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  • June / July 2008

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    the edition

     <<   icon!   >>                        .    .........................................        <

    This issue << Sophie Aldred on Dr Who >>

    Introducing << Briefing book trends >>

    <<Fiver: Iconoclastic>>

    plus all the Regular Features and reviews

     

    IMPORTANT

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    to view all pages go to Blog Archives and repeat click Month

     ??The month's cover detail is revealed in Cover Story??

  • 01 contents

    5:52 PM PST, 6/12/2008

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    <in this issue>

    <in this issue>

    02 <foreword>

    03 <book worm> Cai Guo-Qiang

    04 <thematic>

    05 <briefing: book trends>

    06 <feature story> Companion Piece - Sophie Aldred

    07 <rule of thumb>

    08 <biblio-key>

    09 <fiver> iconoclastic

    10 <gift wrap service>

    11 <rule of thumb>

    12 <guide to grades>

    13 <bespoke wrapping>

    14 <cover story>

    15 <browser endnotes>

    <<navigation>>

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  • 02 foreword

    5:49 PM PST, 6/12/2008

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    <foreword>

     

    This month the icon book sale celebrates stars, biographies and the world of entertainment. 

    You will find books on film icons, like Marilyn Monroe, biographies on auters such as Alfred Hitchcock, and behind-the-scene accounts of televison treasures, like Dr Who (see the interview with Sophie Aldred below).  And if that seems like pretty standard stuff, you will also find icons from the world of music (Vintage Bowie) sport (Arkle - the wonder horse, a sporting icon if ever there was one) and comic book heroes.  There are picture books engaging with the visual pleasures of celebrity culture (Madonna's Sex anyone?), as well as more analytically heavy material, so you'll find media and film studies books here too.

     

    Icon runs through June alongside the Cult Fiction theme.  Featured books are available through Buy it Now so no need to wait until an auction finishes ... buy it and it will be dispatched immediately for your reading pleasure, and fully protected from knock in the post (see the section on packaging below).  

    Happy reading,

    dene october

  • 03 book worm

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    <book worm: Cai Guo-Qiang> 

    The burning book is one of the most powerful images of the suppression of free speech. But Cai Guo-Qiang’s Danger Book: Suicide Fireworks (2008) is a set of books that’s pages are actually made from gunpowder. The unique pieces of art may already have gone up in smoke, but the photographic memory above is just one of the many eclectic book works on display at London’s Victoria & Albert Museum.

     

    ‘Blood on Paper’ showcases artist’s books from the influential to the unknown.  At a time when the physicality of the book is challenged by the advent of the electronic book, the artist’s responses to the historical notion of the ‘livre d'artiste’ are, not surprisingly, varied and often personal.  Louise Bourgeois’s spider etchings (Ode à ma Mère, 1995) are beautiful and disturbing; Jeff Koons’ ‘The Jeff Koons Handbook’ (1992) is clearly self-referential while Anish Kapoor has contributed books with torn pages entitled Wound (2006).

     

    Blood on Paper: The Art of the Book, V&A until June 29, 2008

    Cai Guo-Qiang  ‘Danger Book: Suicide Fireworks’ Photo © Tatsumi Masatoshi, Courtesy Ivory Press (2006) / V&A

     

     

  • 04 thematic: the month's theme

    5:42 PM PST, 6/12/2008

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    <thematic>

    The month's theme is icon and what could be more iconic than the Tardis?

  • 05 briefing: book trends

    5:41 PM PST, 6/12/2008

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    <manhua>

    The Chinese Comic, previously a big influence on Japanese manga, is currently making a big name for itself. With attention focused on the Chinese Olympiad, Manhua is one of many underground mediums providing an alternative perspective on Chinese culture. 

     

    An exhibition, China Comics Now, is currently touring the UK with the main focus on the manhua artists who are revolutionising comics. Curator Paul Gravett reckons that manhua could soon spin off into films and games media making it potentially a huge publishing phenomenon.

     

    According to Yishan Li, an artist who already has mainstream success, manhua is not merely the hybrid of Japanese manga and western comics. ‘It is more about the Chinese way of telling stories,’ she says.

     

  • 06 feature story

    5:40 PM PST, 6/12/2008

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    <companion piece:

    sophie aldred talks about life after doctor who>

    I am sharing the sofa with Sophie Aldred in her comfy, suburban home when I get the nagging sensation that this ordinary setting is sin­gularly appropriate to our meeting. The sitting room is lit­tered with all the right references. A miniature 1960s-style police call box, for instance, which, when the doors swing open, reveals a working phone. There are mundane, homely touches too. Pastel coffee mugs you’d find in any hardware store. Shelves crammed with old Blue Peter annuals and Smiths' records. And there's the sofa itself, which we are not hiding behind, but merely sitting upon. This is hardly the world of Dr. Who, yet the feeling persists. There is something so wrong it is right. A background buzz. The sound of knocks and thumps and drilling, noises off for which Sophie makes a loud apology into my tape recorder. ‘I'll ask the workmen to stop,’ she offers. Suddenly my mental TV flickers with the memory of Tardis doors refusing to come to a silent rest … of the feet of extras emerging from cobbled Dalek skirts … of pretty, young assistants screaming and running circles around a tiny Shepherd's Bush studio … of fluffed lines and wobbly sets. Suddenly her offer seems singularly inappropriate. ‘Resistance is useless!’ I want to tell her.

