• Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:
    • Reply to discussions and create your own threads.
    • Our modern chat room. No add-ons or extensions required, just login and start chatting!
    • Access to private conversations with other members.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!

Purchasing Antique Books

Ringer

Jar of Clay
Anybody around here purchase antique or first edition books as a hobby? I imagine it can be an expensive hobby but I imagine the fun part is to find a rare copy of a book that somebody is unknowingly trying to sell for super cheap. Are antique stores the best place to find these? Any recommendations on where I should be looking.
 

Autodidact

Intentionally Blank
For a bit I was buying and selling modern first editions on ebay. Still have a hundred or so of them. NOt really antique, anything from say 1920-2000 or so, fiction, first editions. Also a few signed biographies. It's lots of fun. Best place to find them was garage sales.

I also collect a few really old ones, from garage sales, thrift stores, library sales, whatever.

Once I found this huge trove of very antique German books at a single sale, most of them pre-1900, but I didn't buy them because I had no idea what they were. Could have been worth a fortune!
 

Nepenthe

Tu Stultus Es
I sell some on EBay but not too many that are antique: mainly 1st editions and odd rare stuff that has a limited but devoted following.
Most of the antique stuff I've purchased was simply stumbling across them at used bookstores and garage sales as Auto' mentioned. I found an 1856 edition of Confessions of an English Opium-Eater at a garage sale once and an 1879 edition of Ingersoll's Some Mistakes of Moses at a used book store. They're not worth too much- I've sold several books published in the last 20 years that were worth a lot more simply because they filled a niche market- but they were cool finds anyway.
 

Ringer

Jar of Clay
Thanks for the information. Are there some locations that are better than others when it comes to garage sales? For instance, would it be worth my while to visit garage sales that are in more "upscale" neighborhoods then the more local neighborhoods? I'm trying to map out a strategy that will make the most efficient use of my team instead of coming at this in a random nature. I will also have to check out some used book stores in the area.
 
Charity shops is where I got most of my jems, though most people are wide to the appeal of first editions, I still managed to pick up a first edition Terry Pratchett last year for €2, kerching, or it would be if I was capable of parting with a book :( I have a first edition first print of Memoirs of a Geisha which I got the old fashioned way ( bought it in Waterstones :D ) Who knew that was going to blow up like that.

Be warned it can get compulsive and I have loads of practically worthless (monetarily anyway) 1st that just take up space.
 

Autodidact

Intentionally Blank
Thanks for the information. Are there some locations that are better than others when it comes to garage sales? For instance, would it be worth my while to visit garage sales that are in more "upscale" neighborhoods then the more local neighborhoods? I'm trying to map out a strategy that will make the most efficient use of my team instead of coming at this in a random nature. I will also have to check out some used book stores in the area.

For what I was doing, modern first editions mostly, I found that only around 1/10 would sell on ebay if I was lucky. Actually then I switched to Amazon which is better. Anyway, my point is to make any money, I had to pay very little, less than $1 per volume if possible. So basically, I stop at the sale, ask how much for hardcovers, and leave if it's more than $1. Occasionally you find people who are really wanting to get rid of their stuff and charge $.25. That's rare but great. If it's over $1 I won't buy it unless it's signed.

Condition is everything.

You do find neat stuff out in the country, like at barn sales, sometimes. But remember, it's all about the condition. What you're looking for is perfect, brand-new, never been cracked. That's the holy grail. And it MUST have the jacket.

Unless it's signed Shakespeare, it MUST have the jacket.

Also I had to learn to avoid best-sellers, which is mostly what you find. No Stephen King, for example, unless it's his first book.

It's fun because of the thrill of the hunt.

And every once in a while you find a signed one. I have a signed Charlton Heston autobiography, if anyone's interested.
 

Autodidact

Intentionally Blank
Oh, just remembered a great tip. Zoom around between 3 and 5 p.m., when they're shutting down. That's when they want to get rid of stuff and will knock it down to a quarter a volume for you.
 

Nepenthe

Tu Stultus Es
Thanks for the information. Are there some locations that are better than others when it comes to garage sales? For instance, would it be worth my while to visit garage sales that are in more "upscale" neighborhoods then the more local neighborhoods? I'm trying to map out a strategy that will make the most efficient use of my team instead of coming at this in a random nature. I will also have to check out some used book stores in the area.
I don't think it'd matter too much as far as neighborhoods; everyone has books to unload and the chance of a prized find probably equal.

Monta mentioned how people tend to be aware of a book's worth and I think in this post-EBay world it'll be tough to find really good stuff randomly. I know you mentioned antique books, but my more profitable book finds have been picking up a bunch of 1st editions of a title I suspect will blow up (I bought a 1st ed. of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone in London then had Rowling sign it when she did a book tour of the U.S. in 2000. Woo hoo!).

Speaking of worthless first editions: my wife has a 1st ed. signed copy of Thatcher's The Dawning Street Years which just gathers dust.It'll make a good prop to level a table someday. But I also have a mass market paperback of Book of the Dead (a collection of zombie short stories from 1990) that has a misprint on the cover (foreward by George R. Romero instead of A.) that's gone for up to 300$ on EBay in the past. It can be a crapshoot. ;)

eta: And everything Auto' just said!!!! :)
 

Panda

42?
Premium Member
I never understood this, to me a book has always been about reading it nothing more. If I could afford it I would love to go to a specialist auction for rare books buy one, and sit there and read it and fold back pages to mark the page. The look of disgust on other peoples faces would amuse me to no end.
 

Kilgore Trout

Misanthropic Humanist
I had a brief interest in this until I researched how much any of the books I wanted would cost. End of interest.
 
I never understood this, to me a book has always been about reading it nothing more. If I could afford it I would love to go to a specialist auction for rare books buy one, and sit there and read it and fold back pages to mark the page. The look of disgust on other peoples faces would amuse me to no end.

To be absolutely honest you kind of have to be a pervert :shrug:
 

Mr Cheese

Well-Known Member
check out estate sales.....

buying a lot of books can yield gems...

at least so my friend who sold books online told me.

Although the market is is saturated to be honest....so good luck!
 

Nepenthe

Tu Stultus Es
I never understood this, to me a book has always been about reading it nothing more. If I could afford it I would love to go to a specialist auction for rare books buy one, and sit there and read it and fold back pages to mark the page. The look of disgust on other peoples faces would amuse me to no end.
It's ok Mat- your parents won't mind if you fold the pages on your favorite books.
PandaBig-PandaSmall.jpg
 

linwood

Well-Known Member
Anybody around here purchase antique or first edition books as a hobby? I imagine it can be an expensive hobby but I imagine the fun part is to find a rare copy of a book that somebody is unknowingly trying to sell for super cheap. Are antique stores the best place to find these? Any recommendations on where I should be looking.

My neighbor had a two volume set of Civil war history that was published "during" the Civil War written by a popular journalist in the North.

He found it in a Goodwill store for ten dollars.

I sold each book separately on Ebay for a combined $1100.00.

You`ve got to have an intimate knowledge of what you`re looking for to do this on a regular basis though as it isn`t just the age of the book that gives it it`s value.
 

Smoke

Done here.
I can't afford to collect antique books, and I don't feel like learning all about the collector's market so I know what's a good deal and what's not.

About the only time I buy antique books is when I want to read something that's been out of print for a very long time. Things like Ebingen Kriegs-Chronik (1919) and The Works of Job Scott (1831). Those kinds of books are a bit pricey, but not what's in big demand, so if I can find them I can usually afford them.
 
Top