Hello,
I have a first edition hardback copy of "The Amber Spyglass" by Philip Pullman from the His Dark Materials Trilogy. I received this book as a present and I was surprised to find that the book had a misprinted error which I failed to notice first time around. The pages 297-328 are repeated at page 218, after which the pages go back to normal and the story is picked up again at 219. I must have been pretty tired when I was reading the book because I didn't notice the error at all! I finished the book without picking up on such an obvious flaw. I went for about 2 years thinking that the book was a complete disappointment because I was left utterly confused by the middle part of the book!
After I read it I put it on a shelf for a while and only came back to it a few years later. This time around I did notice the error. I spoke to my mother about it and she said that I should keep it because first edition hardback books are very rare and in a few decades this book could be very valuable. Is there any basis to this reasoning? Would anyone pay more for a book because it had a strange error of having 31 more pages than any other copy of the book?
I'm not really that interested in selling the book in the future, I'm just interested in how the second hand book market/collectors market works. Do misprints add or detract value? I'd love to hear about any famous misprints from older books if anyone knows of any.
Thanks, Conrad
I have a first edition hardback copy of "The Amber Spyglass" by Philip Pullman from the His Dark Materials Trilogy. I received this book as a present and I was surprised to find that the book had a misprinted error which I failed to notice first time around. The pages 297-328 are repeated at page 218, after which the pages go back to normal and the story is picked up again at 219. I must have been pretty tired when I was reading the book because I didn't notice the error at all! I finished the book without picking up on such an obvious flaw. I went for about 2 years thinking that the book was a complete disappointment because I was left utterly confused by the middle part of the book!
After I read it I put it on a shelf for a while and only came back to it a few years later. This time around I did notice the error. I spoke to my mother about it and she said that I should keep it because first edition hardback books are very rare and in a few decades this book could be very valuable. Is there any basis to this reasoning? Would anyone pay more for a book because it had a strange error of having 31 more pages than any other copy of the book?
I'm not really that interested in selling the book in the future, I'm just interested in how the second hand book market/collectors market works. Do misprints add or detract value? I'd love to hear about any famous misprints from older books if anyone knows of any.
Thanks, Conrad