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I have been asked to look at selling a collection of books that were in a library that has been closed for over seventy years. They were recently found in the attic - put there when the building changed use.
I am going to list them and approach antique booksellers to ger a value and to offer them for sale. What should I include n the list?
Obviously, title, author, ISBN number and date. How do I determine if they are 1st, 2nd, 3rd etc editions? Anything else apart from the above should I include?
Thanks in advance
No best answer has yet been selected by Daij. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Given that the ISBN system has only been in place since 1967, I can't see how you can include ISBNs in the information that you provide!
I've dabbled in a bit of book dealing over the years and I know that 'old' and 'valuable' are far from synonymous terms within the field. Indeed, I'd estimate that about 99% of 'old' books have absolutely no value whatsoever (other, possibly, than as 'reading copies').
Further, any book (that's actually got any value at all) that's without its original dust wrapper will have lost well over half of its value (and probably closer to 90% of it) when that dust wrapper went missing.
Lastly (unless it's very, very rare), any book classed as 'ex libris' (i.e. from a library source) will have close to zero value anyway.
To be honest, I'd be amazed if any antiquarian bookseller has even the slightest interest in the books that you've got. (Sorry!)
I've often found the British Library catalogue useful though when, for example, checking a publication date to see if it matches with the first edition of a book:
https:/
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