Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: books (Page 115 of 128)

1st Editions after the 4th.

After a brief test-run, it is time for some fine tuning. There have been no big announcements to date regarding the bistro end of the new shop. That’s because much of the time up to now has involved getting the books and the store’s interior in order.

Even that is still an ongoing process.

There are more items in boxes in the office awaiting rediscovery. I did find my first edition copy of To Kill a Mockingbird and the three-volume Universal Songster (Jones, London 1832) by George Cruikshank, who illustrated Dickens’ Oliver Twist and two other volumes. It was a pleasure to hold those books once again.

Meanwhile, I’m still fielding questions about the food service.

The trial run revealed a few areas requiring attention, and there is still the matter of suppliers: Specifically – trying to get their attention.

In my previous life as a restaurateur, I contacted Coca Cola about switching to their products and they were quick to bring out a machine that would dispense soft drinks. All we had to do is buy the product. Of course, Paddy’s Irish Restaurant seated 150 people (we had many more than that inside on St. Patrick’s Day, but that’s another story…), and the current layout for the bookstore bistro will accommodate about a tenth of that number.

The food distribution company salesperson hasn’t been seen round these parts since April, so it has been Plan B in the meantime.

There is also that issue of publicizing the food service. It’s in the works now, part of the planned entry-level marketing that will accompany the inaugural run, once we’re beyond the trials.

A number of bookstore guests have already expressed their impatience over the delay – a feeling I share completely. I can only point out that several of the Main Street neighbor restaurants were months in opening, even after posting their outdoor signage. The McHuston awning has only had lettering for just over a week now.

My sixth grade science teacher was fond of repeating the adage “Patience is a Virtue.” I’m not going for sainthood or anything.

It’s only in hopes of avoiding the snags that sometimes come with hurrying.

A reach? Tom Cruise as Jack Reacher.

I don’t know what to think.

Under the headline on the internet news story, it says: In other Cruise news, the first photos are out of Tom Cruise as the title character in the December-release film: Jack Reacher.

The character – Jack Reacher – is the renegade, justice-dealing, ex-military creation of novelist Lee Child, and having read most of the titles in the series I can tell you, Tom Cruise never once came to mind.

Maybe on screen Cruise is larger than life, but you’ve seen his actual size I’m sure. Jack Reacher is supposed to be a bear of a man. Or maybe I just read that into his description, because he is definitely one to avoid becoming crosswise with. Jack Reacher mustered out of the US Army and began traveling around the country, looking for things he had missed during his upbringing and later military life abroad.

Trouble always finds him.

Jack Reacher is such a character that I’ve recommended him to both men and women and – to date – I’ve only had a single fellow say he probably didn’t need to read any more of the series. To the rest of the many, many readers who have taken up my suggestion the books are addictive, to the point that they can’t be read quickly enough.

It is said that women want to date Jack Reacher, and men want to be him.

The author, Lee Child, writes in a visual style that makes reading the books almost the equivalent of watching a movie. Hopefully, the film will be able to capture that energy as well as Child does.

Most of the Tom Cruise movies have been entertaining to me, and if asked, I suppose I’d answer, Sure, I like Tom Cruise.

As Jack Reacher?

I’ll have to wait and see, but I’ll give him the benefit of the doubt at this point.

Check out the latest Jack Reacher novel The Affair, but you know – of course, you can find it at McHuston Booksellers, your Main Street book store in Broken Arrow, OK.

Big Buck Books

Like anything else, people look for bargains among the books. Honestly, I try to price the inventory in a way that the prices are competitive with any retail offering in the US. Most are under $5.

Some of the books are a little more valuable and command a higher price. Still, I compare with internet offerings and try to match the lowest price available.

When a customer looking over some antique volumes asked if she could “talk me down on some of these” I had to decline, knowing they are already priced below what would be asked elsewhere. Beyond that, she was inquiring about books priced under twenty dollars. Perhaps if she had been interested in that $400 leather bound set of early 1800’s philosophy it might have been different.

Even in our age of electronic reading, there are some big bucks being paid for bound copies. Here are some examples of volumes sold in June 2012, the top eight in ascending order, and courtesy of American Book Exchange:

8. Suttree by Cormac McCarthy – $6,000
Published in 1979 by Random House, an author-signed first edition.

7. Go Tell it on the Mountain by James Baldwin – $6,500
A signed, first edition, first printing copy published in 1953 by Knopf.

6. The New Examen by John Paget – $6,750
A 1934 Haworth Press edition limited to 50 signed and numbered copies bound by Sangorski & Sutcliffe and printed on handmade, water-marked, laid paper with deckled edges. Oh, and it was signed by the author, as well as Winston Churchill, who wrote the foreword.

5. The Art Institute of Chicago: 100 Masterpieces: Marc Chagall, Georgia O’Keeffe, Joan Miro, Ivan Albright, Willem de Kooning – $6,825
Full leather, numbered 1978 Rand McNally edition with the signatures of Chagall, O’Keeffe, Miro, Albright and de Kooning added on the 100th birthday of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1979. (Undoubtedly the signatures – more than the book itself – pushed the price.)

4. Contact: A Tribute to Those Who Serve Rhodesia by John Lovett – $8,000
A presentation first edition from 1977, bound in elephant hide, inscribed by the author to Gen. Peter Walls of the Rhodesian army.

3. Formulation: Articulation by Josef Albers – $8,542
A 1972 publication that contains 127 silk-screen prints of the artist’s works, which was limited to 1000 numbered copies, and was signed by Albers.

2. (Actually an envelope signed by Ernest Hemingway) $9,000
Published in 1952, a first edition of Hemingway’s classic The Old Man and the Sea contains an envelope laid into the book. The envelope was post-marked “Habana, Cuba” in 1946 and was signed twice by Hemingway. As with #5, the signature on the envelope likely elevated the price of the book to its final price.

1. An Ideal Husband by Oscar Wilde – $20,120
A first edition published by Leonard Smithers in 1899, this edition was limited to 100 copies, bound in full crushed morocco and signed by Oscar Wilde. (An ironic title, to boot.)

You won’t find these items in our current inventory – although there is a first edition copy of The Old Man and the Sea. It’s a book club edition, though, and won’t make anyone’s “most expensive books” list.

Still, a nice addition to any collector’s library!

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