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General Interest
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John Coughlin from Waning Moon Publications is very excited to be attending the first Esoteric Book Conference in Seattle this September as collector, author, and publisher. For US book collectors/enthusiasts this event is a big deal! |
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Read more: Esoteric Book Conference 2009
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General Interest
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Written by John J. Coughlin
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Thursday, 16 April 2009 18:44 |
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A few people have asked me how I keep track of planetary days/hours since I like to start my projects at the appropriate time. For example I try to start each batch of The Consecrated Little Book of Black Venus on the day and hour of Venus... in my case Friday nights. |
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Read more: Planetary timing during book production
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BiblioFiles
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On February 21st,1977 during a concert stop, KISS band members Gene Simmons, Ace Frehley, Paul Stanley and Peter Criss each donated blood to be collectively mixed with the red ink used in the printing of the first issue of the Marvel/KISS comics.
Authors wishing to add some of their own DNA to their work will be happy to know that
Tokyo-based Ko-sin Printing has developed a printing process that uses a special ink that includes DNA extracted from a hair or nail sample (from human or animal) provided by the author. Already Ko-sin has put the technology to use in some self-published autobiographies whose title pages are printed with ink that includes the author's DNA.
Per the company, mixing DNA in with the ink does not alter the appearance of the page and claims it is possible to extract genetic information from materials printed using this process.
Could this mean the cloning of authors in the not-to-distant future? Perhaps. When Ko-sin Printing sent a sample page to a DNA laboratory, the lab technicians were able to isolate and extract the DNA from the page. |
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BiblioFiles
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The Codex Gigas (Latin for "Giant Book") is interesting enough for being the largest extant medieval manuscript in the world, but the legend behind it makes it all the more intriguing for oddballs like myself!
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Read more: Codex Gigas - Devil's Bible
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BiblioFiles
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Anthropodermic bibliopegy is the practice of binding books in human skin. While not common today, there are believed to be hundreds of examples in libraries around the world, mainly from the seventeenth through nineteenth centuries. One notable example is a text in the College of Physicians of Philadelphia which has a tattoo. |
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Read more: Binding Books in Human Skin
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