Month: May 2010

Collection To Be Sold To Public - Museum to sell huge book collection

The following story made me think long and hard about the result of our years of careful collecting. It is understandable that museums and libraries may seek to rid themselves of books they do not have space or resources to care for. To me, however, it seems a shame that the collector (about whom we know very little) will have his collection sold in such a way. It is important to consider what will eventually become of your own collections. Speaking with family members, friends and even an attorney may give you a great deal pf peace in this area. Legal documents drawn up that specify what is to become of your collection is a very good idea. I will try to find an attorney or expert to interview about this subject in the near future. Be sure to look for more information about this on this site. The following is the story that brought all of these issues to my mind:

Museum to sell huge book collection from Ohio donor

Special to the News-Argus Published: Monday, May 3, 2010 9:52 AM MDT

The Central Montana Historical Society is getting set to stage one of the most unusual sales in its history. The Lewistown museum plans to sell a huge western history book collection from an Ohio donor.

Shirley Barrick, Society president, said the sale will be held from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday, May 8, in the back (work room) of the Museum. The entrance to the room is on Prospect Avenue across the street from the Town Pump gas station. It will be first-come, first-served for the 600-plus books which will be on sale, she said. “The books are from the collection of the late Marvin L. McKinley, Ashland, Ohio, who died on Oct. 30, 2009, and who left an estate worth about $2.5 million,” said Barrick.

McKinley’s will left donations to several individuals and to the Sierra Club, Wilderness Society, National Audubon Society, National Wildlife Federation and National Trust for Historic Preservation,among other beneficiaries. His assets, according to his will, a copy of which was sent to Barrick, included 60 acres worth $240,000, a new $330,000 home and a rental home worth $80,000. Barrick added she never was told what he did for a living. “He loved to travel in the West and presumably he had been through Lewistown more than once. He apparently visited the museum and he very much liked this area. He wanted his Western Americana book collection to remain in the West,” Barrick said.

The Ohio donor’s will stipulated that his book collection was to go to the Montana Historical Society and if they were unable to accept the books, they were to go to the Central Montana Historical Museum. The state historical society took only two books, Barrick said.

“Although the list we received said we would get 604 books, we actually got 623 books. Not all of those are for sale, however, because the museum has kept a few books,” said Barrick.

The attorneys for McKinley’s estate estimated the value of the books at $19,000, but after a local appraiser priced all the books, their total value is $23,645, Barrick said. Last November, the Central Montana Historical Society received a letter saying it may get the book collection, Barrick said. Then, in a letter dated Jan. 6, Barrick was informed that the Montana Historical Society wanted only two books and the rest would be coming to Lewistown. The local historical society’s board approved acceptance of the books at

its February meeting. The books, weighing 1,230 pounds, were shipped in 15
boxes and arrived on April 8. Since that time, a crew of volunteers, composed of local historical society board members, has been sorting, recording, pricing, cleaning and displaying the books for sale.

“The attorney for the man’s estate said that once we received the books they are ours to do what we want with them, so we’re selling them,” said Barrick.

Barrick wanted potential buyers to know that most of these books are rare or collectible and, thus, will not be like the bargain books sold at other local book sales. While many of these books will sell from $5 to $100, prices of others will go up to $650. Several of the books are priced at $200 or more.

“This is a very fine collection of books,” Barrick said. “Nearly all are hardbound, most have their original dust jackets and most are first editions. Many are signed by the authors.”

Subjects include Custer, the fur trade, mining and ghost towns, settlement, railroads, western states including Montana, cowboys and cattlemen, art and photography, Indians, outlaws and lawmen, gunfighters and others.

