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I work for a library for the blind and we are always trying to fill in our collection. I think it is terrible when we have number 5 and number 12 from a series and none of those inbetween. I have found a number of books from Janet Dailey's Americana series at Goodwill. A lot of our patrons are older and many like a "good clean romance". Message edited by its author, Dec 31, 2006, 10:02pm. Message removed. One of my absolute best library sale finds was a small press first edition of the poems of American poet Adelaide Crapsey, who had died of TB before the book was published in 1915. It's called, simply, Verses. Inspired by an anthology of poetry by women titled The World Split Open, edited by Louise Bernikow, I was at the time on a quest for books by little-known woman poets of the early 20th century. "Verses" was on my list, but I never thought I'd find it. When I picked it up and saw the title on the cover, I gasped. My husband, who was nearby, shushed me and pointed out that I shouldn't be so obvious about finding a potentially valuable book. After all, I had to pay only 50 cents for it! Dec 20, 2006, 1:16pm (top)Message 4: ggchickapeeI found hardback editions of Volumes 1, 2, and 4 of Anthony Powell's A Dance to the Music of Time at the San Francisco Friends of the Library big book sale at Ft. Mason. They were $1 apiece! I was so excited! Of course, I then paid $32 for Volume 3 on Alibris because I became obsessed with having the complete set. :) I shop at Goodwill almost on a weekly basis :) I've found so many good books for $1.00 that it would be really hard to say what was the best one. My most recent hit was just yesterday and had (among others): The Drowning Man by Michael Robotham Heart Seizure by Bill Fitzhugh Goat: A Memoir by Brad Land Coalescent by Stephen Baxter Vodka by Boris Starling The Graft by Martina Cole Last month, at the Goodwill, I found a 1938 copy of The Basic Writings of Sigmund Freud. Last weekend I found an entire SHELF of Joyce Carrol Oates, all but one of them in almost brand new condition. All for $1.99 a piece... I found a 1950s paperback of Gladiator in a seashide used book shop for 2 bucks. Feb 13, 2007, 3:43pm (top)Message 8: KromesTomesI tend to have pretty good luck at my local library's book sales ... at the most recent one I got a hardcover 1st edition (albeit 5th printing) of Catch-22 for $1 ... and got closer to completing my John Gardner (not the James Bond one) collection by picking up Wreckage of Agathon. Feb 13, 2007, 6:50pm (top)Message 9: WholeHouseLibrarySorry. I just saw that my message posted twice. Message edited by its author, Mar 21, 2007, 6:53pm. Feb 13, 2007, 6:52pm (top)Message 10: WholeHouseLibraryWe've got a Goodwill Distribution Center near us; it's about the size of a football field. Each aisle is lined with 12 16-foot long tables on wheels. Several times a day, the workers roll out a set of tables, restock them and roll them back in again. Then pandemonium ensues. This is not a place for the weak-of-heart because items get thrown out of the way for people searching for some possible hidden treasure. They used to have a whole separate area for books, records, software, etc. They'd stack as many books as would fit into laundry-basket sized crates, maybe 5 or 6 crates per table, 8 tables per row, 3 rows. There were also 3 large bins where books were just dumped in there, 3 or 4 feet deep. That area is now just like the other aisles, with tons of people castoffs instead of books. The books are now dumped into cardboard crates that are 5-foot cubes against one wall. You can only access the books within your reach, and that's it; you can't climb in and dig down. Kind of makes you wonder what treasures are buried below. That being said, my wife and I have bought maybe 100 books from Goodwill over the past year and a half. Some go to her school library if they're in pristine shape. I've picked up several signed FEs there -- over a dozen, I'm sure, and many more FEs -- one being Human Sexual Response -- (rather mild stuff now, but extremely controversial when it was first published). I think our prize, though, is a 6-inch thick Webster's New Universal Unabridged Dictionary that we got for all of $1.50. We're having a dictionary stand built to display it (and store other tomes) in our