Skip to Content

The BibliOdyssey Book

It is my privilege and pleasure to announce that a book based on the this humble website is now in release and available for purchase by the general public. Interested persons should head to the publisher's site if they are in Europe/UK and to Amazon if they are not.

For those without credit cards or who are allergic to online financial transactions, the latest advice has discerning bookshops in both USA and UK receiving their stock by the second week of November, with the rest of the world to follow shortly thereafter. You may otherwise encourage your favourite bookshop to seek supply (and a measurable improvement in taste and status) direct from the publisher.

As you might expect, the book features eclectic and rare book illustrations derived from many digital repositories, accompanied by some background commentary. It is not simply a regurgitation of what is here in the archives, although about two thirds of the images have appeared on the site previously.

With pre-production topping out at somewhere over 500 years, BibliOdyssey might well be the slowest book ever published. The serious part of the journey has taken more than a year of team effort involving myself and the UK firm of FUEL Design, headed up by Damon Murray and Stephen Sorrell.

When I was first contacted with the suggestion in August 2006 I admit that I was fairly skeptical. "Unpossible, surely?" "How do we get permission?" "Which repositories?" "Who do we contact?" "What laws do we need to know?" "Which images?" "Which countries?" "Thematic or chronological or what?" "What happens if they say no?" "What happens if they say yes?"

Where I only saw insurmountable difficulties, FUEL took the long view, to their credit, softly batting away my initial objections and sketching out a very rough plan for how the project might move forward. They picked out some images, I suggested some institutions, we wrestled over the illustration choices; I did most of the contacting and all of the writing and FUEL did the overall editing, designing and packaging.

So the process has really been about establishing a dialogue with a lot of different people and institutions and being open about our intentions. It probably helped that I've had occasional exchanges with universities and libraries since the site started, so there is a certain familiarity 'out there' about BibliOdyssey. The response to the project idea was overwhelmingly favourable, although individual institutional policies and legal technicalities were sometimes an impediment. Many people went out of their way to accommodate our requests for higher resolution images or supplied interesting background to the books and images or gave recommendations about alternative image choices. We are eternally grateful for their assistance.

The book (like the site) covers a very wide spectrum of styles, time periods and subject matter. You can expect everything from astronomy to zoology and from Art Nouveau to the Renaissance, in something reminiscent of what I call a multi-post (except on steroids and growth hormone and with better grooming habits and no noisy computer fan in the background). I like to think that the trajectory of the book aims somewhere roughly between our internet users' penchant for a concentrated package of beguiling ephemera and as an introductory overview of the cultural wealth accessible from web archives for luddites. [redacted marketspeak: "making it the ideal Christmas present for everybody"]

As a final point I'd offer that, while it might sound like a totally haphazard collection of unrelated visual material, the book is in fact much more of a cohesive and interrelated survey of illustration history than any loose-canon wording here might suggest. The book is also a beautiful product - FUEL have done a wonderful job in the designy-printy stakes, and my objectivity is of course unimpeachable as I was on the other side of the planet and had no role in this facet of production.

While I'm in this rare trumpet-blowing mode: I did an interview with the George Lucas Educational Foundation - Edutopia Magazine - back in July and although it doesn't specifically refer to the book, it was done at exactly the same time as I was writing the book's introduction (which is in fact mostly about the background to the BibliOdyssey website), so inevitably includes a few of the thoughts that re-surface in the book. Because I am nothing if not intellectually lazy. Phantom of the Optical.

Once more for luck..

  • UK/Europe
  • Everybody else

∧∧∧∧∧Late addition: I was interviewed by Elatia Harris for 3QuarksDaily∧∧∧∧∧

Similar entries
  • Being some final observations and background to
    the production of the BibliOdyssey Book. (What book?)
    The second and last part of this essay will appear either
    later this week or next week. Then it shall be put to rest.When the UK firm, FUEL Design, first made contact to say they liked BibliOdyssey and ask if I had any interest in turning the weblog into a book, I didn’t know anything about them as publishers. I found an article at the Design Museum which provided some background details and I was interested to discover that they had been involved in producing the Russian Criminal Tattoo books from a couple of years ago. I had heard good things about this series so I was fairly satisfied that FUEL was worth listening to, even if I wasn’t overly confident that anything would come of it.

