"Book collectors are a curious lot." So begins a story in the Economist about book collectors and the London Antiquarian Book Fair.
From the piece...
Rarely can one touch or gawp at
exceedingly rare treasures like a second folio of Shakespeare; Dickens’s
own marked-up copy of “Mrs Gamp”, which he read from on his last
American tour; or 15th-century books from the presses of
Anton Koberer and Aldus Manutius, which sell for tens if not hundreds of
thousands of pounds. At the other end of the spectrum, vintage
children’s books, autographs and postcards can be picked up at numerous
stands for £50 or less.
Most interesting, perhaps, is the air of optimism—there
is not the slightest whiff of gloom at the state of the book world. The
internet, paradoxically, has made books “à la mode”, says Claude
Blaizot of the Librarie August Blaizot in Paris, purveyor of first
editions of "Tintin" and fantastically bound livres d’artiste.
“It has brought people to books, and shown them booksellers they never
would have known existed before,” he says. Clive Farahar, the Antiques
Roadshow’s book specialist, agrees that technology has opened up the
book trade, and made the world of books much more accessible to all.
“It’s not just the dim little shop on the high street anymore,” he said.
“We can learn so much now we never would have known before.”
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