Quizzes & Puzzles13 mins ago
first editions
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Greatly appreciate any help regarding First Editions. It is quite confusing trying to determine if my Harry Potter books are First Editions or not, 3 or 4 of them clearly state "First Edition" but it seems whilst looking on the www this may not mean they are, I have been seeing a lot regarding numbers i.e 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 on the copyright page but mine do not have any numbers just the above mentioned "First Edition". Also another of my Harry Potter books does not say First Edition but does have two numbers 20 19. Finally I do have a stephen king book that does say 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 is this a 1st. I may come across as being a bit dumb but it is very confusing.
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There is a difference between 'edition' and 'impression'. The edition is the printing plates used, and the impression is the number of times books have been printed off those plates. Therefore a 'holy grail' is a first edition, first impression (or 1/1).
The edition can be determined by looking for the words 'first edition' or by the blurb on the inside of the book (it will say "first published..." and "this edition published..." if it says the latter it isn't a first edition, you only want to see the words "first edition published...").
To find the impression you need to look at the printer key (the sequence of numbers). The lowest number is the impression number, so your Harry Potter book with the numbers 20 19 is the 19th impression, but your Stephen King is a first impression.
If there is no printer key you can usually assume it is a 1/1. In the case of Bloomsbury (who publish the Potter books) all 1/1s are marked by the words 'first edition' and only later impressions have printer keys.
The edition can be determined by looking for the words 'first edition' or by the blurb on the inside of the book (it will say "first published..." and "this edition published..." if it says the latter it isn't a first edition, you only want to see the words "first edition published...").
To find the impression you need to look at the printer key (the sequence of numbers). The lowest number is the impression number, so your Harry Potter book with the numbers 20 19 is the 19th impression, but your Stephen King is a first impression.
If there is no printer key you can usually assume it is a 1/1. In the case of Bloomsbury (who publish the Potter books) all 1/1s are marked by the words 'first edition' and only later impressions have printer keys.