Rare Books &c. at Auction This Week

Swann Galleries offers 19th & 20th Century Literature on Tuesday, May 15, in 310 lots. The top-estimated lot is a copy of Ernest Hemingway's first book, Three Stories & Ten Poems (Paris: Contact, 1923), printed in just 300 copies ($20,000-30,000). A set of three first printed editions of Emily Dickinson's poems could sell for $10,000 to $15,000. A copy of the first printed edition of Anne Frank's diary (Amsterdam, 1947) in the third-issue dust jacket is estimated at $7,000-10,000. Also included are unbound long galley proofs for Philip K. Dick's VALIS ($4,000-6,000) and Charles Dickens' Bleak House in original monthly parts ($2,000-3,000).

  

At Toovey's in West Sussex on Tuesday, Antiquarian & Collectors' Books, in 354 lots. Luigi Mayer's folio volume with aquatint plates Views in the Ottoman Empire (London, 1803), rebound, is estimated at £1,000-1,500. Mathias Koops' Historical Account of the Substances which Have Been Used to Describe Events, and to Convey Ideas from the earliest Date to the Invention of Paper (London, 1800), printed on straw paper, could sell for £300-500. A number of lots in this sale are from the collection at West Horsley Place, the historic house inherited by Bamber Gascoigne in 2014.

  

Rounding out the trio of Tuesday sales, Sotheby's London offers Travel, Atlases, Maps and Natural History Including the Library of Colin and Joan Deacon, in 419 lots. A set of eleven works by John Gould, in forty-three volumes in near-uniform green morocco bindings, could sell for £700,000-900,000. A volume containing a complete set of the Indian Tracts of Bartholomé de las Casas, in contemporary limp vellum binding with manuscript annotations and ownership notes recording that the volume belonged to Inca Garcilaso de la Vega (1539-1616), early historian of Peru, is estimated at £100,000-150,000. Fifteen albumen photographs of Mecca from the 1880s could fetch £80,000-120,000. A copy of the Nuremberg Chronicle rates a £25,000-35,000 estimate, and a copy of Audubon's "Carolina Parrot" plate is estimated at £20,000-30,000.

  

Screen Shot 2018-05-14 at 7.53.14 AM.pngOn Wednesday, May 16, Dominic Winter Auctioneers sells Printed Books, Maps & Documents, in 578 lots. Among the top-expected lots are John Speed's 1676 A new and accurat map of the world (£5,000-8,000); a 1698 second edition of John Ogilby's Britannia (£3,000-5,000); and James Bruce's Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile (£1,500-2,000). If your library needs a set of steps, there's a Victorian gothic oak set available, from Exeter College, Oxford (pictured right; £300-500).

  

PBA Galleries offers a Spring Miscellany on Thursday, May 17, in 455 lots. The highest estimate, $6,000-9,000, goes to a copy of Jean Charlot's Picture Book (1933), this is one of five special sets containing progressive proofs for the 32 lithographs. (If this sounds familiar, it's because it was offered last month with a higher estimate.) Lots 199-380 are being sold without reserve and lots 381-455 are shelf lots, also sold without reserve. Many lots related to Merle Armitage, John Henry Nash, and the Grabhorn Press will go under the hammer.

  

Image via Dominic Winter Auctioneers