living room. The irony of it all is that the stand is costing over 100 times what we paid for the book. Message edited by its author, Feb 13, 2007, 11:01pm. Mar 21, 2007, 2:49pm (top)Message 11: miss_readAt a library sale, my mother found a paperback copy of Cider with Rosie ... autographed by Laurie Lee! (It's now mine.) Mar 22, 2007, 1:21am (top)Message 12: EncompassedRunnerFor under $2 I got a 1925 Great Short Stories of the World by Barrett H. Clark and Maxim Lieber that's superb, but the "treasure" was the Hiroshigi Japanese wood block print that fell out of it! Mar 24, 2007, 4:10pm (top)Message 13: NotSunkYetI attended yet another local FOTL book sale today; I can't seem to pass one by. I had to make three trips to my car. Not only is the 'fun-of-the-hunt' exhilarating but now those book sales hold the double delight of 'can’t-wait-to-get-home-to-catalog-my-finds-on-LT'. So imagine my glee at discovering that one of my finds is a signed, first edition. Studs Terkel’s "The Good War": An Oral History of World War Two weeeeee! I don’t think it was ever cracked open as there’s not even a tiny rip any where on the dust jacket and the binding is still tight. On top of all of that it was only fifty cents! Is today my birthday? Apr 5, 2007, 9:37am (top)Message 14: devenishHave just returned from a day out in Bedford (I live in Northampton) and have found a four volume set of Osbert Sitwell autobiography Left Hand,Right Hand! in the local Oxfam store. Also a book that I have long been after Sarratt and the Draper of Watford by John le Carre in a clearance box in Waterstones here. The Sitwell's were 99 pence each and the le Carre £1 so not bad at all. Apr 25, 2007, 3:47am (top)Message 15: EelKatAll of my Retief books by Keith Laumer came to me used... saddly they are not in print, and even used, they are difficult to find ~~EK Message edited by its author, Apr 25, 2007, 3:48am. Apr 26, 2007, 4:45am (top)Message 16: miss_readNow that the warm weather is here, my favourite bookstall is up and running once again. It's in Cresswell Quay in Pembrokeshire, outside the pub on the estuary. All the books are 4 for £1. How can you pass that up?!?! I had 8 last week (including Love for Lydia by H.E. Bates, The Names by Don DeLillo and The Vacillations of Poppy Carew by Mary Wesley), and will be returning this weekend for more! :) Apr 29, 2007, 10:05am (top)Message 17: nymithThere is this wonderful used book/antique shop halfway to our nearest town, and the whole family sometimes stops in. I have found such treasures as an old version of The Witch of Blackbird Pond, with very nice cover art, Afraid to Ride, a horse story with wonderful illustrations, and The Black Spaniel Mystery, one of my favorite mystery books for teens of all time. My mother found a classy set of books entitled Lands and Peoples, a ton of gothic novels, and a compilation of stories entitled Supernatural Cats. My dad found a recorder, and my brother's collection of Hot Wheels has expanded a fair bit since we started going there, but that isn't very important. May 12, 2007, 6:30am (top)Message 18: miss_readI found a lovely old 1950s Penguin edition of Rose Macaulay's The World My Wilderness yesterday in a market. May 12, 2007, 9:43pm (top)Message 19: clamairyI just snagged a copy of The Great Santini for $1 from the bin near the front of my grocery store. All the money goes to The Jimmy Fund... or something like that. Jun 15, 2007, 9:18pm (top)Message 20: andyrayi live in volusia county, florida, which has a weird economic base. there are maybe 70 percent well to do oldster in quarter million homes with 30 percent poor people and the libraries toss their books out regularly. i go demsey-dumpster diving with a long prong pickup stick, and hit the many (50 or so) thrift stores around the county and get all my books FREE or less than $1. In the dumpster, I have found a first edition of Kerowac's On the Road and the whole set of leather-bound Harvard classics. most of my Koontz and King books come from the thrift stores, and if I wanted to read grisham, clancey, or mary clark I could select fromnumerous copies of as fine first editions. they are everywhere. why buy new books when such a treasure trove seems everywhere? Jun 16, 2007, 7:11pm (top)Message 21: aluvalibriLucky you, andyray! Jun 18, 2007, 11:58am (top)Message 22: ggchickapee#20: I am