Thursday, September 15, 2022

Glass-Case Books (& Robinson the Cat)

UPDATE on feral cat Robinson

Robinson came inside to eat a little breakfast this morning. As I was making my coffee, I felt a cat rub against my leg. I assumed it was one of the girls, but no--it was Robinson!
Then he ran away, back outside.

"I'm not in love. And don't forget it."

 _____________________

Valuable books at the thrift store, I put in the glass display case.
If they don't sell in a few weeks, I mark them  50%down.
Eventually, I take the chance that they'll be stolen and put them on the shelves.

I used to list expensive books on eBay, but it takes too much time to list and ship them. I don't have enough time to tend to BOOK's as it is (not to mention toys).
My focus is on providing books for locals anyway--and giving people a reason to come to the store.

A couple times people have asked how I know if a book is valuable. I don't always, but sometimes a book sets my Spidey Sense tingling, and I look it up (or, more often, I set it aside to look up later--then do a big Look Up all at once).

I wish I'd taken photos of the glass-case books all along.
Here's what's in there now--(or sitting on top, vintage but less valuable books, but still more than our standard $1.99):


Three that sold recently:

Borges' The Aleph and Other Stories, 1933-1969, trans. by Norman Thomas diGiovanni: 1970, out of print, hardcover with dust jacket, $40.

Motherpeace Tarot Deck: 1981, $35 (round cards, feminist imagery)

Douglas Adams, The Restaurant at the End of the Universe, London: Arthur Baker, 1980. Hardback, dust jacket... ex-library book.
(I thought about getting this myself, just for the cover illus.)
I'd priced it $25.
An older man wanted it for his son's birthday and asked if it could be less. I gave it to him for $20.

Unlike this one, ^ our edition was not signed by Douglas Adams--those go for way more. (Adams died in 2001, aged fifty-one.)


I don't usually mind dropping prices on the glass-case books--I price them on the high (but fair) end to begin with.
Some people obviously don't have the money, and I'm just happy they want a book. Others are angling for a better deal (fair enough).
Occasionally I've offered a discount only to have the buyer say, "Thanks, I don't want a discount, I want to support the store."
I love that answer.
________________
Some big sales.

Biggest ever: an early, limited edition set of Edgar Allan Poe books, $280.
Bought by a bookseller in St. Paul (across the Mississippi). He didn't ask for a discount.

I don't like resellers who are selling to Amazon, because they're feeding the maw of that monster. (Not that I have any control over it...)
But if someone buys our books to resell locally, I don't mind. They are turning over the garden soil--part of a healthy ecosystem. Not that we have a healthy ecosystem. It's practically a miracle if anyone makes it as an brick-and-mortar, indie bookseller.

A first U.S. edition of Douglas Adams's Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, $100.
A woman bought it as a Christmas present for her brother. She did not ask for a discount.

An early (not first) ed of The Bell Jar, Sylvia Plath, $35.
I always remember this one because it was donated in a brown-paper grocery bag of otherwise garbage books--it was at the very bottom.
Lesson: always unpack all the books.

Not so big, but we've sold three copies of Obama's latest autobiography, A Promised Land (2020; $40 new) for $18 each.
Because those are of general interest, I stand copies up on the display shelf behind the cash register rather than putting them in the case.
A glowing review
from Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie.
Embarrassingly glowing? Is Obama really "
as fine a writer as they come"? I haven't read this one, but didn't think that when I read his earlier work.
Anyway, some people don't seem to mind giving their copies away to us...

4 comments:

  1. animals will always surprise you when you least expect it. this will drive the house owners crazy that he did that to you and not them.

    love the photos of the books, of course. our local new/used bookstore recently received a large donation from one of the universities. they have priced the books but i fell over at some of the prices. i think the pricer went online and looked up the books and selected the highest price without considering the condition of the book.

    kirsten

    ReplyDelete
  2. They do say things are worth what someone will pay for them....but sometimes it is worth holding out for a decent price.

    What a beautiful cat friend...gently does it!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I love Robinson. He has the majesty of a killer. He is a monster of God. What a miraculous glare. Very perfect.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Ah...Robinson is a smokey Russian blue.

    Ha! Of course! Smokey Robinson!

    He is a most handsome, gentlemanly cat. A leg rub is a thank you, a feline gesture of gratitude and appreciation.

    ReplyDelete