One of the nicest things in the collection is this rare
bibliography, really a catalogue of a collection. In 1932 to mark the centenary
celebrations of Lewis Carroll’s birth, Flora V Livingston of Harvard compiled a
catalogue of the Harcourt Amory Collection of Lewis Carroll, part of the
Harvard College Library holdings. Sixty five copies were printed of which fifty
were for sale. A Christmas greetings signed by Livingston is loose inside. I
don’t know who the recipient was. Also shown is a book of personal verse
written by Harcourt Amory and inside are some newspaper cuttings of his poetic
contributions, signed “ Sylvia Throstle” his pseudonym.
Sunday, 30 March 2014
Saturday, 22 March 2014
Lewis Carroll's Library - 3
Charlie Lovett’s Lewis
Carroll among his Books – A Descriptive Catalogue of the Private Library of
Charles l. Dodgson lists as No.2270,
Williams, Henry Willard Our Eyes and How
To Take Care of Them, Tegg, London 1871. This was first re-sold in the 1898
sale by the Art and Antiques Agency in Oxford shortly after the Brook’s sale of
Dodgson’s effects and library and, as Lovett informs, is now in my collection. When
I bought the book, a short text on ophthalmology, it had just been nicely
housed in a clamshell box and sits well beside the other medical books from CLD’s
library.
Monday, 17 March 2014
Some Mathematical Titles by Dodgson
At the Denis Crutch collection sale I also bought a copy of
the second edition of Euclid and His
Modern Rivals in original crimson cloth, one of 250 copies printed in 1885
( lot 200). It would be six years later until I found a copy of the first
edition (print run also 250 in 1879) on ABE books website, shown in the
photograph. The work is a mathematical drama and described in WMGC 128.
On the same theme – mathematical works by C.L. Dodgson – the
pictures also show two editions of Euclid
Books I, II. Copies of these books are surprisingly rare and difficult to
find. The title went through eight editions and would have literally poured
into class rooms – where have they all gone?
Two editions, a first and third, of Curiosa Mathematica A New Theory of Parallels are shown, both
acquired from book sellers in the UK. All of these mathematical books, without
any special provenance or inscriptions and in good condition cost in the low
three figures to buy. Later I will show rarer mathematical pamphlets and books.
Tuesday, 4 March 2014
Value and Rarity : Six Letters and Other Booklets
In collecting I found that studying the bibliographies for
the rarer items was very stimulating. Certain tricks of the net became useful
tools, for example entering various parts of a title into Google searches and
finding items in bookseller itineries or catalogues. Sometimes these would be
enticed in to view when the bookseller had mis-spelt the author’s name or other
basic error. Today’s blog illustrates some items that also show that rare doesn’t
equate to valuable. The India Alice, a booklet prepared for a Grolier Club
dinner in 1966, describes the finding of one of the few 1865 Alice’s on the
floor of a bookshop in Bangalore and its subsequent journey to Warren Weaver’s
collection. This I held as especially desirable for a long time – a collecting
whim – and when I spotted it in a literature catalogue one day I telephoned to
secure it –but it had been sold that morning. Five years later I found this
copy on eBay, with the dinner card of Lew Feldman still with it (the famous
book dealer El Dieff) and a great inscription. Another rarity is the Six
Letters – no 3 of only 26 copies printed; not valuable as such but try and find
one! There are others which I will blog about in future posts.
Saturday, 1 March 2014
Eldridge Johnson's Facsimile Edition of Alice's Adventures Under Ground
In 1936, Eldridge Johnson, who owned the original manuscript
of Alice, written and drawn by Dodgson for Alice, commissioned Max Jaffe of
Vienna to print a number of copies in collotype of a facsimile edition. The number
is not known for certain but most people state 75 unnumbered copies in green
morocco with a slipcase. Several other facsimile editions have been published
but this one is the finest and nearest to the original, now housed in the
British Library. The oval photograph of Alice Liddell that had been hidden for
many years until it’s’ discovery by Morten Cohen, is shown on the last page,
with the loose final leaf that came with the Johnson facsimile. Copies of this book today usually sell for £1000 plus, though I was lucky enough to get this copy for a fraction of that in 2000 on the internet.