reeling at the idea that a library would throw away books! Lucky you to be there when they do. But think of the alternatives: they could sell them at a once-a-year sale, they could keep a "For Sale" shelf in the library and sell them continuously, they could donate them to charitable organizations to use or sell . . . . Maybe because I live in Portland where everyone is obsessed with recycling, but to think of throwing away perfectly good books -- CRAZY! Jun 19, 2007, 4:11am (top)Message 23: almigwini found ten volumes of the complete mark twain for one dollar apiece in the goodwill in bristol ct. They were half price - yellow ticket day. lucky me. This friday is the once a year library sale in my town (poughkeepsie) and I hope to get to the early bird sale and try to snag some art books, and some hardcovers to replace my paperbacks of classics. Yippee Jun 29, 2007, 11:40am (top)Message 24: andyrayi think i gave the impression i don't spend much money on books. for those that i really want to read NOW i will be another ABEbooks customer or Amazon twit. Fortunately, I don't have to do much oftener than once a year or so. The Volusia County Library system has some 13 separate libraries and they all have their separate regs on disposal of gift and cancelled materials. One of them has decided to sell ALL their VHS tapes for $1 and not circulate them anymore. another as i mentioned before throws out what they consider unsaleable books. trouble is they have a young man who is not schooled in book values. good for us! the daytona beach main library on city island has an extensive ongoing book sale, but one has to be lucky to find a volunteer who is manning the main room. if no volunteer you still have a selection of BOTM and tarnished paperbacks not kept under lock and key. another trick is to let your dogs run in the library's parking lot (our libraries mostly are situated so that heavy traffic isn't extant) at night, and maybe you'll find a dumping of books. I have had that happen only three times this year, but I have some gems from the pickings. Jun 29, 2007, 2:44pm (top)Message 25: jmcclain19The Lost Van Gogh by A.J. Zerries - I picked it up from a used bookstore for $3 and its been one of my best bargains I've picked up in the store. For fiction - I don't know if many do this but I know that I do frequently these days - find what books you want to get and check out Amazon's "Buy this New & Used from $XX.XX". You'll have to pay $3.99 shipping and you'll recieve it from a 3rd party, but there are some excellent deals to be found. I picked up three Carl Hiassen books that were less than $2 a piece that way last month. Add in the shipping and it was around $15 plus tax for three top notch novels. That's been my method of book shopping for the last several weeks - find what I went, then pick my deal in the Amazon Marketplace section. Doesn't work so much for brand new books, but anything 6-12 months and older you can get for a steal. Jul 13, 2007, 12:38pm (top)Message 26: ggchickapeeI've often purchased used books from Amazon.com (my hubby sells used jazz cds on Amazon, so we are always poking around on there), but my enthusiasm waxes and wanes. If I haven't been to a good library sale lately, or have otherwise run dry on $2 to $3 books, paying $4 for shipping to get a book for $1 or less (often hardback best sellers go for $.25 or even less!) strikes me as a good deal. But I have had bad luck buying used paperbacks on Amazon.com. WARNING: Cranky rant following: I have several times (I'm slow to learn) bought paperbacks described as "Like New" or even "New" and received a well-thumbed book with a bent cover and multiple spine creases. (Following a strict if pointless no-spine-creases rule when reading paperbacks, this last really irks me.) When I complain about the faulty descriptions, the sellers all said, "What do you expect? The book only cost a quarter." No, it "cost" me $4.25, which I was willing to pay because I wanted a "Like New" book. If I wanted a beat up paperback I could spend 25 cents at a garage sale. (What happened to the cent sign on the keyboard?) Enough venting. I will put those bad memories behind me. :) I must remember that I will be in San Francisco next week where the highlight of my visit will be a trip to the greatest library book store ever -- the Book Bay at Fort Mason. Message