The most valuable book in the collection is “Wyoming Pioneer Ranches,” published at Laramie in 1955, signed by two of the three authors. This rare book is priced at $650. Another valuable book is J. Evetts Haley’s “Life on the Texas Cattle Range,” published in Austin in 1952. It is hardbound in slipcase. A note is pasted in which is written and dated by Haley. This first edition is priced at $500. Selling for $200 each are William Elsey Connelley’s “Quantrill and the Border Wars,” 1910, signed by the author, and “James Bridger 1804-1881,” by J. Cecil Alter, published in 1925, and signed by the author and numbered. The book is bound in red leather covers.

McKinley obviously had an interest in hunting and fishing. Among books in
the collection are John Mortimer Murphy’s “Sporting Adventures of the Far
West,” 1879; “The Story of American Hunting and Firearms,” by the editors
of Outdoor Life, published in 1959; a first trade edition of Elmer Keith’s “Hell I Was There!” and Martin Rywell’s “The Gun That Shaped America’s Destiny,” 1957.

“For us to be chosen to receive this collection is an honor,” said Barrick. “It is simply outstanding that he chose us considering all the museums there are in Montana. Because the museum receives no tax money and we are completely self-supporting, this gift has been a god-send.

“The museum has received larger financial donations in the past but so far as I am aware this is the largest donation of tangible items in the history of the museum,” Barrick said.

The Six Criteria of Rarity in Antiquarian Books by Jeremy M. Norman

This article is reproduced with the kind permission of Mr. Jeremy Norman of Jeremy Norman's HistoryOfScience.com. For more than thirty-five years they have helped to develop superb private libraries and major institutional holdings of rare books and manuscripts on the history of science, medicine and technology. Thank you for your permission and for your exceptional article.

As an antiquarian bookseller, I am frequently asked to define “antiquarian” or “rare” books. To some extent these two relatively vague but omnipresent terms are used interchangeably in the trade. Nevertheless, they have subtly different connotations. Antiquarian, like antique, suggests something both old and collectible; that is, a book one would want to preserve both for its age alone and also for its intrinsic interest as an object. The term “antiquarian” encompasses the ordinary second-hand book. By contrast, the term “rare” connotes something definitely valuable. How do we define the special category of antiquarian books called rare books?

To be valuable in the market place and thus command a premium price, a book must satisfy at least one, and usually more, of six criteria. First is scarcity of copies. Books printed in editions of 25,000 copies or more usually do not become rare. On the other hand we can all think of family memoirs privately printed in editions of perhaps a dozen or fewer copies for distribution to family members. Most of these extremely scarce books have no interest whatsoever to anyone outside of the families concerned, and are frequently close to worthless unless they concern a figure of historic importance.

Scarcity by itself is thus not usually enough to make a book rare, but should such privately printed memoirs directly concern the childhood of a president of the United States, for example, the memoirs would also fulfill the second of the five criteria, namely what I call substantive importance, or the significance of the book’s contents. The book may be a first edition of a classic in English literature, the first account of a historic exploration of part of America, the first account of a major voyage of discovery, or the first publication of a great scientific or medical discovery. First editions are usually the most prized, but significant other editions are also sought, especially those with important revisions by the author, or first English translations of works originally published in other languages.

Without having any substantive importance, a book maybe highly valued by collectors because of its characteristics as a physical object. It may be printed on an exotic paper or perhaps on vellum. Its binding may be a work of art, or its illustrations may be the work of a great artist. Perhaps the book came from the press of a great printer, or was one of the first produced by a new printing process, such as lithography, Linotype or computerized typesetting. The book may be printed in a bizarre typeface or in a peculiar format—miniature books are a popular example of the latter, and occasionally we have seen triangular books or even round books in spherical bindings which open like the halves of a grapefruit.
Andreas Vesalius’s Icones anatomicae (1933)This copy of Andreas Vesalius’s Icones anatomicae (1933), a 20th-century reprint of the works of the great 16th century anatomist, is enhanced by its art binding by the Canadian binder Michael Wilcox (criterion no. 3). From the Haskell F. Norman Library.

