Book collecting
Book collecting is the collecting of books, including seeking, locating, acquiring, organizing, cataloging, displaying, storing, and maintaining whatever books are of interest to a given collector. The love of books is bibliophilia, and someone who loves to read, admire, and a person who collects books is often called a bibliophile.
Book prices generally depend on the demand for a given edition which is based on factors such as the number of copies available, the book's condition, and if they were signed by the author or by a famous previous owner. For example, a first edition And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street can reach the price of $12,000 in the best condition.
History
In the ancient world, papyri and scrolls were collected by both institutions and private individuals. In surviving accounts there are references to bibliophile book collectors in that era. Xenophon wrote disparagingly of a man who tried to collect more books than his friends. Seneca the Younger was skeptical of those who collect books they do not read, asking: "What is the use of possessing numberless books and libraries, whose titles their owner can hardly read through in a lifetime?" Book collectors in western antiquity prized accurate transcription and high-quality materials.In 1344 the English bishop Richard de Bury wrote The Philobiblon, in which he praised the love and appreciation of books. Philip the Good brought together a collection of "about six hundred manuscripts in his possession at the height of his reign", which was the largest private collection of his day.
With the advent of the printing press invented by Johannes Gutenberg in the 15th century, which resulted in cheaper and more abundant books, and with the contemporaneous economic, social and political changes of the Renaissance, book collecting received a great impetus. Jean Grolier, the Treasurer-General of France, was an important bibliophile and book collector of this period.
With the advent of the Romantic era in the 18th century and its focus on the past, book collectors began to show an interest in old books, antiquarian editions and manuscripts. This new emphasis was nourished by the flood of old books onto the market following the dissolution of monastic and aristocratic libraries during the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars.
The British Whig politician George John, 2nd Earl Spencer collected tens of thousands of volumes. Strengths of his collection included first editions of the classics; works produced by important early presses, and notably an almost complete collection of Aldine editions; and many Bibles.
Sir Thomas Phillipps collected 40,000 printed books and 60,000 manuscripts. He was "the greatest collector of manuscript material the world has ever known".
The increasingly wealthy United States during the 19th century saw the appearance of "titan" book collectors such as the railroad magnate Henry Huntington and the financier and banker J. Pierpont Morgan.
Prices
The Rothschild Prayerbook sold for $13.6 million while the St Cuthbert Gospel sold for $14.7 million. Both of these religious texts were sold in 2012. The Northumberland Bestiary sold for $20 million in 2007. The New Book of Tang sold for $17.1 million in 2018. William Shakespeare’s First Folio, printed in 1623, sold for $9.978 million in 2020. An Action Comics #1 issue sold for a record $3.2 million in 2014 with a cover price of 10 cents.Condition
Despite appearing in many films and other popular culture, wearing cotton gloves while handling old or rare books does not protect the book, and can increase the risk of inadvertent damage. However, the theatrical effect of showing a rare book being handled with gloved hands may increase its selling price.Antiquarian book collecting
Antiquarian book collecting may be roughly defined as an interest in books printed prior to 1900 and can encompass interest in 19th, 18th, 17th, 16th, and 15th-century books. Antiquarian book collectors are not exclusively interested in first editions and first printings, although they can be. European books created before 1455 are all hand-written and are therefore one-of-a-kind historical artifacts in which the idea of "edition" and "printing" is irrelevant. Any book printed up to the year 1501 is known as an incunable or incunabulum. Such books command a premium and are particularly sought after by collectors interested in the history of printing.The first English movable-type printer was Caxton in the late 15th century. Editions of his books from the 15th century are very rare. Occasionally, 16th-century editions similar to Caxton's books appear among antiquarian book dealers and auctions, often fetching very high prices. The last Shakespeare First Folio of 1623 garnered a record-breaking $9,978,000 at Christie's in October 2020.
Books owned by well-known individuals that also have a connection with the author are known as association copies.
The American School Library is an example of a very rare multi-volume boxed set with works by many popular or famous authors. Apparently the only extant full set is owned by the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History.
Prominent book collectors
- John Roland Abbey
- John Quincy Adams
- Darren Ashcroft
- Clifton Waller Barrett
- Chester Beatty
- William Thomas Beckford
- Martin Bodmer
- The Book Club of Detroit
- Thomas Kimball Brooker
- John Carter Brown
- Boudewijn Büch
- Anthony Collins
- George Cosmatos
- Robert Bruce Cotton
- Jules Desnoyers
- Joseph W. Drexel
- Alexandre Dumas, père
- Umberto Eco
- John Evelyn
- DeCoursey Fales
- Ian Fleming
- Henry Clay Folger
- R. B. Freeman
- George III
- Edward Gibbon
- Stephen Jay Gould
- Robert Harley, Earl of Oxford
- Rush Hawkins
- Richard Heber
- Henry II of France
- Philip Hofer
- Harrison D. Horblit
- Arthur A. Houghton Jr.
- Henry E. Huntington
- Thomas Jefferson
- Jerome Kern
- Geoffrey Keynes
- John Maynard Keynes
- Aleksey Khludov
- Jay I. Kislak
- George Frederick Kunz
- Mark Lanier
- Karl Largerfeld
- Robert Lenkiewicz
- Wilmarth Sheldon Lewis
- Josiah K. Lilly Jr.
- Frederick Locker-Lampson
- Antonio Magliabechi
- Alberto Manguel
- H. Bradley Martin
- Larry McMurtry
- Wolfgang Menzel
- Dewitt Miller
- David Scott Mitchell
- Michel de Montaigne
- J. Pierpont Morgan
- William Morris
- Christoph Gottlieb von Murr
- A. Edward Newton
- Friedrich Nietzsche
- Charles Nodier
- William Osler
- Samuel Pepys
- Charles Dyson Perrins
- Sir Thomas Phillipps
- Francis Place
- William S. Reese
- Abraham Rosenbach
- Lessing J. Rosenwald
- Ellen G. K. Ruben
- Joaquín Rubio y Muñoz
- Arturo Alfonso Schomburg
- Martin Schoyen
- John MacKay Shaw
- Frederick Skiff
- Adam Smith
- Walter W. Stone
- Thomas W. Streeter
- George Thomason
- Jay S. Walker
- Levinus Warner
- Andrew Dickson White
- John Griswold White
- Harry Elkins Widener
In China
Terminology
- Cangshulou : library, such as the private Tianyi Chamber, the oldest existing library in China, or the imperial Wenyuan Chamber, where the works collected in the Complete Library of the Four Treasuries were reposited
- Jinxiangben : ancient pocket edition
- Jiupingzhuang or Jiushu : old books published after 1911, when the Qing dynasty was overthrown
- Maobianben : uncut editions
- Songben or Songban : block printed books published during the Song dynasty, highly valued by collectors
- Xianzhuangshu : thread-bound books, usually referred to those published before 1911
Virtual book collecting