r/rarebooks 7d ago

A 1774 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe autographed letter from his Sturm and Drang period sold for €40,640.00 ($47,168.08 )at Ketterer (Germany) on May 18. Presale high estimate was €15,000. Reported by Rare Book Hub

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21 Upvotes

From the English portion of the catalog notes:

Autograph letter signed "G". Very early, great letter by Goethe, written just under three months after the publication of "Werther". Extremely rare. Addressed to the poet Heinrich Christian Boie, giving an outstanding insight into his Sturm und Drang period. Mentions Klopstock, ice skating, his own creative work, his characteristic nose, etc. From a family that has held the letter continuously. Appearing at auction for the first time. 1 1/2 pp. 22,5 : 18,5 cm. - Slight marginal defects.


r/rarebooks 7d ago

The Crying of Lot 49 by Thomas Pynchon, First Edition/First Printing, 1966.

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42 Upvotes

r/rarebooks 7d ago

A rare German language prayer book on vellum, inscribed and dated 1498 with illuminated miniatures by Johannes Bamler sold at Ketterer (Germany) for €63,500 ($73,700). High presale estimate was €25,000. Reported by Rare Book Hub.

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22 Upvotes

(Translated from German catalog notes)

A rare German-language prayer book on vellum, one of the highlights of Augsburg book illumination. Written by Leonhardt Schulin in Augsburg, inscribed and dated 1 December 1498.

Illuminated with miniatures by Johannes Bamler and with gold-ground initials from his workshop. Formerly owned by Jens Sattler, a manufacturer from Schweinfurt. Contains 13 (of 22) fullpage miniatures by J. Bamler himself and 24 color initials on gold leaf ground (2 of which historiated) with tendrils by Bamler's workshop, further 11 smaller initials on gold ground.

18th cent. calf over wooden boards with 2 clasps, front board with a later painted depiction of the Pieta on a domed oval enamel disc; the front pastedown with relief (angel heads and ornamentation) on black velvet. 11 : 8 cm. 180 (of 192) leaves. Sheet size 10 : 7,5 cm. - Minor (finger-)staining, spine with few small defective spots, 1 clasp defective. In general well-preserved manuscript.


r/rarebooks 8d ago

Very very old book...

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32 Upvotes

r/rarebooks 7d ago

Which is the actual first printing of the Burton Arabian Nights?

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3 Upvotes

Hey guys, does anyone know definitively what the first printing of Arabian Nights by Richard Burton is?

There are at least a dozen different editions I've found, all claiming to be the first. Some sources say the kamashastra edition was the first one, some say the Burton club, I've also seen some booksellers imply that there were earlier smaller printing runs? And I've read that any illustrated editions must have been at least as late as 1887?

And within the Burton / kamashastra printings, I've seen at least 5 different bindings (most common being the pictured one)

What should the actual first printing with original binding look like?

Thanks for your help!


r/rarebooks 7d ago

WJ Rolfe Tennyson Primer

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5 Upvotes

Anyone familiar with this series, Mrs Silsby or whether this is collectible? Found with my grandfathers books.


r/rarebooks 8d ago

The Fleischer Story by Leslie Cabarga signed by a bunch of the Fleischer staff

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11 Upvotes

I love Betty Boop and my partner very nicely found this book while thrifting and gave it to me as a gift. I realized after opening it that it is signed by Max Fleischer and several other important figures at the studio.

I do not want to part with it but I’m curious to know how rare of a find my partner found.


r/rarebooks 8d ago

Rare medical book appraisal: 1892 Osler 1st edition + original 1892 receipt

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73 Upvotes

Looking for opinions/appraisal on a rare medical book in my collection. I have what appears to be a 1st edition, 2nd state 1892 copy of The Principles and Practice of Medicine by William Osler in very good condition. It also comes with the original 1892 publisher/bookseller receipt and provenance tied to Dr. William A. Peck, former dean of Washington University Medical School.

I’m curious how significant the provenance and original receipt are to collectors, and what a realistic appraisal or auction estimate might be. Would appreciate any opinions from collectors, dealers, or anyone familiar with rare medical books.


r/rarebooks 7d ago

I have an idea

0 Upvotes

So im a kid right? And I always like going to booksales and i find very interesting books. So im thinking of finding rare books or just books that people are looking for and selling them for profit. I just need a job but I can't get one so please ask for books that you guys are looking for. Thank you!


r/rarebooks 8d ago

I cannot find any information on this 4vol set I acquired: The Arabian Nights Entertainments 1792 C.D. Piguenit, Aldgate. 4vol. Anybody know more about these?

