Book And Magazine Collector, a leading reference publication, has come to an end as of issue No. 328 (Christmas 2010), marking the end of an era for many book collectors. The publication ends, suitably, with some ghost stories (because it's Christmas) and I can't help but get the feeling that this is one title whose ghost will continue to haunt bookshops with thoughts of what may have been... I will be the first to admit to choosing certain issues over others - I didn't pick up some of the issues with a more modern emphasis - but the occasional delve into truly rare and beautiful books were amongst my favorite articles published in any magazine over the last couple of years. The Editorial has the following remark:
That first part, especially - a decline in book collecting - struck me as odd. When you consider that the economic situation means that more people will be reading instead of (for example) going to the cinema, or day trips to the shops, or taking trips to other parts of the UK - in short, any activity which costs money - then it seems that reading would be on the uptake. I can't wrap my head around the logic that an economic crisis, which has improved in recent months, is to blame. I'll take their word that the situation is dire enough to warrant a cancellation of a title which has improved so dramatically in what is quite a short space of time, going squarebound, with added color pages, more biographical data, elements of cultural commentary and a much more attractive cover design.
This may not seem like such a big deal, but if you take a moment to think about the things which the title has survived - the turbulent 1970s, the Thatcher era of quantity over quality, the dumbing down of news in the last decade or so - the standard to which it aspired becomes even more of a cultural loss for Britain, and the book world as a whole. I may have to start buying newspapers for their book sections, though I am loathe to spend money on newspapers... We desperately need some kind of a replacement for the title, before the heritage of serious book information in a monthly publication is lost forever. Something akin to a literary Smash Hits or NME just wouldn't be the same...