The factor of “imprint” constitutes the fourth criterion. (I call it “imprint” after the bibliographic term meaning place and date of publication.) We all know that the first books printed in 15th century Europe are rare, and many later books are rare because they were printed in a special place or at a special time—for instance, books printed in the Confederate States during the American Civil War, the first book printed in Antarctica, or the first book printed on a submarine.

Even if a book is unable to meet any of the first four criteria, it still might command a very high price because of the criterion of association. Give me the most common Gideon Bible, of which vast numbers are printed every year, with the authentic signature of T. S. Eliot and his notes in the margins, and I will show you a very rare and valuable book, indeed. Likewise, a 25th printing of Eliot’s Collected Poems, ostensibly worth about $5, could easily be worth more than 100 times that amount if it bore a presentation inscription in Eliot’s hand and an unpublished manuscript poem by Eliot penned on a flyleaf. We always describe significant associations in our catalogue descriptions and you will usually find several important association copies in our rare book catalogues.

Our sixth and last criterion is condition. Many common first editions of 20th century novels clutter up the shelves of Salvation Army bookstores, waiting to be pulped, while a mint copy of such a book in a perfect dust jacket might fetch a spectacularly high price. The point is that many common books are extremely difficult to find in condition fine enough to satisfy the discriminating collector. With truly scarce books which hardly ever appear for sale, one obviously cannot be so discriminating about condition, and our evaluation of condition is made relative to the particular book involved. Even the finest copy of a seventeenth century medical book might have a repaired spine, but few would want such a copy of a book by the 20th century neurosurgeon Harvey Cushing, unless the binding was particularly handsome, or made for presentation, etc. As long as we bear in mind that condition is relative, it must play a prominent role in evaluating the rarity of any book.

These remarks hopefully will suffice as a brief outline of the six criteria by which I believe any rare book may be judged: scarcity, substantive importance, physical characteristics, imprint, association, and condition. All rare books must fulfill at least one of the criteria. Some may fulfill several, or in the exceptional situation, even all six. The six criteria apply as much to the rare medical books in our catalogues as to books on any other subject. One should bear in mind, however, that substantive importance is open to reevaluation over the years. Particularly in literature and art, tastes in collecting are subject to fads and fashions—what is highly prized today may be passé twenty years from now. Luckily, in the sciences fads and fashions are much more subdued. Because concrete discoveries are involved we can be more objective in identifying the permanent classics in each scientific field. The six criteria of rarity I have outlined here will not help us evaluate the historical significance or substantive importance of the rare medical books described in our catalogues, but once these two criteria have been satisfied, consideration of the other criteria may help us evaluate the desirability of particular books being offered.

I would be happy to receive your comments and suggestions on my choice of criteria in the definition of rarity.

Revised and condensed from a speech made at the Rowfant Club of Cleveland on November 10, 1982. Another version of this paper appeared in Nutrition History Notes, no. 15, 1982, published by Vanderbilt Medical Center Library in Nashville.

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Synopsis Of Reviews Of "Hitler's Private Library" by Timothy Ryback

31z78ozb1dLThe completereview.com has posted an excellent synopsis of reviews of the book "Hitler's Private Library". There are many kinds of book collectors - famous, infamous and annonymous. Much as many of us may hate to claim him among the group of book collectors, he did indeed collect books. His purpose and what use he put to the volumes he collected are debatable, Some feel he sought out books that went along with his preconceived ideas - as some book collectors may do. The following reviewers had the this to say:

From the Reviews:

"The author neatly weaves together Hitler’s political career with his book-collecting habits, tracing the well-thumbed volumes that Hitler consulted during the writing of Mein Kampf. Mr Ryback’s knowledge of German literature and the politics of the Nazi era makes him well placed to follow clues and draw inferences, both from the time and place of acquisition and from the marginalia that can be found in the books." - The Economist

"This is no substitute to such monuments as, say, Ian Kershaw’s two-tome biography. But it serves as a companion to more traditional studies -- and deepens our understanding of Hitler’s personality." - Bertrand Benoit, Financial Times