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14 Upvotes

See pics. Just acquired some old books from a deceased relative but having trouble researching them to find if they should be insured or not. Please provide insight if you can. Thank you


r/rarebooks 9d ago

Librarian says the shuttering Memphis Theological Seminary’s 80,000 books can’t easily be sold, donated, or dumped.

637 Upvotes

From the Memphis Flyer, May 20, 2026

Ed Hughes, the librarian at Memphis Theological Seminary (MTS), has spent the past few weeks trying to solve a big problem. Call it a paper jam.

MTS’s cozy, four-story library contains more than 80,000 bound volumes collected over the course of decades of theological education.

The books, one dating back to the 1600s, can’t easily or quickly be sold, given away, or even moved, and the seminary is closing July 31st.

“There is no easy solution,” says Hughes, the library’s bow-tied, bespectacled director since 2019. “I would hate to see them all go to the dumpster.”

The Cumberland Presbyterian Church’s General Assembly voted in late January to close the ecumenical seminary after years of declining enrollment.

Thirty-six members of MTS’s 62nd and final graduating class received their master’s or doctoral degrees last Sunday at First Baptist Church Broad.

Founders Hall, a 114-year-old neo-Gothic mansion that was converted into the seminary’s main building in 1964, is already on the market.

Hughes has spent the past three months helping faculty and students prepare for the final semester while preparing to close the library.

In addition to all the books, the library has collected thousands of photographs, audio and video recordings, newspapers and magazines, and historical records.
Hughes says the Cumberland Presbyterian Church’s historical foundation will take many of the photos, videos, and historical records, along with hundreds of theses and dissertations. The foundation will collect all denomination-related material.

He’s not sure what to do with all the books. When he reached out to used book vendors, they wanted to know the condition of each book and its 13-digit ISBN (International Standard Book Number). There are 80,000 books and only one Ed.

Hughes would love to give the books to another seminary or library or school. But more libraries (and seminaries) are closing than opening. There’s a glut of used books, and digital copies of many are readily available online.

Even if Hughes could sell or donate the books, removing, packing, and shipping them would be a monumental task and expense. The books are held on floor-to-ceiling shelves in narrow rows that provide barely enough room for a single human browser.
There’s no room for a forklift in the stacks, which doesn’t matter because there’s no elevator. He could pile books on a dolly but he’d have to bring each load down very narrow staircases.

Hughes estimates that moving the books out of the library, if only to dump them, could cost more than $20,000 and take weeks, if not months. “Those are just my estimates,” Hughes says. “I’ve never closed a library before.”

Neither has Dr. Jody Hill, MTS president since 2020. “We’ve tried to interest other seminaries in some of these books, but no one is adding print volumes to their libraries,” Hill says. “It’s a shame. There are some gems in here.”

The gems include a rare copy of the Geneva Bible, a 1560 English Protestant translation. It’s the version the Puritans brought with them to America. It’s also known as the “Breeches Bible” because its translation of Genesis 3:7 said Adam and Eve sewed fig leaves together to make “breeches.”

The shelves also hold dozens of volumes from the Loeb Classical Library, printed in 1912 with Greek or Latin on one side of the page and the English translation on the other. The series includes works by Homer, Aeschylus, Sophocles, Aristotle, Virgil, Ovid, Caesar, Seneca, Josephus, and Augustine.

“They’re wonderful but digital versions of all of them are available,” Hughes says. “In the greater Memphis metropolitan area, I think my wife is the only one worried about their future.”

Scores of books are filled with marginalia — handwritten comments and responses from students across generations of ecumenical education.

On a page in one book, the word “Exactly” written in pencil is followed by the word “False” in ballpoint. In another book, “This is heresy” is followed by “No, this is doctrine.”

“Writing things in the margins is a tradition that goes way back, beginning, I believe, with the invention of papyrus,” says Hughes. “For instance, there are theories that marginalia became part of the text in one or more of Paul’s letters.”

