Chapter 151 Alphabetizing a One-Author Catalogue

I know you’ll probably faint from shock when you read this, but I am actually working on the Dante catalogue Tuesday. (I’m posting this Monday night, but when most of you read this it will be Tuesday.)

It is the first time I have written a print catalogue.

It is also the first time I have scanned images for print and for pdf.

It is also the first time I have had to use a computer to do layout.

Since I learn my tech skills as I go, you can probably understand why compiling this catalogue takes time. Just when I think it will be simple, new questions arise every day.

Here’s today’s catalogue challenge: When one compiles a catalogue of 50 or so works by the same author — Dante Alighieri — how does one alphabetize the items?

By author?
Well, with the exceptions of one or two items, they are all by Dante Alighieri, so that doesn’t help give any organization.

By title?
This is a possibility, but then some items that should be near each other — maybe they have the same illustrator or the same translator — won’t be near each other.

By illustrator?
This seems a good way to go, as my catalogue features illustrated and unusual editions of the works of Dante Alighieri. However, there are a few items which are not illustrated. How would I place those?

By translator?
This could work, for the editions I own in translation. However, I don’t think a potential customer will be searching for a particular translator, so I think it’s not an efficient way to organize the books.

By the Book Fair approach?
You are probably familiar with my thoughts on arranging shelves for book fairs. If not, you’ll know that I organize the books on the shelves at a book fair for their visual impact. I sort the books into general subjects — decorative bindings, western Americana, pioneer women, etc. but don’t alphabetize them at all. I shelve the books with pretty covers face out. Other books go spine out to fill in spaces between the face-out books. For the Dante catalogue, I plan to have images of most, if not all, of the books. Perhaps I should arrange for visual impact alone? That does make it somewhat difficult, though, for a person looking for a specific item.

By date published?
This is an interesting way to catalogue the books, because it will visually show the way that illustrators chose to portray Dante’s works over the centuries. Still, what would I then do with the non-illustrated copies?

By some other form of organization that hasn’t occurred to me?

Have any of you booksellers compiled a catalogue of items by one author before? Have any of you book collectors received a catalogue of items by a single author? What would make it easy or difficult to use? If you can offer any ideas, I’d love to hear how you think I should arrange the catalogue items. If you are so inclined, you can leave a comment below. Thanks in advance.

Published in: on March 31, 2008 at 5:01 pm Comments (3)

Chapter 150 Back to the Books

Tom and Huck return to school today, after a week off for Easter vacation. The house is peaceful enough for actual book work again. I’m off to my local historical society to hunt for some more books today. It’s been too long since I’ve gotten out to scout, and I’ve missed the last two of my favorite library sales. I don’t often find lots of books at the historical society, but I find enough to make occasional visits worthwhile. Besides, I love its quiet basement location in an historic old courthouse. Did I mention that there’s a great bakery down the street, too? ;)

Now that March is ending, it’s time to plan for April. First, here’s my list of priorities for March, with the status in bold next to the goal.

MARCH 2008 PRIORITIES

+ Learn more about Rare Book School Courses at UCLA DONE. Applied for “Books of the Far West” course.
+ Do something, anything, related to completing the Dante catalogue. Bought two more books. Did nothing else.
+ Set up 2008 accounting on computer. Done. This was a big project, and took most of my work hours during March. Now all is in order and I will enter expenses as they arise rather than saving them up for 14 months and then trying to enter them on the computer. (Sure I will.)
+ List one book a day. Did not list any new books. Did have a few sales, though.
+ Contribute an article to BookThink. Done.
+ Contribute an article to Bookshop Blog. Not done. Sorry again, Bruce.
+ Keep blogging here. Done.

Here are the priorities for April:

APRIL 2008 PRIORITIES
+Dante catalogue.
+Contribute an article to BookThink.
+Contribute an article to Bookshop Blog.
+Keep blogging here.

You can see that with the exceptions of some writing commitments I’ve made to others and to myself, I am making that catalogue the only priority this month, probably at the expense of a few other sales I could spend time to get. But that’s ok. I’ve got to finish this catalogue. It’s finally time.

See you in the stacks!

Published in: on March 30, 2008 at 7:38 pm Comments (0)

Chapter 149 How Much Do You Pay When a Customer Offers You Books?

I’m still spending time with Tom and Huck, who are out of school this week on Easter vacation. Having kids out of school for a week means that they want to do exciting things every day, like watching the man who hammered a four-inch, steel nail into his skull, ate fire, and walked barefoot on broken glass while carrying Tom on his back. We’ve been very busy trying to top that today. I promise that next week my posting will be back to bookish business. In the meantime, Joyce Godsey, owner of sicpress.com and Bibliophile Bullpen has answered the above question.

How much should you pay when a customer offers you books?

