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Jodie Wagner Palm Beach Daily News May 12, 2026, 3:36 p.m. ET Musician Mark Rivera will hold a book signing for his memoir, “Sideman: In Pursuit of the Next Gig” on May 14 in Palm Beach. The event will take place at Raptis Rare Books, followed by a free live performance at Churchill Cigar Company.Continue reading “In the News: Mark Rivera, Saxophonist for Billy Joel, to appear May 14 in Palm Beach.”
There is a moment every collector remembers. It might happen in a dusty antiquarian shop, at an auction preview, or while turning the pages of a catalogue. You pick up a book — really pick it up, feel the weight of the binding, study the title page — and something shifts. You are no longerContinue reading “The Beginner’s Guide to Collecting Rare Books.”
Harcourt Bindery in Charlestown Helps Give Books New Life. The ancient art form of bookbinding is still practiced by hand at a small shop in Charlestown, Massachusetts. CBS News April 19, 2026 The Harcourt Bindery was recently featured in a segment on CBS News with lifestyle reporter Rachel Holt.
Palm Beach Daily News Jodie Wagner, Palm Beach Daily News Tue, April 14, 2026 at 5:09 AM EDT Antiquarian bookstore Raptis Rare Books will host a book-signing in Palm Beach with FOX News host and former White House press secretary Dana Perino on April 17. The event will run from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. atContinue reading “Fox News host Dana Perino to sign new book at Palm Beach bookstore.”
When Little, Brown published Infinite Jest on February 1, 1996, it arrived already mythologized — a 1,079-page novel with nearly 400 endnotes, written by a thirty-three-year-old from central Illinois who had spent four years on a book his editors privately feared was either genius or magnificent self-indulgence. Three decades later, that question has been settled. InfiniteContinue reading “Infinite Jest Turns 30: How a 1,000-Page Novel Became a Mirror for Modern Life.”
Published in 1689, John Locke’s Two Treatises of Government challenged the idea of divine monarchy and introduced a revolutionary concept: that governments derive their authority from the consent of the governed. Before this work, kings ruled by divine right, with power believed to come from God. Locke rejected that foundation entirely. He argued that individualsContinue reading “The Book That Invented Modern Democracy: John Locke’s Two Treatises of Government.”