edited by its author, Jul 13, 2007, 12:38pm. Jul 13, 2007, 12:41pm (top)Message 27: aluvalibriWell, just yesterday, at one of the local libraries' bookstore, I found the first American edition of A Hero of our Time by Lermontov, translated by Vladimir Nabokov and his son Dmitri. I spent the exhorbitant amount of fifty cents for it! Jul 17, 2007, 11:27am (top)Message 28: varielleI've not had much luck at our local Goodwill, but the Habitat for Humanity Store has a fabulous selection of books. I found the Complete Flannery O'Connor and a signed Trellis Cookbook by Marcel Desaulniers. My local Friends of the library has great sales where I carry off sacks of mostly paperbacks. Aug 3, 2007, 2:55pm (top)Message 29: wisewomanLast Saturday at Goodwill and Unique Thrift I found a bee-yew-ti-ful copy of Susanna Clarke's Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell, a copy of the biography A Beautiful Mind, Paula Begoun's Don't Go to the Cosmetics Counter Without Me (sixth edition), a somewhat battered copy of Ursula LeGuin's original Earthsea trilogy, and a few others. I have also found Jane Austen's Complete Works in hardcover for 30 cents (hardbacks were three for a dollar) at a library booksale. I'm going to some library sales tomorrow... been looking forward to it all week... :-P Aug 5, 2007, 1:52pm (top)Message 30: miss_readWell done for snagging those Jane Austens, wisewoman! That's the deal of the century! I had a lovely time at the car boot sale this morning. I didn't even spend £5 and came home with: Beyond the Black Stump by Nevil Shute Onions in the Stew by Betty MacDonald Susan on Saturday by Susan Graham I'll Never Be Young Again by Daphne du Maurier Daughters of the House by Michele Roberts After You'd Gone by Maggie O'Farrell Living Dangerously by Katie Fforde (I need a chick lit fix!) Moab Is My Washpot by Stephen Fry Madhur Jaffrey's Indian Cookery and a box set of five Penguin classic crimes comprising: The Moving Toyshop by Edmund Crispin The Franchise Affair by Josephine Tey (I already have another copy of this one, but it's one of my favourites) Death at the President's Lodging by Michael Innes The Tiger in the Smoke by Margery Allingham The Innocence of Father Brown by G.K. Chesterton It was a very good day indeed. :) Aug 6, 2007, 2:31pm (top)Message 31: melannenWe were up in Acadia National Park for a few days, and in the back room of a little souvenir shop in Southwest Harbor, they had a shelf of $.50 used books. I got a fifty-year-old volume of english fairy tales with color plates by Arthur Rackham! I don't know what's more awesome, the book or where I found it. Aug 7, 2007, 3:10pm (top)Message 32: magstAre there any good used book stores in the Atlantic City area? I'll be there on vacation tomorrow until Sunday 8/12/07, and I would love to hit some of the local places. Thanks for all suggestions! Aug 7, 2007, 3:37pm (top)Message 33: jordan7hmI picked up a six volume set of The Memoires of Jaques Casanova for about 60 bucks. Not sure as to the publication date. Interesting read, very slow going. Aug 9, 2007, 8:41pm (top)Message 34: ggchickapeeI don't know from Atlantic City, but someone else in this group posted a link for www.booksalefinder.com, that gives info about sales, etc. Aug 10, 2007, 9:31am (top)Message 35: wisewomanI bought 19 books at a library booksale Saturday, including: The Master Puppeteer and Park's Quest by Katherine Paterson Elantris by Brandon Sanderson The Golden Ocean by Patrick O'Brian Strunk and White's Elements of Style The Brothers Lionheart by Astrid Lindgren Sherwood by Parke Godwin Daughter of the Forest by Juliet Marillier The Witches by Roald Dahl Several John Grisham books Constantine by Frank G. Slaughter And some others I can't remember at the moment. All for $4. Aug 13, 2007, 12:14pm (top)Message 36: miss_readExcellent haul, wisewoman! I picked up four books today at a charity book stall outside a pub for £1. Included was a lovely 1943 copy of Frenchman's Creek with the dust jacket intact and in remarkable condition! Aug 13, 2007, 8:43pm (top)Message 37: magstI found a really cute little used book store called Hooked on Books in Wildwood, NJ. I bought the following books... Natural Born Charmer by Susan Elizabeth Phillips The Emperor's Children by Claire Messud The Torso in The Town by Simon Brett A Salty Piece of Land by