This is an important question. The first part of the antiquarian bookselling equation is finding the best books in the best condition. The second, and equally important part of the equation is paying the best price for the book. Check out Joyce’s take on the question here.

Chapter 148 One Fun Thing about Blogging

One thing I like about blogging is how much I learn from others. Since I don’t have an open shop, I don’t have the benefit of people coming through my door to discuss the books and authors which hold their interests. I like to think of this blog as a virtual way to have these discussions with customers, visitors, and colleagues.

Recently, I blogged about an upcoming trip I am taking with my family this summer. The trip will include visits to two of the homesites of one of my favorite pioneer women, Laura Ingalls Wilder.

Today, I received a comment from the editor of a Laura Ingalls Wilder newsletter, The Homesteader. I did not even know there was a Laura Ingalls Wilder newsletter. I just have to get a copy! Or two. Or three. Or more. The editor had read my blog posts on my travel plans and gave me some good ideas for things to do while I’m in South Dakota and Minnesota.

So, if you’re a Laura Ingalls Wilder fan, check out The Homesteader. And keep reading here. When the time comes, I’ll blog our journey across the country this summer.

See you on the prairie!

Published in: on March 26, 2008 at 5:50 pm Comments (0)

Chapter 147 Only in San Francisco

I took Tom and Huck up to The City today, as they have this week off from school. I asked them what they wanted to do. They elected to go to a local tourist trap, Pier 39, a place I have not been in years.

It is, perhaps, not a well-known fact that those of us who have lived in the Bay Area since birth only rarely visit places like Alcatraz, Pier 39, Fisherman’s Wharf, and the Golden Gate Bridge. We do those things only when out-of-state friends are visiting, and then we say silly things like, “I’ve always wanted to ride the cable cars, but for some reason — even though I’ve lived here for over 30 years — I’ve never done it! I’m glad you’re visiting so I had the chance to try it.”

Our out-of-state guests usually stare incredulously, and say equally silly things, like, “If I lived here, I’d ride the charming cable cars every day.” (Well, no, you wouldn’t, because you wouldn’t want to wait in the one-hour-plus lines of tourists to get your ten minute ride.) Mostly, those of us who have lived here all our lives go to The City to dine in style. The landmarks are beautiful, but they are second to the excellent restaurants. The food is so good that the excellent weather and the spectacular views are mere gravy.

Today my provincial view changed.

Today was the ultimate tourist-in-San-Francisco day.

Today was — dare I say it — fun.

We started at Aquarium of the Bay at Pier 39, a small aquarium with two 300-foot-long glass tunnels out into Bay waters so we could see the native fish up close. It was amazing to be surrounded by water on all sides. Later, we even got to touch a bat ray, a leopard shark, and a star fish. Not a bad start to a day I had worried would be spent wandering through shops with “Escaped Alcatraz Inmate” t-shirts for sale.

After our aquarium tour, I decided to take Huck and Tom on a guided Bay cruise — Alcatraz, Angel Island, Sausalito, and the Golden Gate Bridge. Since they have only seen The City from within, I wanted them to see it from the water, with the panoramic City skyline as a backdrop. I wanted them to see the San Francisco that visitors see when they first arrive, the city that my Nana and the late newspaper columnist Herb Caen used to refer to as, “The City that Knows How”.

This was a good plan. Except that it was about 20 degrees cooler out on the water, and windy. And then there was the typical fog, which obscured the usually bright towers of the Golden Gate Bridge. It is another little known fact that if it is 70 and sunny on the Peninsula, where I live, it will be 55 and windy in The City. Dress accordlingly. We had fun, but we were freezing, and so happy when we passed Alcatraz because it meant we were almost back at the pier, where we could warm up.

After our cruise, we stopped for lunch and had hot clam chowder in a sourdough bread bowl, something we almost never make at home. Tom and Huck loved it. I confess I did as well.

We strolled the tacky shops of Pier 39, buying Ghirardelli chocolate (even though we can get it at the grocery store at home) and flattening souvenir pennies. We briefly considered heading down the wharf to the Ripley’s Believe it or Not Museum and the Wax Museum, but decided against it.

Before we left, we stopped to watch a street performer. He surprised all three of us by selecting Tom to be his assistant. He did the following:

1) Ate fire and let Tom hold the torch.

2) Hammered a four inch steel nail up his nose and then pulled it out of his nose with pliers and tosssed it over his shoulder into a wine glass Tom was holding.

3) Walked barefoot on eight feet of broken glass while carrying Tom on his back. (Tom, at almost ten years old, is over five feet tall and weighs 90 pounds.)

Now, this is more like the quirky San Francisco we Bay Area natives know and love.

Tom and Huck loved today.

They were in heaven.

They saw the mythic San Francisco skyline — the Trans-America Pyramid, Coit Tower, the Presidio, the Golden Gate Bridge — through a shroud of equally mythic fog from a boat bobbing in the Bay.

