We were off on a family trip to Wisconsin, August 4 to 8, to visit family and friends. Because of a tight schedule there was no real book browsing or scouting. But I did cross paths with two unusual bookstores.
Inside the main concourse of Milwaukee's Billy Mitchell Air Field, is a bookstore - Renaissance Books. While stores selling new books are not unusual in airports, this store is quite different and sells only used books. The store was a fixture in downtown Milwaukee, until the City condemned their building. The new location in the airport opened in 1979, and some claim this was the first bookstore to be located within an airport. The store has no website for me to provide a link.
Unfortunately, the tasteful facade is the best part of the store. Its books are somewhat ratty wrt condition, and generally overpriced - most hardcovers starting at $25, regardless of title, edition, or condition. Some collectible titles are cased, but the ones I looked at were mostly later printings and priced in the hundreds of dollars. As photo below shows, excess inventory spills over to floors, as well as there being a lot of double shelving of titles.
It was an interesting store to browse around in, but there was not a single book that I considered buying.
On our return flight on the 8th to Tucson, we had a plane change at Denver International Airport. Our connecting aircraft was long delayed (we didn't arrive home until 3 am on the 9th), and while wandering around the C-Concourse (Southwest), I happened on a branch location of Denver's well-known Tattered Cover Book Store. This store has been in business in downtown Denver since 1971. While it sells mostly new titles, its multi-storied building is well worth the visit. There are many, many signed 1st editions available, and I think there may be a few used books tucked in among the new titles.
The store now has multiple locations in Denver, but the one in the airport is not yet listed, so it may be a new venture. The airport store was secured by a metal, drop-down barrier, so no photos of that branch. Photos here are of the original downtown location. Check out the Tattered Page at:
https://www.tatteredcover.com/
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Monday, August 13, 2018
Tuesday, July 3, 2018
John Steinbeck - Travels with Charley (Edited Slightly)
I have been recently reading a number of travel books, and
began in 2017 when I realized that John Steinbeck’s Travels with Charley (Viking
1962) had been published 55 years before. I reread Travels and noted, as I had
in my two previous readings, that some of the incidents that Steinbeck describes
seemed very unlikely. Indeed his oldest son, Thom, had once remarked publicly that his dad was too introverted and not good at interacting with strangers to
have had many of encounters reported along the road. He stated that his father
probably sat a lot in his pickup camper, which he named Rocinante (after Don
Quixote’s horse), doing what he did best - fictionalizing many details of his
trip.
Photos of front and back of book's dust jacket, along with the endpages map of Steinbeck's route around much of the country.
Steinbeck and Charlie at home in Sag Harbor, Long Island New York, before beginning their trip.
Since he apparently didn’t keep a detailed log
of his trip, or record tapes recounting his daily progress, nor snap photos
along the way, it is very difficult for others to try to reconstruct the
details of his trip. It is curious that Steinbeck named his pickup camper
Rocinante. In many ways Steinbeck was like Quixote at this point in his life:
awkward, past his prime, and engaged in a task that was beyond his capabilities
and personality. Regardless, Steinbeck did go off in search of America and his
book about the trip has become a true classic of travel writing, even if parts
of it were fictionalized. Thom also remarked that his father knew that his
health was deteriorating (Steinbeck died in 1968 at the age of 66), and that
the real reason for the trip was to see the country again, and to prove to
himself that he could still drive around it.
Steinbeck's steed, Rocinante, at the National Steinbeck Center in Salinas, California.
As for book collecting: copies of the first
printing of Charlie are sought after and often priced in the range $350.00 to
$750.00. The dust jacket was very fragile and was prone to sun toning over the
years, especially on the spine. The photograph of book I used above is a later
printing – the true 1st state of the jacket does not have the Nobel
prize blurb below “Steinbeck.”
Saturday, June 23, 2018
Our Latest Ad In Firsts Magazine
This is our current ad from Firsts Magazine the July/August Issue.
Additional details and more photos can be found
Dinosaur in a Haystack - https://www.biblio.com/search.php?author=&title=haystack&keyisbn=&dist=50&zip=&dealer_ids=520237
The Dinosaur Heresies - https://www.biblio.com/search.php?author=&title=heresies&keyisbn=&dist=50&zip=&dealer_ids=520237
Bully for Brontosaurus - https://www.biblio.com/search.php?author=&title=bully&keyisbn=&dist=50&zip=&dealer_ids=520237
Saturday, April 28, 2018
Monday, April 2, 2018
2001 A Space Odyssey - Fifty Years Ago
The movie 2001 premiered on this date in 1968, 50 years ago - in New York City. The script was developed in 1965 and the movie came several years later, and then the book was published a couple of months later in June 1968. Shown here are two photos from the famous movie - early man-apes staring at the monolith in Africa millions of years ago (above) and the astronauts (Gary Lockwood left and Keir Dullea right) on the resultant voyage (following discovery of a similar monolith near the permanent moon-base) to Jupiter. In the background is "Hal" with his single eye, watching over them. Of the three stars of the film, "Hal" was perhaps the most memorable.
This was one of those rare situations where a script and movie led to publication of a very collectible book - jacket of US first above and of UK first below. It is often said that the movie script had its beginnings in a short story - The Sentinel written by Clarke in 1948; however Clarke has stated:
"I am continually annoyed by careless references to "The Sentinel" as "the story on which 2001 is based"; it bears about as much relation to the movie as an acorn to the resultant full-grown oak. (Considerably less, in fact, because ideas from several other stories were also incorporated.) Even the elements that Stanley Kubrick and I did actually use were considerably modified. Thus the 'glittering, roughly pyramidal structure… set in the rock like a gigantic, many-faceted jewel' became—after several modifications—the famous black monolith. And the locale was moved from the Mare Crisium to the most spectacular of all lunar craters, Tycho—easily visible to the naked eye from Earth at Full Moon."Although the space program was well underway, the first landing on the moon would not take place until July 20 1969, a bit more than a year after the movie premiered. The predictions of the film would prove to be wildly optimistic - except perhaps with regard to "Hal" and the subsequent explosions in computing systems. The early science fiction writers (during the late 40s into the early 60s) consistently under-forecast the extreme developments in computing power and technology that were to come.
First editions in collectible condition range in price from around $300 to thousands of dollars for special or unusual signed copies.
Monday, March 19, 2018
Monday, January 29, 2018
Bradbury's Dandelion Wine And A Look Back At ABE Listings
I have recently been listing for sale a number of books from my personal library. When I started to list Ray Brabury's Dandelion Wine (his first novel, published by Doubleday back in 1957) I discovered that I had kept a copy of the ABE listings for that title. I had done the search in November 2001, before I bought the title from a local, used bookstore.
The comparison between the listings and prices from today versus more than 16 years ago provides indications about how the collectible book business has evolved as the Internet has grown.
In 2001 there were 7 first printings of the title offered on ABE. Prices ranged from $500 for a copy with serious problems, to $975 for the next copy, to $2,000 for the highest-priced copy.
Today there are 21 copies of the first printing up for sale on ABE. Prices range from $250 to $2,250. Several of the lower-priced copies have serious condition problems, or are lacking the dust jacket. In contrast, the highest-priced copy is offered at a price that is $1000 higher than the next copy offered. Most copies online today are priced from about $400 to $1000, depending condition.
Not only has the title suffered price depression, but the number of copies available has tripled, and there are many more dealers with this title for sale. Of the 7 dealers offering this book in 2001, only three are currently selling online.
It has been quite a roller-coaster ride since I started selling back in 1994.
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