  • Queen of Columbines

    Five of Columbines

  • Wilhelmina Cycle & Co. Ltd. Zeist-Holland. rijwielen 1897-1898

    Bezoekt onze Viskwekerijen - Koninklijke Nederlandsche

  • "Tis a deception! granted, but such a one as does honour to human nature;
    a deception more beautiful, more surprising, more astonishing, than any
    to be met with in the different accounts of mathematical recreations."
    [Karl Gottlieb von Windisch 1784]

  • "An endeavour to preserve some memorial of the brilliant and fugitive beauties, of a particularly splendid and elegant tribe of plants, first gave rise to this work; and having enjoyed considerable, perhaps unusual, advantages, in the very great liberality with which specimens were supplied, both from public, and private collections, it became a favourite recreation, to describe them as simply and naturally as possible, with both pen and pencil.

    Having no pretensions whatever, either to scientific knowledge, or extensive research, any attempt at a lengthened technical descriptions, is purposely avoided [...and the artist/author...] relies on the indulgence and courtesy of those more able and learned promoters, or generous admirers of botanical pursuits, who may be induced to patronize the feeble attempts, of an Amateur." [from the preface]

  • "There is in this particular region a collection of races
    diverse in feature, language and customs such as cannot,
    perhaps, be paralleled in any other part of the world".
    [Gazetteer of Upper Burma and the Shan States, Sir George Scott, 1899]

    "We shall never be able to trace all the people who
    now inhabit Burma back fully to their original seats,
    or say precisely where they had their beginnings".
    ['The Tribes of Burma', C.C. Lowis, 1919]

  • Illustration © Jeremiah Maddock as seen on:
    my love for you is a stampede of horses [via Elly Yap].

  • This riff on Giuseppe Arcimboldo's (wikipedia) 'The Four Seasons'
    is appropriately timed (well, appropriate if you are in Austria
    in the next six weeks anyway) --- the first-ever full-scale survey
    dedicated to the proto-Surrealist’s work is currently on display
    at the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna (ends 1 June 2008).
    Addit: see Guardian Arts story: 'Natural Wonders'

  • Yep, it's time for Dutch Design Week again, and the Philips Design Probes site is getting a head start on bridging the gap between design, business, and where the next generation of viable innovative products will come from (via Yanko Design). Fascinating stuff:

  • Sighting One: I have just been informed that there are 5 new copies of the original, self-published edition of Vegan Lunch Box available for sale in the UK and Europe. You can find the book along with Laptop Lunch Boxes and more at Becky and Lolo.

  • 'The Illustration of The Great European War No.16
    - A humoros Atlas of the World'

  • Click through the picture to experience my disappointment in not finding a larger version of this wonderful image. Actually, to truly experience my disappointment you will need to (painlessly) register at the Parker Library site and then try searching several whichways to unsuccessfully hunt down the manuscript. Tease.

    The eagle illustration represents St John and comes from an 8th century Northumbrian gospel manuscript. Although it does not appear to have been uploaded as yet, if you enjoy seeing illumination work from previously inaccessible and priceless manuscripts, this site is a worthy place to spend some time.

  • "[W]e are inclined to believe them to be produced by an evolution of the planet, just as on the Earth we have the English Channel and the Channel of Mozambique.[..] Their singular aspect, and their being drawn with absolute geometrical precision, as if they were the work of rule or compass, has led some to see in them the work of intelligent beings." [Giovanni Schiaparelli]

  • (Shark, remora, puffer fish etc)

    (detail) The Sea-Eagle

    A Malabar Shewing Tricks with Serpents

  • Zounds, a dog, a rat, a mouse, a cat, to scratch a man to death!
    a braggart, a rogue, a villain, that fights by the book of arithmetic!
    [Shakespeare: Romeo and Juliet - III, i]