They touched sharks.

They watched a man eat fire, hammer metal into his skull, and walk barefoot on broken glass while one of them got to assist in these endeavors.

Only in San Francisco.

P.S. I forgot to take my camera with me today, so the snapshots will have to remain in my memory. And I think they will for a good long time. Who can forget a man pulling a four-inch nail out of his nose with a pair of pliers?

Published in: on March 25, 2008 at 8:27 pm Comments (2)

Chapter 146 Fishing For Books, Part 2

Here’s the rest of the article I recently wrote for BookThink on scouting for and finding saleable books. Part 1 is here, in case you missed it. You might notice that some of Part 2 comes from an old blog post I did on this topic; I think the information is germane to the topic and worth repeating. Enjoy!

PART TWO
As I wandered the booths of the fair in San Francisco, I realized that if people are going to buy books from me instead of one of the other 200 sellers there, I had to do several things: offer books no one else was offering, offer books in the best possible condition, and offer books at a fair price.

First, I specialize in a field not already dominated by a dozen other booksellers and I know my specialties. I currently specialize in illustrated and unusual books by Dante Alighieri and in books written by or about American women in the 19th century, most of them pioneers. I chose my specialties primarily because these are subjects I love, and as a former high school English teacher, also studied and taught. I have better luck selling what I know and I expect to know more the more that I sell. I have taken the time to educate myself about the best books in my field. Who wrote them? What are their titles? What do they look like? Could I recognize one if it were found on the bottom of a heap of other books in a box?

I also buy /invest in bibliographies relevant to my areas of specialty. I read those repeatedly and also read other dealer catalogues on the subjects to improve my knowledge of what’s out there. That way, when I go “out there”, I know a bit about what I seek – titles, authors, editions. Additionally, I learn what characteristics will help me identify a book in the field previously unknown to me – names of significant people who wrote about Dante, artists who illustrated the Dante, or titles of books about places where pioneers settled, to give a few examples.

Secondly, I try to buy books in my subject area in the best condition I can afford. One thing I realized while looking at the books offered by other booksellers at the fair is something I had heard many times before but that didn’t register completely until I was at the fair: Condition is paramount. After seeing the books of 200 booksellers displayed right next to each other, I really understood this concept. If you are selling books at a fair with 200 dealers, chances are that someone else may be offering the same book or type of books as you. The factor that usually makes the difference in selling that book is better condition. The same is true when selling books on the internet. If a collector wants to purchase a book that has 12 copies listed for sale online, chances are he’ll buy the one in the best condition. Condition matters.

When I saw the range of books offered at the San Francisco fair, I resolved to quit buying those tempting books with a few flaws I come across every so often, like the first edition that sells for many hundreds of dollars in fine condition, but since my copy needs to have the front board re-attached, it will be worth significantly – no, exponentially — less. I don’t know why I continue to stockpile such books. I think that sometimes I become so excited to find a particular title that I don’t care about condition. If I find the title in question, I’ll buy it. Unless the book is truly rare – as in no other copies offered for sale in the last 100 years — all this leaves me with, really, is money poorly spent and books with flaws when there are plenty of fine books available. I concluded from my book fair observations that I would be better off spending my money on acquiring only a couple of fine books than I would spending my money on a dozen good books.

I also try to offer my books at a fair price, based on the current market value of the book, how much work I put into researching and describing the book, and based on making more than I paid for the book. This means that I have to acquire the books at a good price in the first place, which really means I have to be creative when hunting for books.

Where, then, to scout for saleable books?

Start with the ubiquitous estate sales and library sales. You won’t find hundreds of volumes of good material at one time, but these sales are excellent places to start. Library sales give a new bookseller a chance to see books of all editions and all conditions. It was at a library sale that I saw enough book club editions of books that I began to learn how to distinguish most of them from a real first edition. You won’t see any book club editions (at least I hope you won’t) in a true antiquarian bookshop, so it’s hard to learn if that’s the only place you shop. It was also at a library sale that I learned to differentiate condition — a good from a very good, a very good from a near fine, and a near fine from a fine book. Seeing the wide range of conditions on so many books helped me to know to know the difference. A library sale will add volumes to your education as a bookseller, if not to your bookshelves.

Don’t despair that you see a lot of dreck at most library sales (and you will see a lot of dreck). The term book hunter suggests that we must know the dross from the gold. If you are new to book collecting or bookselling, you need first to learn to recognize the dross in order to separate it from the gold. Once you attend the same sale a few months in a row, you will get pretty good at this and no longer feel like you aren’t seeing anything saleable at your library book sale. Also, if you inadvertently purchase some “mistakes”, you won’t have broken the bank to do so. When these mistakes happen to me, I chalk it up to “bookseller’s tuition”, the price I pay to learn to be a good bookseller.

