The Daily Ping

Fred "Rerun" Barry once commented here.

February 1st, 2001

Library Book Sales

Library Book Sales

Sure, Barnes and Noble is OK and Amazon’s not bad for finding the semi-rare book, but the greatest book-buying thrill comes for me at library book sales.

During college I went to a great one at Fredericksburg’s downtown library (they had it twice a year). I’d often come home with two large boxes full of books for under $20. And a lot of these were out-of-print religion and philosophy texts, cheap paperbacks, and rare photo and art books. There’s nothing quite like the smell of dusty books lined up sloppily on tables for 25 cents a piece. Especially when you come across that one “perfect” book and pay 1/50th of what it’s really worth.

At a recent book sale I ran across a book whose title intrigued me: Eugene Field’s Love Affairs of a Bibliomanic. Written in 1896 (and this edition published in 1905), Love Affairs… is a wonderfully fun story about a man obsessed with collecting books. And for $2.00, the find was all the better: from what I can tell, this book hasn’t been printed in years (though it is available online via Project Gutenberg and as a Microsoft E-Book). This book hadn’t even been read (many of the pages were still together and hadn’t been cut apart) and on Alibris is currently going for nine times what I paid for it. Though not really “rare,” it was still one of my better finds that day.

A good place to hunt down your own local book sales is BookSaleFinder.com. -ram

Posted in Everyday Life

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