
The Biblio File hosted by Nigel Beale
THE BIBLIO FILE is a podcast about "the book," and an inquiry into the wider world of book culture. Hosted by Nigel Beale it features wide ranging, long-form conversations with authors, poets, book publishers, booksellers, book editors, book collectors, book makers, book scholars, book critics, book designers, book publicists, literary agents and many others inside the book trade and out - from writer to reader.
Latest episodes

Aug 2, 2006 • 27min
Wendy Duff on the difference between Librarians and Archivists #20
Wendy Duff is Director of Graduate Studies and Associate Professor at the University of Toronto, Faculty of Information Studies. She received her PhD from the University of Pittsburgh. Her primary research interests are user studies, archival description, and electronic records. We talk here about the differences between Librarians and Archivists, and other important ‘stuff’.

Aug 1, 2006 • 40min
Jim Roberts on the Evolution of Bookselling #19
Jim Roberts is the owner of Books End Bookstore in Syracuse, New York. We talk here among other things about salt, the AB Bookman's weekly magazine, the emergence and evolution of book-selling on the Internet from Interloc, to Alibris, to Abebooks; collecting General Custer, war books and the histories of American military divisions.

Jul 29, 2006 • 11min
Tim Parks on Prizes, Awards, Coetzee and Rushdie #18
Prizes are ridiculous. Winners are often poor writers. Short lists are political. The whole world kneels before a bunch of Swedish academics who only read books in translation... So what does Tim Parks really think of book awards? Listen up. You'll also get his thoughts on Salman Rushdie and J.M. Coetzee.

Jul 21, 2006 • 45min
Prof. Joseph Khoury on Hamlet, Acts 1 & 2 #17

Jul 20, 2006 • 45min
Prof. Don Nichol on the History of Book Publishing Copyright #16
Dr. Don Nichol is an English Professor at Memorial University in Newfoundland, Canada. He has been researching copyright law and its role in the history of writing and publishing for more than a decade. He is the author of Pope’s Literary Legacy, published by the Oxford Bibliographical Society in 1992, and editor, more recently, of The New Foundling Hospital for Wit 1768-1773, a three-volume set containing enhanced facsimiles of some of the 18th-century’s most popular and salacious English satire. Nothing too salacious in our conversation, unfortunately, but we do have a rollicking good talk about 18th Century booksellers and authors, the Copyright Act of 1710, copyright libraries, 14 year protection, perpetual monopoly, the famous Alexander Pope and his friend John Gay, Dr. Johnson, and his biographer James Boswell, less famous Andrew Miller, and my new hero, the independent Scottish bookseller/philanthropist Alexander Donaldson, a Warren Buffet of his age. Periodically you’ll hear what sounds like an earthquake rumbling in the background…this is nothing more than a soft Atlantic cross-breeze wafting through Don’s corner (yes, he’s made it) office in the Arts building where the interview was conducted.

Jul 18, 2006 • 25min
Fran Durako on her Kelmscott Bookshop #15
Fran Durako is owner of the Kelmscott Bookshop in Baltimore, Maryland. We talk here about her love of William Morris, fine printing and Victorian book illustration, the transition from book collector to seller, and art as a ‘positive necessity of life if we are to live as nature meant us to.’

Jul 14, 2006 • 30min
David Gilmour on his novel A perfect Night to go to China #14
Acclaimed Canadian novelist and critic David Gilmour was born in London, Ontario in 1949. His first novel, Back on Tuesday, was published in 1986, followed by How Boys See Girls in 1991 and An Affair with the Moon in 1993. Lost Between Houses, published in 1999, was nominated for the Trillium Book Award. Sparrow Nights, his fifth novel, was published by Random House to rave reviews. His latest novel A Perfect Night to go to China won Canada’s 2005 Governor General's Award for Fiction. I met with David in the foyer of the Chateau Laurier hotel in Ottawa the morning after he received his award from the Governor General at Rideau Hall. We talk about winning it, sex, suicide, kids, the perfect woman, wearing spandex at discos and the fact that for him, conquering for women and affirmation are not the same thing. He is a candid, funny, sensitive man worth listening to, plus, in my opinion, Canada's best novelist. Hope the background Christmas carols, and what sounds like a flock of little tweety birds, aren’t too distracting…

Jun 17, 2006 • 33min
Martin Levin on the role of the book review editors #13
Martin Levin was for 17 years the popular (particularly at Book Expo Canada where we met) Books Editor at the (Toronto) Globe and Mail newspaper, and, according to Dennis Johnson, founder of MobyLives and co-founder/co-publisher of Melville House, one of the most esteemed in the business. We talk here about namesakes in Tolstoy, guilt, tragedy, sorrow at not being able to review anywhere near all worthy books, blockbusters syphoning money away from deserving titles, getting boys to read books, graphic novels, Canadian literature as post-colonial/nationalist; Cynthia Ozick; post-modern levelling; discerning value; the benefits of competition; the decline of book talk in print; and Thunder Bay, Ontario.

Jun 17, 2006 • 45min
Jamie Byng on Myth and the Art of Publishing #12
Jamie Byng is Publisher at Canongate Books, an independent publishing firm based in Edinburgh, Scotland. Thanks in part to his tireless efforts, and the huge success of its Booker-winning novel Life Of Pi, Canongate won Publisher Of the Year at the British Book Awards in 2003. It won again in 2009. Jamie is also the originator, and (was) first Chair of World Book Night. In 2005 he launched the first in a series of Canongate novellas that feature ancient myths from various cultures reimagined and rewritten. Though the initial titles received mixed reviews, the series was branded by many as "bold" and "ambitious." I met with Jamie at Book Expo 2006 in Washington D.C. We talk here about, among other things, this myth series and his appreciation of mythology; the bible underlying creative imagination and the Western Canon and his skill presenting and capitalizing on the concept; ambiguity; the responsibility we parents have to make the lives of our children interesting, at least; Joseph Campbell; Margaret Atwood; and living without fear.

May 10, 2006 • 50min
Peter Ellis London-based Antiquarian Bookseller #11
Interview with used antiquarian book dealer Peter Ellis at his shop on Cecil Court Road in London, England.