When you’re confident at a library or an estate sale, start scouting your local historical society. Many of these organizations hold regular sales. Mine even has an open used book shop. I was once lucky enough to find books and ephemera donated to the historical society that have the bookplate of a prominent California historian, and that added somewhat to their already saleable value.

Another place I shop frequently is the open (and/or online) shop of my fellow booksellers. A very valuable part of my bookselling education has been to get to know other booksellers. Once you have some basic knowledge, it is worth your time to cultivate a relationship with more experienced sellers. I now know a few well enough that they’ll buy a particular book with me in mind, hoping they can sell it to me. I’ve also been able to supply a couple of booksellers whose likes and dislikes I’ve gotten to know. Sometimes they will offer me a book at a low price because it is a book outside of their own specialty and they want to get their money out of it and devote that money to another book within their specialty.

If you can’t exhibit at a book fair, attend one instead. Some of my best buys have been from other booksellers at book fairs. A book fair can offer 50 or more booksellers in one location, or in the case of San Francisco, 200 sellers. Frequently, sellers offer books at fairs that they do not offer online or in their shops. You can also occasionally find deals among booksellers looking to sell off books they acquired that aren’t a part of their specialty. They are wonderful places to scout and to meet your fellow booksellers in person.

I do go to the occasional book auction, though I don’t often find bargains there. Still, I learn a lot about what makes a book sell. It comes back to condition nearly every time. I also buy some books on ebay, but not unless I know a lot about the book I’m about to purchase. There’s nothing worse than a seller purporting to have a first edition and then seeing the actual book and finding out it’s a book club edition. Better to know the points of issue ahead of time and figure out for yourself if the book is actually a first. I’m wary of signed books sold on ebay, too. It’s just too hard to determine authenticity in most situations. Still, when you know what you want and you’ve done your homework, you can find interesting books there.

Purchasing an entire estate of books may also lead to some good finds, but, if like, me you are a new bookseller, take care to research how to evaluate and negotiate such a deal. I’ve purchased such an estate once before and it was a good experience for me and for the seller, but I asked the advice of more experienced booksellers as to the protocol of housecalls before I agreed to look at the customer’s books.

Finally, read Larry McMurtry’s entertaining novel, Cadillac Jack. It’s a fun read and is a great portrayal of the mindsets of collectors and sellers, even though the characters in the book are neither booksellers nor book collectors. The narrator, Cadillac Jack, repeats a mantra when he is looking to buy items he can resell later: “Anything can be anywhere.” I have discovered that, more important than where one hunts for books, is the attitude with which one hunts for books. I have had some of my best book finds when shopping while employing Cadillac Jack’s “anything can be anywhere” motto. When you find a saleable book, the main thing is to pay attention to how your own knowledge will help you sell this book, to condition, and to the price you pay for the book.

Published in: on March 24, 2008 at 5:42 pm Comments (0)

Chapter 145 Gone Fishing . . . for Books

Please accept my apologies for not blogging Friday. Huck was a bit under the weather, though he seems all better now. We spent the weekend coloring Easter Eggs and trying to finish painting the stripes on one wall in a bedroom. I must confess that, despite our bold plan, the painting is not going well. Though we meticulously taped off the areas to be painted in the striped colors, the paint bled under the tape and the edges of each stripe are smudged. We are still deciding the best way to remedy the situation. I could be disappointed. Instead, I choose to believe that it is confirmation that I am intended to be an antiquarian bookseller instead of a housepainter.

stripes.jpg
What was I thinking?

smudge.jpg
These smudges have to be fixed!

Tom and Huck have this week off of school, so blogging will be light as we fit in a few fun activities. I’ll resume my normal pace once they resume their normal schedules. Thanks for understanding.

baskethead.jpg
Tom and Huck with Easter Baskets on their heads, getting into a bit of Easter mischief despite my best efforts to make them wear “dress up clothes” today.

Meanwhile, here is Part 1 of my most recent BookThink article. In an effort to break the reading into manageable chunks, I’ll post Part 2 tomorrow.

BECOMING AN ANTIQUARIAN BOOKSELLER:
SCOUTING AND FINDING SALEABLE BOOKS
By Chris Lowenstein

I recently exhibited at the San Francisco Antiquarian Book, Print, and Paper Fair. It’s a large fair with over 200 booksellers showing off and selling their best books and ephemera. Someone new to book collecting and bookselling might wonder where these sellers find their inventory — most of it varied, interesting, and in great condition. Though the ability to market and sell your books is key to succeeding as an antiquarian bookseller, perhaps more important is the ability to find good books. Scratch that. Good books are everywhere. What’s most important is honing your ability to recognize and acquire the best books in the best condition at the best price. This is an infinitely more challenging task, and one of the most exciting parts of the job of an antiquarian bookseller.

