a Used Book Store







As usual, I was at my favorite Used Book Store (UBS) on a Sunday morning (July 2) trawling for interesting books to read and to give as gifts. I normally apply my ukay-ukay skills in looking for books that interest me or some bookworm friends, grandkids and godchildren so usually I start at the shelves containing nonfiction books, coffee-table books, novels, children's books and end up at the magazine bins. But that Sunday morning, I started at the magazine bins and proceeded to the coffee-table books. When I pulled out Carl Sagan's Cosmos from the shelf, this is what I saw which shocked me!

The book's dust jacket with two price labels on it.
NF-S 16 code written near the spine of the book.

The first picture above shows the book's dust jacket with two UBS price labels. The picture below it shows my own version of the Dewey Decimal System of classifying the books in my library written in black marker ink near the book spine (NF-S 16)!

I immediately scanned the book for other marks I made on it.

Rubber stamp mark of my name was erased from the inside front cover.
The title page of the book with the rubber stamp mark of my name was torn out.
Rubber stamp mark of my name on page 11.
The rubber stamp mark of my name was carefully cut from page 111.
While taking a few moments to take shots of the book with my cellphone camera, only one thought swirled in my mind: How the hell did my long-lost book end up here in UBS? 


Summoning up from my memory the adventures of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson, Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys which I read as a child and teenager, I resolved to get to the bottom of this mystery.

Back at home, I took out the binder which contains the catalog of books I have in my library. This is what I found in the catalog:


I wrote  and a check mark after the book title which meant somebody borrowed it, but I couldn't, at that time, recall who it was. I remember though having read it in the early 1990s when I transferred to my present residence and someone borrowed it not long afterwards. That was almost twenty years ago! It was time for some detective work! Let's go, Sherlock Holmes, Dr. Watson, Nancy Drew, and Joe and Frank Hardy!

As far as I can remember, only two friends used to borrow hard-cover, coffee-table and pocketbooks from me and were delinquent in returning them: Delinquent Young Borrower (DYB) and Delinquent Old Borrower (DOB). DYB is a graduate of the university I work for while DOB is a local writer. Both of them were interested in astronomy, the unknown, UFOs. 

My primary suspect was DYB. He used to travel from Davao City and Metro Manila and vice-versa. It could be that he went through hard times and had to sell my books to UBS branches found in Davao City and Metro Manila. But wait! I know for a fact that UBS has a centralized buying system which sources used books from the USA. So it couldn't be DYB. Hmmmm . . .

On the other hand, I always meet DOB at UBS where I would drop hints about his returning my books (to no avail). At the time he borrowed books from me, he told me he needed them to write his book about extraterrestrials landing in Mindanao (this book was finally published last summer).

So I went back to UBS on July 5 to talk to the branch cashier who was on her day-off that Sunday. I took out Carl Sagan's Cosmos from the shelf and showed her the proofs that I own the book.

I told her I had two suspects, but since she didn't know DYB personally, I only mentioned DOB's name. She looked at the book's dust jacket and the price labels. She said one of the labels indicates that the book was shipped to UBS just last month. She told me she remembers DOB buying it and returning it soon after because he already had a copy of it. 

Together, we pieced the mystery of the long-lost book and answered the question How the hell did my long-lost book end up here in UBS?:

DOB still has the copy of my book which he borrowed almost twenty years ago. He wants to get rid of it. So when he saw the used copy on sale at UBS, he saw the opportunity to do so. 

He bought the book and once back at his house, removed the dust jacket and switched the UBS copy with my book. He took pains to remove signs of my ownership on it (some, but not all) and returned it (my book) covered in the dust jacket of the UBS copy several days later. Sitting on his bookshelf at home now is his copy Carl Sagan's Cosmos
What he didn't count on was that with my ukay-ukay skills (plus some detective work), I would eventually discover the switching he did.

Mystery of a long-lost book incidentally found in a Used Book Store: SOLVED!

As to what motivated DOB to do the dirty deed of switching my book with what he bought at UBS instead of returning it to its rightful owner (me!) deserves another blogpost. :)


Sunday, June 19, 2011

Bookworm of Gensan collects: Rizaliana






Having studied our national hero, Jose Rizal in high school and college, I remained interested in and curious about him.


In college, we had a 3-unit course on the national hero for which our textbook was written by Gregorio Zaide. 
I've read Rizal's Noli Me Tangere (Touch Me Not) in English (titled The Social Cancer) and Filipino and in comics (graphic novel) form. I'm rediscovering it this time with the Penguin edition with Harold Augenbraum as translator.

This year, in honor of Rizal's 150th birthday, Penguin released El Filibusterismo (The Filibustering/Subversive), the sequel to Noli Me Tangere. Translation is also by Harold Augenbraum. I've read this in college as The Reign of Greed.

The first of 3 books on Rizal by historian and Rizal scholar, Ambeth Ocampo, Rizal without the Overcoat humanizes the hero.
Meaning and History collates the lectures made by Ambeth Ocampo on Rizal.

Ambeth Ocampo shared with his readers Makamisa, Rizal's third novel and how it was discovered. 




Lolo Jose: An Intimate and Illustrated Portrait of Jose Rizal by Asuncion Lopez Bantug is by far the most personal and lavish biography of the hero by one of his descendants that I have read.

Double Lives: Crafting Your Life of Work & Passion for Untold Success, by David A. Heenan features Rizal as a model for using his passion for success.