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If you think Top 10 sellers have it made, think again. During July, they faced obstacles from all directions. The non-fiction top seller appended a note about his dyslexia to the 171-page listing he created. Another seller embarked on a third try with one auction, citing non-paying bidders as the problem. And still another warned off buyers lacking positive ratings only to end up with a -4 feedback winner called an idiot by previous sellers. Life at the top isn't always easy.
On the other side of fortune, a Canadian seller's book knowledge paid off with quick turn-around and
approximately $8,485 profit. Read about it in the Fiction Top 10.
#1
A set of UK first edition first printing volumes of The Lord of the Rings tops the fiction list in July. Each volume is in the original dust upclipped dust jacket. The UK seller described the dust jackets as professional restored with age discoloration of the white background as the only flaw. The volumes themselves are described in detail. Three photos illustrated the 10-day auction which started at GBP 0.99 and, after 32 bids, ended at $9,948.21.
#2
Described as "the rarest book in the Robert E. Howard canon.... There were 8 known copies. The ninth copy can be seen here."
This 1937 book is in good condition with a Boots Book-Lovers insert and no dust jacket. Listed by a Canadian bookseller,
it sold as a BIN in a private auction. Tim Doyle, BookThink's Science Fiction Editor, wrote me about this auction in July.
"There is a great story behind it ...," he wrote. "The auction is for a beat-up ex-lib hardcopy without dustjacket.... The
best part: the seller ... purchased it off of ABE about three weeks ago, for approximately $15."
#3
Though this UK seller wrote in the auction, "DO NOT BID if you have less than 5 or 98% positive feedback...," the stated winner was "not a registered users" with -4 feedback who used a BIN to purchase the volumes for $4,646.50. Yes, that's minus 4 feedback. On examination of the feedback, it turns out the buyer is described as "idiot" by 2 different sellers; another called him a "complete time waster." A month past the closing, neither buyer nor seller shows feedback from this transaction. The 3 volumes listed are UK first editions with signed bookplates and were shown in 4 photos.
#4
Another trio comes in the #4 position in an auction by a frequent Top10 seller from the UK. Calling this a "Mad Stock Clearance," the seller describes the volumes without mentioning their titles in the 10-day auction with 7 photos. Described as "All Hand Signed, all minimum good-very good condition," the set sold for $2,513.54 in a private auction with 21 bids.
#5
A near fine first edition, first printing in a very good+ dust jacket sold for $2,422.37. Listed by a UK seller in a 10-day auction with 10 photos, the book is signed by the artist on the book and front flap. Twenty-six bids took the auction from a starting bid of GBP 0.07 to the selling price.
#6
Another Lord of the Rings set appears as #6, listed by a UK seller in a 10-day auction with 10 photos.
The Fellowship of the Ring and The Two Towers are 2nd impressions and
The Return of the King is a 1st impression. All are in dust jackets. All three are described as in fine condition and in their original dust jackets. The auction attracted 15 bids and ended at $2,146.60.
#7
The 1st edition, 2nd impression volume is described as in excellent condition. Flaws include a bookplate and a price-clipped dust jacket. Listed for 10 days with 6 photos, the UK seller's auction received 11 bids, raising it from a starting bid of GBP 500 to $2,038.35.
#8
The first US seller in July's fiction list saw this auction end with a BIN of $1,950. Listed with 6 photos, this is #348 of 350 signed copies with the illustration portfolio. Both King and Wrightson signed the book; Wrightson also signed the color artwork. The seller states, "I have been burned twice now with this book and would like to see it go to someone who is going to pay for it, and who is going to enjoy it!!" As an extra enticement, the seller offered free shipping for a BIN purchase "with more than 12 hours to go."
#9
This Lord of the Rings set is described as a "deluxe, slip-cased" set "… housed in the original Pauline Baynes decorative slipcase…. The first, rarest, and most collectable edition of Tolkien's trilogy." Book are in very good condition and were purchased by the UK seller's father around the time of their publication in 1968. Listed in a 7-day auction with 6 photos, the books attracted 21 bids to sell for $1,895.77.
#10
As the US seller explains, "This is the book handed out as favors at the party for the anniversary of 'Carrie.'" Signed by King and numbered 115, it is called "super rare." It sold as a BIN for $1,500.
"Apologies for my dyslexia, I wanted to do the auction unaided," wrote the seller as an addition to the 171-page listing of the volume described as "The Eldras Shakespeare Elizabethan Old English Illustrated 1566 Bible atrributed to the Ownership of Mt. William Shakspeare." As brief sample of the auction content - "O that I should be forced by computer nerds to sell the family silver! .... BID! BID! BID!" At least 8 photos were included in the 10-day auction. The UK seller started the auction at US $0.01 and, after 42 bids, the book sold for $7,900.
In a concise auction, another UK seller listed a 1st UK edition, 1st impression slipcased copy of
Long Walk to Freedom. Described as #178 of 250 signed copies, it is bound in green leather and is in mint unread condition. Listed in a 7-day auction with 3 photos, the auction attracted 19 bids and moved the starting bid of GBP 100.00 to close at $4,088.92.
Described by the US seller as one of "a limited printing of 55 copies in 1904 No Place or credit to the producer.... [the title] was one of his ribald productions done in 1876 that he never owned upto until 1906." In a 7-day listing with 7 photos, the auction moved from a starting bid of $35 to sell for $2,550 with 8 bids.
Sold as a BIN less than a day after listing, the book is described as weighing app. 20 lbs. Listed by a US seller with no photos and a starting bid of $2,200, the book is described as "the real thing. Codex Sinaiticvs, Petropolitanvs, The New Testament, The Epistle of Barnabas and the Sheperd of Hermas … produced in facsimile…."
This volume is a Genesis Publication with all that includes - leather deluxe, #173 of 500, and an accompanying "box of delights." It's in pristine condition with a signed numbered certificate. Listed by a UK seller in a 10-day auction starting at GBP 1,000, it received 3 bids and sold for $1,986.61.
Published in 1859, the 150-page guide to cricket has tanned pages and stains on the last pages. Graded good, it was listed by an Australian in a 7-day auction with 5 photos. Started at AU $200, it received 12 bids and sold for $1,863.43.
Fifty copies of Waugh's essay were privately printed in 1926, explained the UK seller, who notes that this book is "a notoriously difficult title to find." Described with stained boards, part of spine gone, and "in need of the attention of a skilled book binder," the title received 16 bids, moving it from a GBP 9.99 starting price to sell for $1,834.70.
A red first edition of It Works was listed at $0.99 and sold with 7 bids at $1,814.59. The US seller notes this is #2552 and in "great condition." Flaws include 4 lines highlighted in purple, small spots, and a previous owner's name.
Signed by the author, this first edition without the dust jacket is graded very good. Flaws include fraying atop the spine, a small tear, and some foxing. Shown in 6 photos in the 7-day private auction, the book sold after 17 bids for $1,675.
11 of the sellers were from the UK
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