A new bookseller might ask, “How do you know when you’ve found a saleable book?” The simplicity of the question belies the complexity of its answer. Author, illustrator, title, subject, edition, condition, binding — all these things and less have attracted me to the books I’ve acquired and later sold. Sometimes I buy a book because it’s the first edition by a well-known author. Sometimes I buy a book because it is the first written account of a significant historical event, or because it offers a different perspective than most of the other accounts of an historical event. Perhaps it’s a much-loved illustrator or a beautiful binding that attracts me, content notwithstanding. Perhaps it’s a book completely outside of my field of specialty, but it’s in fine condition.

Just as it’s difficult to pin down the definitive characteristics of an antiquarian bookseller, it’s difficult to pin down what kind of book is best for an antiquarian bookseller to sell. Like true beauty — or dare I say –pornography, I just know a saleable book when I see it, and based on my knowledge of a particular author, genre, or subject, its value is sometimes in the eye of the beholder. Perhaps the best strategy a new bookseller can take is to learn what knowledge we need to recognize books that we can sell.

To be continued tomorrow . ..

See you in the stacks!

Published in: on March 23, 2008 at 11:19 pm Comments (1)

Chapter 144 Owning a Book Store

I was all set to sit down and write a nice, bookish post this afternoon. Then Huck came in from playing outside, complaining of a terrible headache. He also has a runny nose and a slight cough. Not normally one to be felled by the common cold, Huck wrapped up in a blanket and asked me to sit with him. He promptly fell asleep cradled on my lap (most unusual behavior for my active 7 year old). Now it’s 8:40 p.m. (California time) and he feels hot to me, perhaps with a fever. So, forgive me, but the bookish post will have to wait until tomorrow, when (I hope) things are better. Tomorrow is the first day of Easter vacation, so it figures that a nasty cold would make its appearance just when we were all set to have a few days of family fun.

In the meantime, I’ve been enjoying and learning from two recent posts over at Scott Brown’s always interesting Fine Books and Collections Blog. In addition to putting out a great magazine about books, Scott has recently become the owner of a bookstore, himself!

Click the links below if you’re looking for a thought provoking read.

So, You Want to Own a Bookstore

So, You Want to Own a Bookstore, Part II

See you in the stacks!

Published in: on March 20, 2008 at 8:50 pm Comments (0)

Chapter 143 Susan Halas with Advice for Newcomers in the Book Biz

I’ve sung the praises of the Bibliophile email list in the past. If you’re not already on the list, it is a good place to read the range of opinions of booksellers and book collectors on a variety of topics. Just the other day bookseller Susan Halas had a post on this list which I think is a good read. She has granted me permission to reprint it in its entirety. I hope you find it useful, too. I am always appreciative when other booksellers share their perspective. Thanks, Susan, for sharing the benefit of your experience!

Message: 1
Date: Mon, 17 Mar 2008 05:58:07 -1000
From: “Susan Halas”
Subject: [b] info Advice to Newcomers in Book Biz (long repost)
To:
Message-ID:
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset=”iso-8859-1″;
reply-type=original

Aloha Bibs,

This is a LONG re post. Some of you have read some or all of it before. I have requests for re-post so here it is again.

For what its worth, this some basic advice learned from my parents who were both dealers for more than 50 years and who made a pretty good living in the pre internet antiquarian, scholarly and out of print book trade.

For the record I am now 64 years old and have been working in the book biz since I could sit upright and hold a pencil which is just about the time my folks started their shop.

Much of what I know about books I learned from my Dad, MJ (Jock) Netzorg who was a noted antiquarian specialist, historian and collector and co-owner of the Cellar Book Shop in Detroit, Michigan. I learned it by going with him on his buying expeditions from the time I was a little girl in the 1940s until he died in 1996. I also learned it from my Mom who was concerned about things like invoices, packing, going to the post office, issuing catalogs and dealing with customers and libraries

My mother, the equally great Petra F. (Pete) Netzorg, was in charge of making sure at least half of what my Dad bought went out the door for money on a regular basis. My mother handled the sales, but my father wrote the blurbs and set the price.

My father was a wonderful teacher, he had a tremendous memory, he’d spent his life in the dark moldy basements of places like Goodwill Industries in the days when they just piled the books to the ceiling, and he never met a distressed but worthy tome he didn’t like. Lucky for me (and by extension my fellow bibs) that everything he said has turned out to not only be true, but profitable.

So for some of you who are starting out, or didn’t have the living incarnation of all book biz knowledge sitting next to you at dinner on a
regular basis, here are some of the things he told me, that have served me well.

1. What you pay for something has nothing to do with what it is worth. Zero, Nada, Zip! THIS IS THE MAIN RULE. Engrave it on your brain.