The library opened with about 3,600 volumes in 1964, the year the seminary moved from McKenzie, Tennessee, to Memphis. A decade later, it reached its capacity of 44,000 books.

The seminary expanded the library in 1982, doubling the stack space and adding a classroom, a new reading room and a few offices. By 2000, the library held 80,000 bound volumes. Circulation among faculty and students was about 12,000 a year.

“Now, circulation is a handful,” says Hughes. “Every now and then a faculty member will check out a book. Students never do. I haven’t bought a book for the library since 2022.”

The library’s holdings include the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. collection, hundreds of documents — most of them photocopied at the King Center in Atlanta — about King’s life, theology, ministry, and death. It is being donated to the seminary’s House of Black Church Studies, which will become a local nonprofit organization.

The C.S. Lewis Collection holds about 50 books written by or about the late author, scholar, and Anglican theologian. “It’s a nice collection, but his books are readily available,” Hughes says.

Books aren’t the only special collections in the library. In the 1970s, Rev. Richard Magrill, a cabinet maker and the library’s second full-time director, built dozens of finished cedar shelves to make room for more books.
The shelves remain. “I don’t know what is going to happen to these shelves,” Hughes says. “They need a new home. They’re beautiful.”

As the library approaches its past due date, Hughes is scouring those and other shelves. He wants to make sure he doesn’t leave behind something important, invaluable or irreplaceable.

“I’m really afraid I’m going to miss something,” he says. “Before it all disappears.” 


r/rarebooks 8d ago

Help needed to identify whether or whether not I have a 1st edition 1896 book (The Riddle Ring, Justin McCarthy)

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16 Upvotes

I stumbled across this book in a thrift store, and I couldn’t find any evidence that it wasn’t a first edition copy. It only cost $3.50, and I wanted to check with people who knew more about this than me. And if not a first edition, whether it’s valuable or not.


r/rarebooks 9d ago

1760 Jesuit school drama collection (Neumayr, S.J.) armorial binding bearing the arms of the Prince-Bishop of Augsburg, the author's own ecclesiastical superior

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72 Upvotes

Theatrum Politicum sive Tragoediae ad Commendationem Virtutis et Vitiorum Detestationem, P. Franciscus Neumayr S.J. Augsburg & Ingolstadt, Crätz & Thomas Summer, 1760. Cum Privilegio Caesareo. First collected edition of Neumayr's Jesuit school dramas composed for the Ludi Autumnales and Saturnales of the Augsburg Jesuit College, 1731–1747.

Plays included: Titus Imperator (1741), Constantia Orthodoxa (1736), Eutropius Infelix Politicus (1742), Anastasius Dicorus (1744), Jeroboam (1735), Servus Duorum Dominorum (1733), and Tobias & Sara sive Nuptiae (1747), a musical drama dedicated to Maximilian III Joseph, Elector of Bavaria, on the occasion of his wedding.

Arms of Joseph Ignaz Philipp von Hessen-Darmstadt (1699–1768), Prince-Bishop of Augsburg 1740–1768, surmounted by the episcopal mitre.

The title page identifies Neumayr as Augustae Ecclesiae Cathedralis Oratorem Ordinario: Cathedral Preacher of Augsburg. The bishop whose arms are on this binding was his direct ecclesiastical superior. The book, the author, and the provenance all converge on the same institution at the same moment.

Neumayr is documented in Sommervogel's Bibliothèque de la Compagnie de Jésus.


r/rarebooks 8d ago

Question for collectors. Which book did you start your collection with, and how many books are in your collection now?

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4 Upvotes

r/rarebooks 9d ago

A heroine of france - red cover

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15 Upvotes

Picked up this book for the spine, thought it looked really cool.

Tried to find out more about it but could not find another red one anywhere.

Does anyone have any info or can shed some light on it?


r/rarebooks 9d ago

Fascinating Association Copy of a Book on Polynesian Culture

11 Upvotes

I found this book at an estate sale, and noticed it was signed. I'm wondering if it's worth finding someone who deals with Polynesian studies to inquire about it. Anyone have thoughts, advice, insight?

With the help of Google, I've got:

The author, ​Willowdean C. Handy, was a prominent American anthropologist and ethnologist. In 1920–1921, she and her husband, Edward Smith Craighill Handy, traveled to the Marquesas Islands as part of a famous scientific expedition for the Bishop Museum of Honolulu. She became an expert on Marquesan art, culture, and tattooing.