Jimmy Buffett Lethally Blond by Kate White A Tale of Two Sisters by Anna Maxted All for under $20.00. Message edited by its author, Aug 13, 2007, 8:46pm. Sep 6, 2007, 10:43am (top)Message 38: wisewomanI found The Salterton Trilogy last night at Goodwill and bought it on the strength of the reviews on the back. It looked like it might be good, and the 5 reviews here are good, so it seems my 50 cents was not ill-spent :-) Sep 6, 2007, 12:06pm (top)Message 39: NotSunkYetJust the other day I picked up an 1893 copy of Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter at the local Goodwill. It was published by Henry Altemus and was part of a series: the "Famous Red and White Books, Series 150". It also has an inscription from what appears to be a husband to his wife on Christmas day 1894. Can't help wondering if he had concerns or if she was simply a book lover. Sep 6, 2007, 12:15pm (top)Message 40: miss_readFunny, NotSunkYet! I love finding old books with inscriptions inside, don't you? Sep 6, 2007, 1:57pm (top)Message 41: NotSunkYetI love finding books with inscriptions although I sometimes find them to be somewhat sad. Inscriptions such as... Dear Grandma, ... Love, So & So makes me think that Dear old Grandma has passed on and somehow that thought is made worse wondering how Dear Grandma’s books have found their way to the local Goodwill. Weren’t any of Grandma’s descendants readers? Were there no descendants? If there were descendants didn’t they want to keep those special books given to her as gifts? Oh, I’ve got to stop writing these thoughts before I depress all of you. I suppose it could be that they wanted to share Grandma’s library with the world. I also think of my own mortality and when I’m gone who will and how will my books be dispersed? Maybe by the time I’m gone books will be thought of *shuddering* so technologically outdated or politically incorrect that they’ll simply be discarded. All I know is that if anyone in my family had been readers I would have felt tremendously special to have been bequeathed their library. I wouldn’t give a hoot about any money, money gets spent, books stay with you. And I don't care what anyone else thinks; piles of books, strategically placed are decorating accents, not clutter. Sep 6, 2007, 2:37pm (top)Message 42: varielleI found a copy of The Rising Sun: The Decline and Fall of the Japanese Empire: 1936-1945 at a friends of the library sale. The inscription said "Happy Father's Day 1973. This was your war Dad." Broke my heart. I couldn't believe it ended up in a library sale. Sep 6, 2007, 3:40pm (top)Message 43: mcna217#41 I agree completely. I recently purchased a cookbook at a swap meet. Three sisters were selling their recently deceased mother's belongings. For $2.50 I got a 1950's cookbook full of handwritten notations. I bought it not because I needed another cookbook, but because I felt that it needed to be in a good home. My husband thought I was crazy. It led to a discussion of what to do with my personal belongings (including my books) at my death. My husband promised to keep this book along with the others. Sep 6, 2007, 4:04pm (top)Message 44: vivienbrendaI'm beginning to think there is a link between lovers of words and an affinity for the past; each book we read has the capacity to live forever --- if the world goes on that long, another topic entirely --- and so we read to be connected to eternity. Finding an inscription in a book is how I feel when I come across a recipe handwritten by my less than affectionate mother. I see her in her youth and can almost see her cooking that meal. The words, the handwriting, the ink, all reach into my heart. I feel that way when I read history, and know that there really was an entire world before I came into it. To #41, I can only say that your empathy with those inscriptions touches me. Our mortality will not be so bad as long as there are people like you to feel our existance. Sep 6, 2007, 10:33pm (top)Message 45: melannen#41 I often find myself feeling the same way. I've been haunting my local Goodwill's books and records room enough that I can often tell when someone's whole collection has come in, and sometimes even get a rough idea of what they must have liked. It's terribly sad, but at the same time, I sympathize with the people who donated it. With a constantly increasing amount of