Over the past years I’ve seen a lot of posts expressing indignation that someone would ask top dollar for merchandise acquired for pennies.
But my Dad’s first rule was there is absolutely no relationship between the two. Once it’s yours, YOU assign the value. The more you know the more you see the more you touch the more likely it is you’ll find bargains.

2. TOUCH IT — It’s easy to fool your eyes, but it’s hard to fool your fingers. In the centuries of printing, papermaking and binding there have been many attractive reproductions and facsimiles. It’s hard to spot them visually, but you can almost always tell by touch. The difference between a wood pulp and a rag paper is obvious to yourfingers, same with letterpress vs. offset. So feel it, touch it, smell it — all these are better indicators of how old something is than what it looks like.

3 If it was considered beautiful once, it will be considered beautiful again.

This means taste goes in cycles, so while for the longest time you couldn’t give away Elbert Hubbard’s Roycroft material or people took
their Mission style furniture to the dump Guess what, both of these are back, and many other genres fit this model..

Next time you see odd stuff and you can not understand why on earth anyone would have ever wanted them, look again and think if maybe a few years from now this era will be in vogue again. The more horrible it looks, the more likely it will come back.

4. Invest in the 19th century.

My dad thought the 19th century was the great undervalued under rated era. So much happened, so much was invented, discovered and explored especially by Americans; but during the 20th century most of the snootier dealers thought the 19th century, especially the LATE 19th century was junk.

There is an awful lot of junk there, to be sure, but there is also some spectacular and wonderful stuff. I buy the 19th century and early 20th
century any chance I get and I don’t much care about condition.

5. Which brings us to the corollary - If it’s NON FICTION — condition doesn’t count — what counts is — Is it all there or mostly all there?

My dad was an expert in buying good books in bad condition, sometimes falling apart, sometimes without covers, sometimes scribbled or stained or water damaged or wormed, and in the fullness of time those defects became a lot less important–especially if the books had wonderful maps or plates or pioneering science, anthropology, or exploration, all highlights of the late 19th century.

There’s always been quite a bit of discussion about BREAKING books, so here for the record is his take on things. My dad wasn’t big on breaking, but he did think there was a difference between ripping the plates out of a book or magazine and taking it apart carefully and saving it in sections so it could be useful to a wide variety people with a variety of tastes and interests. So while you might not want a whole bound volume of Appletons or Harpers or the Bookman, or National Geo. you might very well want that one page with the ad for Darwin’s Origin of the Species, or the color plates by Maxfield Parrish, or the short story by Joseph Conrad, or the picture article of the Pan American Clipper on it’s first trans Pacific flight .

He also was one of several of the prior generation who pointed out to me that the invention of “binding” was a relatively recent development.
This was amply confirmed later in my life when I got more deeply into 18th century prints and maps and learned that for the longest time many important works were issued as loose sheets. Especially those with plates and maps.

That’s because people with enough money to buy these usually expensive works had their own ideas about how they should be put together. Some of them followed the printers instructions on placement of the plates and maps, but some of them didn’t and kept them loose to hang in the old baronial digs or bind (or not bind) as the fancy suited them.

So before you wring your hands over the evil book breakers just remember that most of the older good stuff really started life unbound — text and plates were printed on separate presses by different methods and onlycame together at the binders and only because it was cheaper to make one volume than to bind the text and box the plates (the really right way to do it according to the truly snooty end of the antiquarian trade).

Now — when we come to the second half of the 19th century — you are often doing the book a favor by taking it apart, because by the mid-late 19th century the paper used in making books changed from rag based to wood pulp based and the wood pulp paper is so heavily acidic that it often ate (or is right this second eating) through the pictures and everything else it touches, also the printing ink was/is so thick and black that it frequently offsets onto everythng it touches, that’s when the whole sheet isn’t crumbling in your hand.

And while I wouldn’t advise taking stuff apart in each and every case, there are definitely some instances you are doing yourself, the book and the collecting public a favor by taking it carefully apart. Please notice the word CAREFULLY.

Please hold the flames on this view, I know some of you think differently — this is my own and my dad’s opinion. and trust me, after nearly 30 years in my own business that’s the way it is.

6. Always look for value, especially check the EPHEMERA pile at fairs, at shops, at 2nd hand stores, on line, check the junk.

OK, some of you aren’t sure what ephemera is. Ephemera is misc. odd bits of paper, scraps like labels, pamphlets, broadsheets, handout, ads, news letters, all those little scraps of stuff. Most book dealers have a box or many boxes stashed somewhere because they don’t know what it is and they wish someone else would take it away.

That stuff that the other person doesn’t want, is often a gold mine for somebody else. Here’s an example. When I was back in Detroit a few
years ago I only got a little time to shop so I treated myself to the big Lansing book show, where I bought one small baggie of ephemera. Total weight less than 2 oz and I got change from a $10 bill.