"Thanks to his imaginative research -- and his willingness to investigate a very creepy subject -- we come closer to one of the most elusive men ever to shape world history. (...) His effort is worthwhile: one finishes this short, packed book with a firmer take on the sort of intellectual -- or pseudo-intellectual -- who persuaded the best-educated nation in Europe to make war on civilization and try to exterminate the Jews. But deep insights remain elusive." - Anthony Grafton, The New Republic

"What distinguishes the slim, elegantly written, meticulously researched, fascinating volume by Timothy Ryback, Hitler's Private Library, is his careful analysis of a small, selected number of works that he associates with formative episodes in Hitler's life. By evaluating the passages that Hitler has underlined, or added marginalia to, Mr. Ryback seeks to extract and elucidate what about the books was important to the man, and moreover what "occupied Hitler in his more private hours, often at pivotal moments in his career." " - Ian Kershaw, The New York Sun

"Still, Ryback has provided a tantalizing glimpse into Hitler’s creepy little self-­improvement program. While being a bookworm may not be a precondition for becoming a mass murderer, it’s certainly no impediment." - Jacob Heilbrun, The New York Times Book Review

"Ryback relies heavily on Walter Benjamin’s idea of the private library as a map of its owner’s character, but Hitler’s reading yields few new insights, and some of what Ryback dredges up is merely peculiar" - The New Yorker

"Timothy Ryback has tried to glean some insight into the emotional life, hatreds and enthusiasms of the Nazi leader. There are few surprises. Rather than yield with humility to writers and their books, Hitler used them merely to bolster his preconceptions. (...) Hitler's Private Library, the fruit of eight years' research, provides a warning against the dangers of blind adherence to ideology and the damage that a deal of selective reading can do." - Ian Thomson, Sunday Times

"Ryback has made an original and interesting contribution to the study of this monster, not least by showing that, in some respects, he was just like many of the rest of us." - Simon Heffer, The Telegraph

"While Hitler's Private Library is crisply written and covers the dictator's reading life from World War I to his suicide in 1945, Ryback could have dug a little deeper. (...) While thoroughly engrossing, like virtually all books about the Nazi dictator, Hitler's Private Library does sometimes leave a reader slightly annoyed or puzzled. Details are occasionally wrong or at least fuzzy and in need of clarification. (...) These gripes aside, Hitler's Private Library is still fascinating -- and unnerving." - Michael Dirda,
The Washington Post

"Ryback knows the history of this period exceptionally well, and has a good eye for spotting and highlighting revealing vignettes; the links he establishes between the books and the life invariably make for absorbing reading. (...) Ryback deserves praise for his investigative labors and, especially in our increasingly virtual and digitalized age, for recognizing what the physical nature of books may reveal about their owners. He also deserves a reader’s gratitude for being a graceful and interesting writer. Nevertheless, Ryback’s approach is seriously flawed." - Michael McDonald,
Weekly Standard

"Eine faszinierende Studie, die interessante, aber nicht überraschend neue Einblicke in die Persönlichkeit Hitlers bietet." - Marion Lühe, Die Welt

"Rybacks Buch fügt dem Hitler-Bild keine grundlegend neuen Erkenntnisse, wohl aber unbekannte Facetten hinzu." - Volker Ullrich, Die Zeit

The previous reviews are followed up by: The complete review's Review: This review is insightful and extremely well written - well worth visiting the site for a read...

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Catalogue of rare flowers to bring up to €40,000 in Germany

TulipTulip illustration from Fleurs du Printemps et de L'Este

Another news story from http://www.paulfrasercollectibles.com/ a wonderfully informative site for collectors:

The baroque florilegium will head the sale of fine and collectible texts next month

A rare copy of Fleurs du Printemps et de L'Este, a baroque florilegium (literally: 'gathering of flowers') from the early 17th century is to be sold at Ketterer Kunst.