stuff, and an increasingly more mobile society, and a constantly decreasing birthrate, there's just more stuff than there is people to inherit it. I console myself by buying a few and adding them to my collection, in remembrance for all of Grandma's books that were got rid of before I could fly out to the ancestral homestead to rescue them. Sep 20, 2007, 8:08am (top)Message 46: andyraymellanen: there is "stuff" and there is "stuff." books to me are not stuff. They are living voices with which I commune. I do volunteer work with two areas of society that most people don't know (or care to know) about -- drug addicts and alkies. I'm struck by how many of them do not know how to read, and those that do don't. There is some kind of commonality betwen books and mankind's continuity, I believe. Anyway, I have it in my WILL that the executrix must keep and enhance my collection in order to participate in the rewards of my material leftovers. Sep 21, 2007, 10:35am (top)Message 47: MyopicBookwormI hear you, andyray: but unlike voices, books take up physical space in the house, and I'm 'communing' with six large cardboard boxes in the living room at the moment. Sep 21, 2007, 7:42pm (top)Message 48: melannenI certainly agree on the value of words and of reading and the continuity it gives us (I can go on for pages about it!) and I'm continually boggled by the number of people who *aren't* living marginally who don't read - what do they think about? Such a sparse life it must be --- But at them same time, I too am 'communing' with several boxes of my great-grandmother's books in my attic. And my father's. And my other grandmother's. Many of which I have my own copies of, in more readable condition. I keep them because I value books as physical objects on an aesthetic level, and because I like having that connection with my ancestors through their books (And certainly one of my father's philosophy books, complete with his marginalia, is not something I would *ever* consider getting rid of.) And because I *swear* that one day I *will* have shelf space for them all. All the same, if I did not *have* the attic and I had to prioritize I would probably choose to keep the hand-made quilts and the Christmas ornaments and the antique dresses and the oil paintings and the old letters and the grocery-stamp china and the woodworking over the boxes of crumbling books that I will never read. I can put the collections into LT and reconstruct them later if I want to! At least reconstruct the voices in them if not the physical objects. And with books the words are the important parts. And if I ended up inheriting the books of one or two of my relatives who chose to make libraries instead of kids, I don't know *what* I'll do for space. (Or, for that matter, how my heirs will make room for my library. I suppose I'll just have to get famous enough that I can donate it to a university!) Sep 21, 2007, 11:18pm (top)Message 49: vivienbrendaThere are books that I treasure and others that I read. The ones I treasure stay neatly stacked in my library bookshelves. The ones I just read are given away to Friends or other organizations...often a swap for something that goes on my TBR list. Now that's the unmanageble pile, in the nightstands, on the dresser, starting to amass in the guest bedroom... But I do not collect books that I do not intend to read (is that a doube or triple negative?). Even as I gather new books, I go through my piles and always read something from that list. I work my way through the books that I really do want to read. So there may be treasures available in all kinds of places, but unless I plan to read them...I leave them behind. Oct 12, 2007, 8:10am (top)Message 50: battlinjackOne of my best deals at a local "Friends of the Library" sale happened 2 years ago. I happened to go into the FOTL bookstore the week before the sale. The lady working told me that someone had donated their brothers entire collection of science fiction & fantasy after he passed away. I was the first person in the door and wound up taking home 4 large boxes of books. All Sci-Fi & Fantasy in good shape. Nearly 400 books in all. I was in heaven for weeks after that! brett Nov 9, 2007, 3:44am (top)Message 51: judylouLooking through the shelves at a second hand shop in a small country town in Victoria, I came upon Peter Carey's the The Tax