The bag was stuffed with antique ephemera consisting of about a hundred cartoons by Thomas Nast, and other illustrators of the period all
carefully clipped from Harper’s of the 1880’s. They were all original issue, in great shape and most signed in the plate Th. Nast. The dealer I
bought it from was glad to see it go. He’d had it for a long time.

It was one of my most rewarding acquisitions. It included Nast caricatures of Oscar Wilde and other literary figures of the day as they looked to Nast — the quintessential irreverent American.

It was gold mine of stereotypes — Asians, Indians, Blacks, Immigrants, Mormons, as viewed in the 19th century.There was also a ton of NYC politics and law, as well as Jumbo the Elephant — a Nast favorite that later became the symbol of the Republican party, and there were even a few Nast drawings of Santa Claus another Nast contribution to the popular genre.

The hard part was not what it cost, the real challenge was to catalog take the pix and describe it well, and of course to decide what it was/is worth. I’ve spent many many hours on that little bag. I learned a lot.

I like the 19th century even more because of the time spent on researching those cartoons. I got my money back the first time I posted to this list and many times more since then. So, by me ephemera is good, it’s scarcer than books, usually worth more, doesn’t take up much space and can often be purchased for a low price.

See Rule #1 — what you pay is no indicator of what it’s worth

7. Know your printing processes, inks and papers.

It is impossible to know everything there is to know about books and prints and maps and photos, but you can easily get a pretty solid grip on the different printing processes: relief, intaglio (engraving, etching, drypoint), stone litho, photo mechanical, real photo with emulsion, offset, and now computer or digital generated print and images.

The better you understand the look and feel of each of these processes the better you will be able to judge the approx. issue DATE of issue of the many things that will pass through your hands. The more you TOUCH the more you fingers will be able to spot the difference in what the paper and printed surfaces FEEL like. These are the best indicators of the age and it’s not that hard to get the hang of it.

8 OLD is relative. The USA is a young country. So old for us, is 18th century–200+ years ago. Even 100 years is old. Sometimes 50 years, or 30 years or 10 years is old. This is not the case in other countries, especially European and Asian countries. An 1810 map of America with an American imprint (published in America) is worth a lot more usually than an 1810 American map published in England. That’s because 1810 for American publishing is “old” while it is bare a blink in the eye of time for the English.

And here’s a PS from August 2003.

Prior to the invention of the internet and computers the book biz had a long, glorious and noble tradition that went back some 500 years. So on the book side there’s an awful lot to know. But after the invention of the Internet the book business changed a lot, from a dusty back shop esoteric clique-y group of dealers/specialists, to a front of the bus, cutting edge, fast paced, highly competive LARGE group of solo operators. You already know that.

What you might not know know is it’s a lot easier to learn about books than it is to learn about computers and tech stuff. The most important asset any book biz can have besides knowledge, spirit, high standards and a sense of humor, is TECH SUPPORT. If you don’t know the tech stuff yourself, find someonewho does. You’ve got to keep up on the tech side, even if it doesn’t come naturally.

Not only must you use the new technology, you must be comfortable with it. Just like books, really you don’t (and can’t) know it all on the tech side, but just as having good stuff at good prices was the key to being successful in the pre internet world, the key to 21st century profitablity is understanding and embracing the technology.

PS from December 2004

On when to cut the price and when to raise the price.

My Dad was known to lower the price when the person on the other end of the transaction really wanted/needed and would provide a good home for the book(s) in question. He and my mom would also sometimes lower the price when people bought a group or lot of books, or when the book(s) in question had major defects. They sometimes offered discounts to the trade and they often paid a referral fee if a customer or colleague helped them make a decent sale.

Neither of my parents were big on cutting the price if things didn’t sell. That’s because my dad was pretty good at only bringing in things of value, and their assumption was that eventually that value would find a market. They also didn’t lower the price for people who haggled too much.

A little bit of haggling is good, shows interest and spirit. A lot of haggling is a turn off. Contrary to popular opinion sometimes when things didn’t sell they raised the price, even raised it steeply, and like magic those books went out the door. Don’t ask me why, but that works.

Also on a related subject is the advice given to me long long ago by Mr. Isadore Berkelouw Senior (whose name I’m sure I never spell correctly).

I was about 30 when I first went into business on my own as Prints Pacific, and my mom sent me to see him at his apt. in Santa Monica. Mr. B ran a global book business on several continents which I believe is still going.

I still remember his exact words: DON’T FALL IN LOVE WITH THE MERCHANDISE. By this he meant that some books belong to you, they are your personal collection you intend to keep them (forever or close to forever).

Other books are part of your inventory and you intend to SELL or TRADE them at a PROFIT. The ones that you intend to sell are there to be SOLD. So don’t like them so much that you forget to sell them. Keep that clearly in you mind and you will prosper. Forget it and you will have lots of books but maybe not as much money as you might want.