The work is to be the prize lot in their Rare Books, Manuscripts, Autographs, Decorative Prints, Maritime and North German Art auction.

Plants had to be both rare and attractive to be recorded in the book. The florilegium contains 19 illustrations of tulips, which were the most valuable flowers by far in those days as an aesthetic perception of plants was growing in the 17th century, beyond interest merely in their medical properties.

With an estimate of € 40.000 the manuscript counts among the auction's highlights.

Last year, we reported on one of Ketterer Kunst's other rare book sales in which the botanical text Phytanthoza-Iconographia by Weinmann was a key lot. The four volume set sold at close to its top estimate at €56,400 ($84,500).

Another botanical work will raise interest in the current sale: the Flora Danica.

The complete Danish edition of the first 29 issues of this most significant Scandinavian botanic work from 1766 will be sold in the upcoming auction. Even today it is still the most comprehensive account of Danish, Norwegian and northern German flora.

The estimate for this book with 1860 copper plates is at €15,000.

In the same auction is a Latin Book of Hours from the second half of the 15th century. The magnificent and richly illustrated manuscript on vellum from either France or Flanders was arranged in a way so that even laymen had easy access to its content.

The individual sections each begin with a caption in red and a large initial with an extremely appealing, high quality miniature.

The section of zoology is headed by Thomas Pennant's Zoologica Britannica. Britische Thierge-schichte.

The first Latin-German edition in the translation of the Nuremberg cultural historian Christoph Gottlieb Murr is a splendid work on Great Britain's birds and tetrapods (four-legged animals), it comprises 132 copper plates in an old colouring.

Published in the years between 1771 and 78, it will go under the hammer with an estimate of €28,000.

Thomas Whichcote's A Plan of Mathematical Learning Taught in the Royal Academy Portsmouth will be a delight not only for mathematicians. The unique manuscript book, with lavishly and thoroughly executed illustrations on shipping, was made in 1904 and covers all topics relevant for the navy, among them arithmetic, navigation, sailors' readings, mechanics and trigonometry. The guide price is €15,000.

Ketterer Kunst's auction will take place on May 17-18 in Hamburg.

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'Rarer than a Gutenberg'... a 1782 bible brings $67,500

BunchBible276_1The Robert Aitken Bible - very few are in private hands

This just in from http://www.paulfrasercollectibles.com/ a great resource for news items about all things collectible:

The first to be printed in the United States, the Robert Aitken bible starred in a Pennsylvania sale

On Tuesday, William Bunch auctions offered an impressive selection of collectibles in Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania, many of them from the collection of New Jersey's Fred Peech. Some of the pieces needed restoration as a result of being kept in Peech's barn, but they were rare and valuable nevertheless.

The most attention-grabbing lot was a Robert Aitken bible. Robert Aitken was a Scottish-born Philadelphia printer who was the first to print the bible in the newly created United States of America in 1782. It is entitled as follow:

The Holy Bible, Containing the Old and New Testaments: Newly translated out of the Original Tongues; and with the former Translations Diligently compared and revised. Philadelphia: Robert Aitken, 1781-82. 2 parts in one volume.

It was the only bible in America's history ever to receive Congressional endorsement, but only around 10,000 were ever printed. It is now sometimes claimed to be rarer than a Gutenberg bible, as the auctioneer notes. The exact number which still survive is unknown, though no more than 10 are thought to be in private hands. There are 21 complete Gutenbergs in existence.

Given a guide price of $40,000-60,000, the Bible proved yet more impressive to bidders, whether as a landmark book or piece of Americana. The hammer came down on a price of $67,500, not including Buyer's Premium.

Bibles are naturally greatly desired by book collectors, and sometimes even as an investment. In December 2009 we had the privilege of selling the Bible that Aitken's fellow Scotsman Robert Burns leafed through shortly before his death in 1796.

Those interested in collecting valuable early Americana may be interested to know that a document signed by George Washington is currently available.

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