     

    ‘I get quite cross when people talk about wobbly sets,’ Sophie Aldred [aka Ace] opines. ‘We never had any wobbly sets. The BBC would always put their all into it, certainly the ones I worked on. We had the most incredible sets and costumes.’

     

     She does have a point. The wobbly sets happened, but they were a feature of the original black and white stories that were rarely off the air in the 1960s. Recorded as it were ‘live’, there wasn't the time or money to do a second take and, depending on your point of view, the effect was either clumsy or charming. Sophie Aldred hit the screens during the 1980s – an altogether more sophisticated era, or so it seems to her. Her character Ace, companion to the seventh Doctor, Sylvester McCoy, had a predilection for explosives, and cost quite a bit of the special effects budget.

     

    ‘The companions were a clever device whereby the audience was led into the Doctor's world. The Doctor always remained a bit far apart and mysterious, whereas the companion would be the audience's representative. With some assistants you look back in horror at what they did but that was the role of w-omen on television in the Sixties. The women weren’t really that important and were usually just sex

    symbols. I think Ace was very much a product of the Eighties’.

     

    Unlike previous companions, Ace represented something of an egalitarian challenge to the patriarchal Doctor of the 1960s and 1970s. Excitable, rebellious and occasionally arrogant Ace often quarrelled with ‘the professor’ although ultimately lacking the sophistication to win these spats.

     

    ‘I suppose I was cast because of my personality fitting in with the personality of Ace, although I have never gone around blowing things up with Nitro 9 or hitting Daleks with baseball bats! The character was based on the kind of confident person I was at twen­ty-five rather than the sixteen-year-old Ace was meant to be. I had a big say in my costume and this was apparently quite unusual. I had come from the world of children’s theatre where your input made a difference. We’d all sit around discussing what clothes we should wear. I assumed that television would be the same, so in I went, guns blazing, saying, oh - I think I should wear this, and luckily people took it on board. I ended up wearing this black bomber jack­et I'd seen in The Face, and some Dr. Martens, which were just coming in at the time . . . ‘cause I’m so trendy’.  Sophie pulls at the shaggy jumper and well-used joggers she’s wearing, punc­tuating the fashion statement with another laugh.

     

    Even though the female companions have taken on ever more active roles recently, as played by the likes of Billie Piper, Freema Agyeman and Catherine Tate, Sophie doubts that much has changed intrinsically. ‘Really it’s the same old character, isn't it? Companion gets in a spot and the Doctor rescues her’. Why not have the Doctor regenerate as a woman, I suggest. Sophie laughs like she never heard that one before. ‘I’m terribly old fash­ioned, I'm afraid. So much for my feminism. It goes out of the window when I think of the Doctor. I think things like the Rani work very well as women, the baddies. But, it’s just nice to have the Doctor as a paternal figure’.

     

    Although her time travels were brought to an emergency stop in 1989, the character Ace has lived on through the pages of Virgin’s New Adventures novels. ‘It was strange to read about my character but I think they did a very good job. It was a funny feeling but I'm not possessive enough to think, oh no, I wouldn’t have done that! You do relinquish the character. But I've only read three. I’m not really interested in the sci­ence fiction genre, I mean, I love Terry Pratchett, I love that humorous stuff. But I'm more interested in writing for children’.

     

    Like her idol, third Doctor Jon Pertwee, Sophie is very active on the fan club scene. ‘I was at a conven­tion and Carole Ann Ford (the very first companion) was signing autographs and I thought, wow, that was forty years ago and she's never been allowed to forget it. It doesn't get in the way of my career though and while I still enjoy going to conventions and meeting fans and doing things like writing the Ace! book, I'll continue to do it. It’s a lovely thing to think that work I did is still thought of highly’.

     

    Sophie’s book –  Ace! – follows the three years of Sylvester McCoy’s tenure as Doctor, from both behind-­the-scenes and on-camera perspectives, and is illustrated with original artwork and over three hundred pri­vately owned photographs. ‘Mike Tucker - who I wrote it with - and I had a huge collection of personal photographs hanging around in drawers, gathering dust. Because I was new to television, I just used to go around taking loads of photographs. When we took it to Virgin, they just couldn’t believe how much material we had ... design drawings ... interviews ... just masses and masses of material. I’ve always liked writ­ing diaries as well. It's a very personal book, I'm quite honest in it (well, very honest!) about what I was going through. It's for fans really. But it amazes me to think that fans would be interested in my life. I feel like such an ordinary person’.