And a final PS
Some of you in the past have asked permission to forward or post this info
to others, permission granted.

The book trade is a noble & glorious profession, it’s now it’s a larger group. May we all go forth and prosper.

Visit my auctions at ebay user id Ppacific http://tinyurl.com/kbd4

Visit me live on Maui by appointment only.

Susan Halas
Prints Pacific, Ltd.
1939A Vineyard St.
Wailuku, HI, USA 96793
halas@hawaii.rr.com
(80 8) 244-7777

Chapter 142 How I Know My Husband is Crazy (About Me)

Thoughtful Husband and I both have big birthdays this year, ones that end in a “0″. We wanted to do something to mark the occasion. Throw a party? We could, but that could get expensive. We both grew up in the Bay Area, along with many of our friends, and we both have good sized families, so there would be a lot of people to invite. A party would be fun, but would only last for one night.

I thought about taking a special trip with Thoughtful Husband and Tom and Huck, one that would make a great family memory. I tried to think of something that might be especially enjoyable to Thoughtful Husband yet still kid friendly. I secretly planned to take him to a hotel in Oregon where a friend of ours stayed with his family. They had a great time and highly recommended that we take our family there.

What’s the big deal about a hotel in Oregon, you’re probably wondering?

Well, this hotel is made entirely of tree houses.

That’s right. Tree houses.

cavaltree07small.jpg

I can just see the pure joy on Tom and Huck’s faces when they learn that, much as their namesakes Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn might have, they will spend a night in a tree house fort. Thoughtful Husband, being basically a grown up boy himself, has wanted to travel here since his friend told us about it a few years ago.

I hesitated in mentioning my idea to Thoughtful Husband. What if he really just wanted to bask in the sun and relax in a hammock in some tropical clime like Hawaii? Fun, but too expensive in our case. Would playing treehouse fort with me and the kids be exciting enough for a __0th birthday gift/celebration?

One day, Thoughtful Husband, said, “What do you want to do for our __0th birthdays?”

“I don’t know,” I said, secretly hoping he’d come up with something amazing.

“I know you’d probably like to go somewhere fabulous, like London, or Paris, or Rome,” he said, frowning.

“Yes, but I don’t think that’s realistic right now.” (I’ll admit it I would like to go any of these places, but like Hawaii, it’s just not a possibility at this time, and I know it.)

“Well,” said Thoughtful Husband, “I’ve been trying to think of something meaningful and fun, even if it’s not exotic. And I thought of something, but I didn’t want to mention it because I worried that you wouldn’t think it was good enough.”

“Guess what?” I interrupted. “I thought of something we could do, too, but I wasn’t sure it was good enough for you either.”

“What is it?”

I told him all about the tree house. He thought it sounded like a great family trip. “I can’t believe you are agreeing to camp in a treehouse,” he said. (He knows I like pioneer women, but I don’t actually want to live like one. I’m afraid of snakes, bugs, and too much dirt.)

Next, he told me his plan.

“I know you collect books by and about pioneer women, and I know how much you like Laura Ingalls Wilder. I thought we could rent an RV, drive across the country and see a few of her old homesites. I figure if you visit places like Nevada, Utah, Wyoming, and South Dakota, it will help your knowledge of Western Americana in particular. You never know, you might find some good books along the way! We can drive home through Oregon and stay at the tree house hotel. There is a Laura Ingalls Wilder homesite in DeSmet, South Dakota and another just over the Minnesota state line in Walnut Grove.”

Stunned silence. Thoughtful Husband is not a bookish sort. I cannot believe he has taken into consideration my love of books and Laura Ingalls Wilder in planning our family vacation. Wow! I love this man. How many husbands would indulge their wife’s amassing of books in the dining room, the bedroom, the hallway? And then still want to take her on a book-related vacation? Oh, yeah! He’s a keeper.

“I didn’t want to tell you at first because I was afraid you wouldn’t want to drive in an RV and I thought you might want to go somewhere more glamorous than South Dakota.”

“When I aspire to be a bookseller specializing in the history of the west and the people who settled there in the past 200 years, where else could possibly be more glamorous than South Dakota? I love this idea! Thank you, thank you for thinking of it!”

I’m going to be a pioneer woman this summer. I’ll be headed East instead of West, but since I’ve spent my whole life in the West, going East will open a whole new world to me!

I’ve gotten varied responses from friends and family here in the cosmopolitan Bay Area. The general consensus is, “Two weeks in an RV with kids and dog driving through flyover country? You guys are crazy!”

I realize this isn’t everyone’s idea of fun. But it’s not everone else’s __0th birthday. It’s ours.

Yes, we’re crazy. About each other.

Tomorrow: One bookseller’s advice to those new in the book business

Published in: on March 18, 2008 at 5:02 pm Comments (2)