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-   -   Book Valuation Website (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/1021279-book-valuation-website.html)

Seahawk 02-17-2019 10:58 AM

Book Valuation Website
 
I know how subjective it is, and, like stamps, a fools errand in terms of values.

But, my wife and I are purging ourselves of books and other clutter.

We have a lot of First Editions from a number of authors from a number of genres.

Can anyone recommend a website that has a reasonable evaluation tool (that I can then decrease by 90%) based on condition, no jacket, etc.?

Thanks!

recycled sixtie 02-17-2019 11:20 AM

I have been doing the same thing namely trying to dispose of some old books. I have googled the name of the book and author and the response is from either ebay or amazon. Not great prices considering the older books are mostly 1950's and one in the 1930's. When I go to a used book store it will give me some idea of how much to ask for them.
Cheers, Guy

Seahawk 02-17-2019 12:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by recycled sixtie (Post 10358735)
I have been doing the same thing namely trying to dispose of some old books. I have googled the name of the book and author and the response is from either ebay or amazon. Not great prices considering the older books are mostly 1950's and one in the 1930's. When I go to a used book store it will give me some idea of how much to ask for them.
Cheers, Guy

Boxes and boxes...anything that is on sale or valued under $5.00 on the sites I have found gets the hook.

The local used bookstore is interested because he knows my wife. The rest donate to the local library, if they will take them.

We have found some really interesting stuff in and among the bookshelves we haven't touched in 15 years.

This has been a very interesting day!

recycled sixtie 02-17-2019 01:15 PM

I am rereading books that I have not read for 5-10 years. It seems like I am reading them for the first time!

Perhaps some of mine could be used for the PPOT gift exchange. I have been buying used books on Amazon and even with shipping it comes under the price of a new paper back at a local book store. Love my books but like you say got to downside a lot of stuff.

93nav 02-17-2019 01:27 PM

Depending on how much work you want to do. Take a look at abebook.com and sort for most expensive first. It is surprising what some old books go for. Of course, this is what they are asking for the books.

BeyGon 02-17-2019 02:26 PM

I had good luck selling books on Ebay last year, I checked what others were asking and undercut them. Sold about $1000 worth there.

Sooner or later 02-17-2019 03:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by recycled sixtie (Post 10358859)
I am rereading books that I have not read for 5-10 years. It seems like I am reading them for the first time


I am the same way. I don't have to buy new books.

MRM 02-17-2019 06:55 PM

Paul, I am a disciple of the written word and have some space to store books. If you don’t have anywhere else to put your books contact me and we’ll work out a way to get them to me in one piece and I’ll keep them.

LWJ 02-17-2019 11:46 PM

Abe books? Maybe a good resource.

Arizona_928 02-18-2019 01:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by LWJ (Post 10359347)
Abe books? Maybe a good resource.

They have a monthly listing fee.

eBay would be my thought. media rate shipping is the only real upside to selling them online.

Have any chemistry related books?

karenmarlow 02-18-2019 04:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by recycled sixtie (Post 10358859)
I am rereading books that I have not read for 5-10 years. It seems like I am reading them for the first time!

Perhaps some of mine could be used for the PPOT gift exchange. I have been buying used books on Amazon and even with shipping it comes under the price of a new paper back at a local book store. Love my books but like you say got to downside a lot of stuff.

The same. Like I've never read them.

https://66.media.tumblr.com/avatar_d6ddd3738f9e_128.pnj

Seahawk 02-18-2019 06:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MRM (Post 10359228)
Paul, I am a disciple of the written word and have some space to store books. If you don’t have anywhere else to put your books contact me and we’ll work out a way to get them to me in one piece and I’ll keep them.

What do you like to read (I am sure the list is wide-ranging but give me your top two)?

I'll ship you a few samples!

The books won't be trashed. The local used book guy gets the first shot, then the Vintage Values folks who sell books and then the local library that accepts donated books they then sell at a big event every year.

I do so much appreciate the offer!

MRM 02-18-2019 12:49 PM

Paul, anything you have left over will find a new home. I'm embarrassed to admit that I love spy novels and detective stories. John D. MacDonald and Travis McGee, Len Deighton and Bernard Sampson. Anything by Frederick Forsythe (did you know he was a real life freelance writer, and perhaps something more, in the Biafra war?) All of Nelson DeMille's stuff.

On top of that, I love biographies and autobiographies. Anyone who knows enough about someone to write a biography about him is worth my time and effort to read. Anyone who did enough to write a book about themselves has something that's worth me reading about to learn something.

Classic American literature, Poe, Robert Penn Warren, Mark Twain, Fitzgerald. The Great Gatsby is the Great American Novel but All the King's Men is the Great Southern American Novel. All American comedy descends from Mark Twain and he invented the use of accurate local dialect. Brit Lit - Swift is the father of political satire. The Romantic poets, well words fail to describe. Words are meant to be insufficient when discussing the Romantics. Anything by Dickens or his descendants.

After that, histories and historical fiction. War histories and political tomes. Anything by Max Hastings, Ward Just, Bernard Fall, Churchill, really anyone who writes anything about war.

And finally, I have a soft spot for completely anachronistic books that are period pieces that are a perfect insight into the way things were but are completely bypassed by modern life. I grew up reading anything I could get my hands on. I inherited the books my grandmother held on to that my father and uncles read. The library was full of books that were relevant when written but are no more than time capsule curiosities now. One of my favorites was a young adult novel from the 1930s about the crew an American dirigible named the Goliath and its exploits against its heavier-than-air foes. But everything old is new again and some people are taking a second look at lighter than air craft.

So, basically anything downscale that you have will find a home with me!

Seahawk 02-18-2019 12:58 PM

Stand the **** by.

Incoming!

Quote:

Originally Posted by MRM (Post 10360161)
Paul, anything you have left over will find a new home. I'm embarrassed to admit that I love spy novels and detective stories. John D. MacDonald and Travis McGee, Len Deighton and Bernard Sampson. Anything by Frederick Forsythe (did you know he was a real life freelance writer, and perhaps something more, in the Biafra war?) All of Nelson DeMille's stuff.

On top of that, I love biographies and autobiographies. Anyone who knows enough about someone to write a biography about him is worth my time and effort to read. Anyone who did enough to write a book about themselves has something that's worth me reading about to learn something.

Classic American literature, Poe, Robert Penn Warren, Mark Twain, Fitzgerald. The Great Gatsby is the Great American Novel but All the King's Men is the Great Southern American Novel. All American comedy descends from Mark Twain and he invented the use of accurate local dialect. Brit Lit - Swift is the father of political satire. The Romantic poets, well words fail to describe. Words are meant to be insufficient when discussing the Romantics. Anything by Dickens or his descendants.

After that, histories and historical fiction. War histories and political tomes. Anything by Max Hastings, Ward Just, Bernard Fall, Churchill, really anyone who writes anything about war.

And finally, I have a soft spot for completely anachronistic books that are period pieces that are a perfect insight into the way things were but are completely bypassed by modern life. I grew up reading anything I could get my hands on. I inherited the books my grandmother held on to that my father and uncles read. The library was full of books that were relevant when written but are no more than time capsule curiosities now. One of my favorites was a young adult novel from the 1930s about the crew an American dirigible named the Goliath and its exploits against its heavier-than-air foes. But everything old is new again and some people are taking a second look at lighter than air craft.

So, basically anything downscale that you have will find a home with me!



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