Inspector for $4. Only after buying it did I open to the second page to find the author's signature! Lucky me! Nov 9, 2007, 10:46am (top)Message 52: RevenantNot my best find, but a good one for the locale, a heap of old paperback Mickey Spillanes I found in a church basement bazaar. They included a copy of Kiss Me Deadly with this great cover of the lady who sets off the story fleeing from the asylum with captors in pursuit. I was twelve at the time and was elated with my find. Nov 12, 2007, 11:03am (top)Message 53: wisewomanI just found an 1890 copy of Charles Dickens' Sketches by Boz (it also has Great Expectations but that touchstone wasn't working). It was at a library booksale's bag day, and this lovely old hardback went in my bags with 26 other books for a total of $6. I wonder if that is entirely legal—? Nov 16, 2007, 6:09pm (top)Message 54: plaugherFinding ridiculous deals at used shops can be hit or miss at best, but the best one I've made recently was picking up a first American printing of "The Kite Runner" by Khaled Hosseini, in a crisp, unclipped dust jacket, for $7.00, at a shop in Portland, Maine. I was shocked that it was on the shelf, in that pristine state, at that miniscule price. If you're looking for a copy of it nowadays, the cheapest pricethat first printing is running on ABE is around $400. My best library/fundraising sale find was tracking down a poorly-filed (in the history table) first printing of Canadian author Robertson Davies first play, "Overlaid", for 50 cents. The play, when not published in an anthology, is among the scarcest pieces of twentieth-century Canadian literature. I positively love library sales. Where else can you build a collection of classics, fill author gaps, &c., at less than a dollar a pop (most of the time)? Message edited by its author, Nov 16, 2007, 6:12pm. Dec 16, 2007, 1:07am (top)Message 55: Heather19I haven't been to the local used bookstore in awhile, I really should take a day-trip there now that I have a little bit of money (yes, day-trip... that's how long I always end up spending there!). As for old books of the deceased.... When my grandfather died I ended up with a lot of his old books, and frankly they just aren't books I'll ever read. War books, old short-story collections... But I refuse to give them up. They are a part of him, and for that reason I want them. Apr 20, 2008, 11:15pm (top)Message 56: KegsoccerNobody's posted here in awhile, but I just had to post about my awesome find. Church yard sale, I picked up a complete 15 volume set published in 1964 of Masterplots Digests of World Literature in excellent... I may even say like-new condition. They gave it to me for $3! I was buying some other books too so my total was $6.50, but I gave them a $10 and told them to keep the rest because I felt slightly guilty at such a low price for these books and it was going to charity anyway. I just looked them up online and saw several collections of these selling for $75... On ebay the highest priced is at $380. Not that I really plan on selling them, but it just makes my find even better. Message edited by its author, Apr 20, 2008, 11:29pm. Apr 21, 2008, 12:51pm (top)Message 57: wisewomanVery nice, Kegsoccer! :-) I'm going to a big library sale this Wednesday. Counting the days... Apr 21, 2008, 1:48pm (top)Message 58: JakethesnakeI found a first edition first printing of Alcoholics Anonymous at a thrift store for $.50. When I sell it I will be able to fill my house with books! Apr 21, 2008, 2:50pm (top)Message 59: MakifatIf I worked it right, I could probably make a living off some of the things I find at Goodwill. Unfortunately, I don't really have the initiative for that. A few years ago, I found a huge selection of Easton Press books in excellent condition for 1.99 apiece. They look good, but they aren't really up my alley and I ended up selling them for a tidy sum. Nowadays, I pass up lots of books I might formerly have bought, out of the kindhearted notion that finding them will make some other bilbliophile's day (and because I have finally broken myself of the bad habit of knowingly buying duplicates!). My best haul was a fairly large number of books on medieval history (some signed) dating to the first decades of the 20th century which I found in a Goodwill shop in Austin. They were inscribed by "A.C. Krey". Later I found out