The inscription reads: ​"Kaoha [a Marquesan greeting/valediction meaning love or compassion] to Edward and Elizabeth Handy, faithful friends of all Polynesia from Willowdean C. Handy"

​The "twistt" if you will is thatWillowdean and her husband Edward divorced in 1934. Edward later remarried a woman named Elizabeth , and the two of them continued to collaborate on massive anthropological studies of Hawaii and Polynesia.

​This book was published in 1965 (the year Willowdean died.).This inscription shows that despite a divorce three decades prior, Willowdean remained close enough with her ex-husband and his new wife to warmly gift them a signed copy of her final memoir, explicitly honoring their shared, lifelong devotion to Polynesian anthropology.

The name "HANDY" written on the bottom text block edge indicates this copy likely sat on Edward and Elizabeth's personal research bookshelves for decades.


r/rarebooks 9d ago

The Monument to Robert Gould Shaw

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19 Upvotes

Spotted at The Brattle Book Shop last weekend, I looped back today, negotiated the price (the front joint is split), and brought it home. Published in 1897, it becomes the earliest title in my moderately extensive collection of Bruce Rogers’ designs while employed at Houghton Mifflin’s Riverside Press (Grolier 21; Warde 7).

It’s a rare book, though no limitation is stated.

It seems an appropriate addition on this Memorial Day weekend.

Robert Gould Shaw was a Brahmin Bostonian who volunteered to the Union Army and lead the 54th Regiment, the first all-black regiment. The movie “Glory” tells the story.

The bronze monument to Shaw and his troops was sculpted by Augustas Saint Gaudens, and stands opposite the State House in Boston.


r/rarebooks 8d ago

Anyone seen a speaker for the dead copy like these?

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1 Upvotes

They are signed limited numbered/lettered editions. I can’t tell if a speaker for the dead version was ever printed.


r/rarebooks 10d ago

A lovely manuscript book that I have picked up for just 10€

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109 Upvotes

r/rarebooks 9d ago

Andersen's fairy tales cant find any info of this edition pls help

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27 Upvotes

Edition does not have any dates wondering if missing dj and just cant find pictures of this edition


r/rarebooks 9d ago

1857 Goethe book ❤️

12 Upvotes

r/rarebooks 9d ago

Artist's Edition of Liber Khthonia by Jeff Cullen

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6 Upvotes

First edition of Liber Khthonia by Jeff Cullen, Syracuse-based author.


r/rarebooks 9d ago

The Crime of Sylvestre Bonnard by Anatole France

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4 Upvotes

This was in a box marked free at my library


r/rarebooks 10d ago

The ingoldsby legends

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9 Upvotes

I found this book at work one day, brought I home because i was really interested in it and the illustrations it has. I would just like to know if anyone else has seen a copy this old and with these illustrations? I can't find anything about this particular edition at all. Nor about the lt corporal who wrote in it as a gift for someone. If anyone can provide any information regarding my queries, I would really appreciate it.


r/rarebooks 10d ago

Fabularum Aesopicarum (1698) & Oikomenes Periegesis (1704)

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31 Upvotes

I'm trying to learn more about what I have here. It appears to be two distinct works bound together:

  • Photos 1 & 2: Fabularum Aesopicarum Delectus, published in Oxford (Oxoniae) in 1698

This one is interesting because it contains latin, green, hebrew, and arabic typefaces. I found a copy on abebooks, but it's bound with another unrelated volume (Phaedri Augusti Caesaris).

  • Photos 3 & 4: Oikomenes periegesis, published in Oxford (Oxonii) in 1704

This one contains some fantastic maps of the ancient world. I found a copy on abebooks, but it contains 16 engraved maps, while my copy contains only 12, with signs that 4 were removed at some point.

Unfortunately, the condition isn't great. Both covers are completely detached, and it has ex libris markings (a bookplate from Church Missionary Society Library and a couple stamps on internal pages that are scratched out in ink).

I'd appreciate any insight into which editions these two works are (first, later reprints?), and any significance to them being bound together. Any thoughts on possible value, particularly given the condition (binding, missing maps, miscut title page), are welcome too. Thanks