     

    The downside of having played a companion is being so associated with the role that people are forever asking what she'll do next. ‘I’m very lucky to be kept working all the time, particularly with children’s presenting’.  At this point, a loud bang reverber­ates through Sophie’s house followed by a brief pause and more smiles. ‘And I’m busy decorating the house,’ she adds.

     

    ‘I’d like to do a period drama, a Sense and Sensibilities type role. Or a British X Files, but play it more feisty, riding around on a motorbike, say’. Indeed, Sophie isn’t ready to consign the bomber jacket to a dusty drawer just yet. ‘It has been suggested that it would be really neat if I came back because I wouldn’t recognise the regenerated Doctor’. A precedent was set when 1970s companion, Sarah Jane Smith (Elisabeth Sladen), joined David Tennant’s Doctor, and even landed a children’s TV spin-off. How would Sophie feel about that? ‘I’m a real fan,’ she confesses, ‘so of course, that’s just what I’d like to hear’.

     

     

    IMPORTANT

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  • 07 rule of thumb book review

    5:39 PM PST, 6/12/2008

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    <rule of thumb>  

    Babylon 5 Season by Season  Point of No Return #3~ Jane Killick

    Brief Blurb:

    Number three in the series by series guide to the cult TV programme.

    About the book:  Not being much of a BabyFive anorak, I am passing this on to a fan for review. 'Be critical!' I explain. 'Okay,' he says. 'If I was being critical,' he continues, 'I'd have to say the books aren't all that critical.' 'And that's important?' I ask. 'Not really,' he says, 'but you asked me to be critical. This is a book for fans,' he explains, 'since the fans already like the series, there's really not much need for criticism.' Fans, apparently, will be energized by the introductory article on special effects, smacking their lips at the prospect of the season three overview and synopsis of all 22 episodes, and positively wetting their pants at the thought of the cast and crew providing crucial behind-the-scenes insight. ‘But casual viewers will benefit most,’ my guest reviewer explains contrarily, ‘since the books fill the gaps of missing episodes and highlight the relevance of the story arcs to the series’.

    Spoiler quote: ‘At last, after more than a year of building the relationship between these two people, they kiss.’

    Rule of Thumb: Polite thumb –  it’s good … if this is your bag 

  • 08 biblio-key book collector glossary

    5:38 PM PST, 6/12/2008

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    <biblio-key>

    binding

    .

    .

    The binding is what holds the pages together.  Binding methods can include sewing and stapling the inner sheets into outer wraps. However the binding most commonly refers to hardbacks: a book bound in boards covered with material like leather or cloth.  ‘Full binding’, three-quarter, half and quarter binding all refer to leather-bound books.  While full binding refers to a book fully bound in leather, three-quarter binding indicates leather spine and corners covering three-quarters of the top edge (half-binding, only half the top edge, and so on).  When a book is described as a ‘binding copy’ this usually means that it is no better than a reading copy in quality – it either lacks the original binding or a fair/good quality one.

     

    <in previous issues>

    endpapers - may 2008

    wrappers – april 2008

    foxing – march 2008

    french flaps – february 2008

     

  • 09 fiver

    5:38 PM PST, 6/12/2008

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    <fiver >

    Iconoclastic: Celebrity as Author?

    5. William Shatner is the popular one from 1960s cult TV Star Trek – well, with the fans anyway.  According to the actor, he isn’t quite as popular with ex cast members.  He moans all about it in his autobiography Up Till Now (Thomas Dunne, 2008), a book that gossip about these unlovely ex cast members.

    4. One of the above is Leonard (Spock) Nimoy who comes in for a teacherly word, or several, because of his irrational alcohol addiction.  Nimoy prefers working in the theatre to TV (particularly London theatres).  It could be that it’s a lot less bitchy, or maybe it’s because, as the Vulcan himself admits, you get to drink during the intermission.

    3. Spice woman, Victoria Beckham, when asked for her favourite book, replied ‘fashion magazines’.  Apparently she has never read a book.  No, not even her own.  No, not even one of the hundreds of biographies on her hubby.  All of which is not terribly surprising … apart from her erudite endorsement of ex models Kim Barnouin and Rory Freedman's ‘diet novel’ Skinny Bitch (Running Press, 2005).

    2. If her pop and film careers failed, Madonna Ciccone Ritchie still has a colourful literary reputation to fall back on.  Her children’s book series The English Roses (Callaway, 2003) has been criticised for alleged Kabbalah propaganda. Children might find her back catalogue – the aluminium book Sex (Secker & Warburg, 1992) – more liberating.  Meanwhile her latest controversial literary contribution is for the book Vogue Living: House, Garden, People (Knopf, 2007) which sees her romanticising her rural retreat by dyeing her pet sheep all manner of unnatural colours.

    1. When British actress Joanna Lumley, former pin-up girl of The New Avengers (1976), donated an entire top shelf of well-read paperbacks to a South London homeless charity, and then hand-signed every last one of them, she might have expected them to fly out like they'd be high-kicked Purdey style.  At a fiver a throw, customers have given the idea a good kicking instead.  Maybe she should stick to signing the books she actually writes.