that Augustus C. Krey was a professor at the University of Minnesota, and that he was married to a minor but respected Texas novelist. When he died, she moved back to Texas and I assume that when she passed away, some of his books ended up at Goodwill. I love finding books that tell a story. At the same Goodwill, I used to periodically find really excellent editions of classic English literature, stamped as coming from the library of "Ginger Hall". Ginger had excellent taste, but it seems as if she never so much as cracked any of these books open, they were in such pristine condition. Apr 24, 2008, 8:23am (top)Message 60: muumi>58 The proceeds from a first edition, first printing of AA could really fill your house with books... especially at 50c a volume! =8^O I was shopping the bargain basement of an antiquarian bookstore in London, Ontario and was startled at the amazing books they marked down to 2 or 3 dollars and banished to the dungeon. Among other things I got a lovely book called The Maid of Domremy and Other Tales with a chromolithographed frontispiece. Can't tell the monetary value, it's one of those things that is too uncommon to have a price online, but it's a unique book for my daughter's collection of Joan of Arc books. Apr 24, 2008, 1:09pm (top)Message 61: rocketjkI've had many, many great finds in thrift stores. The find that comes to mind first is finding four volumes of a set called The Novels of Balzac, published by the Gebbie Publishing Company, Philadelphia in 1900. The volumes I found are: Beatrix The Rise and Fall of Cesar Birotteau A Daughter of Eve Muse of the Department Message edited by its author, Apr 24, 2008, 1:10pm. May 22, 2008, 9:25am (top)Message 62: selkie_girlI found the whole series of Harry Potter in hardback for 50 cents each in Salvation Army. Jun 12, 2008, 11:27pm (top)Message 63: Heather19Not a rare or unlikely find, but made me simply squee with joy: While in San Diego last weekend, in Hillcrest (aka gay-central), I found a nice little used bookstore that had a huge section of LOCAL lesbian and gay authors. Books that are not on Amazon or readily available elsewhere. Picked up about 15 of them, jumping for joy the whole time. Jun 27, 2008, 2:58am (top)Message 64: whirledpeasthe best cookbook i've ever found had eight $100 bills in it. boy, was that a nice day. Jun 27, 2008, 3:43am (top)Message 65: estellenI found a hardcover collector's edition set of the complete works of Daphne du Maurier for what amounts to in American money 5 dollars. Jun 27, 2008, 10:13am (top)Message 66: wisewomanWhoa, whirledpeas! That's way cool :-) I'm so happy! Today I found a first edition hardcover of The Neverending Story by Michael Ende at Half Price Books. The BEST part was the manager cutting the price for me from $25 to $8! He said I was the first person to ask after that book in months and since he had so many books that he needs to put on his shelves, he was willing to cut the price. It is in near perfect condition. This made my day!
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Touchstone worksTouchstone authorsMargery Allingham C. W. Anderson Barrett H. Clark H. E. Bates Stephen Baxter Paula Begoun Louise Bernikow Simon Brett Jimmy Buffett Peter Carey John Le Carré Betty Cavanna G. K. Chesterton Barrett Harper Clark Martina Cole Pat Conroy Adelaide Crapsey Edmund Crispin Roald Dahl Robertson Davies Robertson and Davis Don DeLillo Marcel Desaulniers Charles Dickens Michael Ende Katie Fforde Bill Fitzhugh Stephen Fry fulltext Parke Godwin Susan Graham Nathaniel Hawthorne Joseph Heller Carl Hiaasen Michael Innes Madhur Jaffrey Alfred Kazin Brad Land Keith Laumer Laurie Lee Lermontov Scarlet Letter Maxim Lieber Astrid Lindgren Rose Macaulay Betty MacDonald Frank N. Magill Juliet Marillier William H. Masters Daphne Du Maurier Websters Merriam Claire Messud Vladimir Nabokov Sylvia Nasar Claire Necker Joyce Carrol Oates Patrick O'Brian Maggie O'Farrell Christopher Paolini Katherine Paterson Susan Elizabeth Phillips Anthony Powell Arthur Rackham Michèle Roberts Michael Robotham Ruth Rosen Brandon Sanderson John Shirley Nevil Shute Osbert Sitwell Frank G. Slaughter Elizabeth George Speare Mickey Spillane Boris Starling Flora A. Steel William Strunk Studs Terkel Josephine Tey John Toland Noah and Mckechnie, Jean L. Webster Mary Wesley Philip Wylie A. J. Zerries |

