There are now no popular magazines in the UK covering the field of rare and antiquarian books. Just seven years ago there were two—
Rare Book Review and
Book and Magazine Collector –and I wrote regularly for both of them. First to fold was
Rare Book Review, a very glossy and well designed affair financed by a wealthy dealer. Previously this had been known for many years as the
Antiquarian Book Review, and before this as the clumsily-titled
Antiquarian Book Monthly Review, an early issue of which we have here.
When we consider how well designed and glossily produced magazines covering other fields in the arts –such as fashion and the fine arts—it is astonishing how unglamorous this particular magazine must have appeared to the eye of someone familiar with, say,
Vogue, the
Burlington Magazine, or
Country Life at that time. To arrive at something that could compete in visual terms with these titles it took over 40 years and oodles of dealer's dough. It isn’t as if there had never been glossies that had dealt with aspects of the antiquarian book trade---
The Bookman, a product of the twenties and thirties, being the most notable.
The idea for a new popular magazine distinct from the academic
Book Collector and the dryasdust
Clique,