Five years ago, Joseph Makkos made a splash with an essay in the Atlantic about how he acquired a sizable collection of vintage New Orleans newspapers for free through a Craigslist ad. He created a company called NOLA DNA, arranged for storage of the collection (kept by the previous owner in 30,000 airtight tubes), and began working on how best to save and showcase its content.

I’ve been following this story ever since, writing about Makkos, his discovery, and subsequent projects in our spring 2018 issue and in the paperback edition of my book, Rare Books Uncovered. Which is also why I didn’t hesitate to support (full disclosure!) his new Kickstarter campaign to scan, convert, and share this historic archive.

The month-long campaign hopes to raise $20,000 toward this goal. Makkos posted it just a few days ago, writing: “As the Times-Picayune will publish its final issue on June 30, 2019, we are reminded that the storied era of paper publishing is drawing to a close. Without proper preservation and digitization, the publications that have been generated over the last 150 years will be, quite literally, left in the dust … Let's not let that happen to this collection!”

Once in the care of the British Library, this collection of NOLA papers, c. 1888-1929, was auctioned off to the highest bidder back in 1999, much to the dismay of writer Nicholson Baker, who chronicled his efforts to buy them and many others in the 2001 book, Double Fold. The anonymous winning bidder of this collection tried to sell them off piecemeal but gave up, which is how Makkos came into the picture.

What started off as a lark has become one man’s life's work — and it’s important work that ought to be supported. To do so, click here.

A much quieter auction week coming up:

Christie's Paris will sell the first part of the Bibliothèque Paul Destribats in a three-day, 607-lot sale from Wednesday through Friday, July 3–5. Cendrars and Delaunay's La Prose du Transsibérien et de la petite Jehanne de France (1913), one of 28 copies on Japan paper, signed and initialed by Cendrars, is estimated at €200,000–300,000. At the same estimate are Man Ray's Champs délicieux (1922), one of just two examples known, and the corrected proofs of André Breton's Manifeste du surréalisme and Poisson soluble (1924).

A marvelous copy of Éluard and Picasso's Le Barre d'appui (1936); the autograph manuscript of Breton and Éluard's Dictionnaire abrégé du surréalisme (1938); and the original manuscript of Éluard and Picasso's Divers poèmes du livre ouvert (2e série), one of just six known copies (pictured), are each estimated at €100,000–150,000.

Also on Wednesday, Forum Auctions holds an online sale of Books and Works on Paper, in 257 lots. Lots 1–121 comprise "The English as Collectors," a documentary library collected by Frank Herrmann (1927–2017), the founder of Bloomsbury Book Auctions and the author of several books about collecting and the auction trade. There will be much of interest here to anyone whose interests run in such directions. Highlights from this sale are expected to include a collection of signatures from members of the 1953 British Mount Everest Expedition and a large-paper copy of Thomas Frognall Dibdin's Bibliographical Antiquarian and Picturesque Tour in France and Germany (1821), each estimated at £1,000–1,500.

A couple notes on last week's sales: as I was writing the blog post I thought that many of the estimates for the June 26 sale of The Library & Picture Collection of the late Martin Woolf Orskey at Dominic Winter seemed fairly low, and that was borne out by the results: the £780,360 total realized was more than twice the expected high estimates. The top lot proved to be a set of five colored English woodcut broadsides from around 1670, which fetched £30,000 (ten times their presale estimate). A copy of the earliest known depiction of a book auction, estimated at just £600–800, sold for £18,500!

And in the Bonhams London sale, the 1737 copy of Horace taken by William Perry around the world on Captain Cook's Endeavour voyage—estimated at £15,000–25,000—sold for £62,562.