Collecting Childrens Picturebooks: May 2006 Archives

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May 31, 2006

The Cat In The Hat Comes Back (1958)

Dr. Seuss First Edition Identification

The Cat In The Hat Comes Back, written & illustrated by Theodor Seuss Geisel
Random House, 1958

Children's Picturebook Price Guide Value:  $300 VG+ 

 

Essential identifying point

Copyright page:  Line with “FIRST PRINTING”

 

Essential Identifying Point

Book and DJ front cover:  Snowball at bottom left by Cat’s tail.

 

 

 

The ‘snowball’ point is of assistance if a later edition dust jacket is placed onto a first issue book—the first printing book and dust jacket match and are the only printings with the ‘snowball’. The book is easy enough to identify, being a stated edition. 

In the Children’s Picturebook Price Guide we categorize this type of Seuss book as “Group A:  Stated First Printing”.  Other Seuss books in the group include Lady Godiva and Horton Hatches The Egg.


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The Cat In The Hat (1957)

Dr. Seuss First Edition Identification

The Cat In The Hat, written & illustrated by Theodor Seuss Geisel
Random House, 1957

Children's Picturebook Price Guide Value:  $4,000 VG+ 

First Edition Identifying Point
Front DJ Flap:   Price "200/200"

 

 

 

First Issue Book
Book spine:  Single signature; 2nd issue and later printings have three signatures.

 


 

 

 

Be very careful with sellers substituting the 1985 facsimile dust jacket on the first edition book.  The only difference between the 1985 facsimile DJ and the first edition DJ is the phrase "Printed in U.S.A." on the bottom back flap of the facsimile.

Background

(Note:  The following is a Wikipedia entry, which we wrote.)

Dr. Seuss created The Cat In The Hat in reaction to the May 24, 1954 Life Magazine article by John Hersey, titled “Why Do Students Bog Down On First R? A LOCAL COMMITTEE SHEDS LIGHT ON A NATIONAL PROBLEM: READING.” In the article, Hersey was critical of school primers,

“In the classroom boys and girls are confronted with books that have insipid illustrations depicting the slicked-up lives of other children. [Existing primers] feature abnormally courteous, unnaturally clean boys and girls.” “In bookstores, anyone can buy brighter, livelier books featuring strange and wonderful animals and children who behave naturally, i.e., sometimes misbehave. Given incentive from school boards, publishers could do as well with primers.”

Hersey’s arguments were enumerated over ten pages of Life Magazine, which was the leading periodical during that time. After detailing many issues contributing to the dilemma connected with student reading levels, Hersey asked toward the end of the article:

“Why should [school primers] not have pictures that widen rather than narrow the associative richness the children give to the words they illustrate — drawings like those of the wonderfully imaginative geniuses among children’s illustrators, Tenniel, Howard Pyle, “Dr. Seuss,” Walt Disney?”

Dr. Seuss responded to this “challenge” by rigidly limiting himself to a small set of words from an elementary school vocabulary list, then crafted a story based upon two randomly selected words—cat and hat.


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May 30, 2006

Abraham Lincoln (1939)

Caldecott Medal First Edition Identification

Abraham Lincoln; authored and illustrated by Ingri & Edgar Parin d'Aulaire
Doubleday, Doran & Co. ; 1939

1940 Caldecott Medal

Children's Picturebook Price Guide Value: $1,600 VG+ 

Essential identifying point
Copyright page:  Line with "FIRST EDITION".

 

Non-essential identifying point:

Front DJ flap price "$2.00" 


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The information offered on the website and blog is offered free of charge. If you find the information useful, then kindly link or share the post with a parent, teacher, librarian, bookseller, or collector. Thank You.


May 29, 2006

Ferdinand (1936)

First Edition Identification

Ferdinand ; written by Munro Leaf, illustrated by Robert Lawson; Viking Press; 1936

Children's Picturebook Price Guide Value:  $5,000 VG+

Essential identifying point

Copyright page:  Line with "FIRST PUBLISHED SEPTEMBER 1936". with no additional printings listed.

 

Non-essential

DJ flap price "$1.00"

Background Information

Ferdinand was a national phenomenon in the late 1930’s after it’s publication. The anti-fight message struck a chord with a world infected with war. By 1938, in it’s first two years of publication, Ferdinand was reprinted over ten times. In 1938, Disney released an animated film “Ferdinand The Bull ”. Life Magazine, the leading periodical of it’s time, published articles on the book and it’s creators in two separate issues. The Feb. 21, 1938 issue featured a story titled “Ferdinand, The Bull Who Loves Flowers, Is Now A Grownups Hero” (Bibliophiles will love the Carl Sandburg cover; the article, however is about Sandburg singing folk songs?). The Nov. 28, 1938 issue highlighted the Disney film, along with photographs showing the multitude of toys and other cross-promotional material being merchandised. The magnitude of merchandising material would be common place today, however was ground breaking at the time.

Ferdinand was the highlight of author Munro Leaf’s career. He was writer and illustrator for a series of “Can Be Fun” books (i.e. Manners Can Be Fun , Safety, Grammar, etc…), and did author a Caldecott Honor winning book, however nothing came close to the notoriety he garnered for Ferdinand. Illustrator Robert Lawson did have significant commercial success after Ferdinand , both as an illustrator and as an author. In 1937, he won a Caldecott Honor award for his illustrations for Four And Twenty Blackbirds, then won another Caldecott Honor in 1938 for Wee Gillis , which was authored by Munro Leaf. Lawson was the illustrator for Mr. Popper’s Penguins , which won a Newbery Honor award in 1938.

In 1940, Lawson won the Caldecott Medal for They Were Good And Strong , a book he both wrote and illustrated. Lawson was the illustrator for the 1942 Newbery Medal book, Adam Of The Road . Finally, Lawson won the Newbery Medal in 1944 for Rabbit Hill , a book he both wrote and illustrated. (Lawson also did the decorations and endpapers for Putnam’s 1939 publication of T.H. White’s Sword In The Stone , which was later turned into a Disney feature film.)

Ferdinand has been in print since it’s publication in 1936, and has been translated into a number of foreign languages. How many fiction books published since 1936 have been translated into Latin? The anti-fight sentiment still rings true today.


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May 25, 2006

Poo Poo And The Dragons (1952)

A copy of Poo Poo And The Dragons, written by C.S. Forestor and illustrated by Robert Lawson, sold on eBay for $752 on May 22, 2006 (eBay Item#7030268919): 

From the item description:

"This is a first edition, signed and inscribed by author C. S. Forester, illustrated by Robert Lawson.  "Raisa Rogozina, best wishes from C. S. Forester, 22nd August 1942." 

A lovely book about Poo-Poo (Harold Heaveyside Brown) and Horatio, a very playful dragon. I'm not an expert but the book is in fine condition with a little ripple at the bottom right corner, otherwise boards have no discoloration or wearing.  […] Jacket is in fine condition with just a few chips at the corners and bottom of spine and slight discoloration on back edges.  Also included is a memo from the publishers dated August 12, 1942."

The Children's Picturebook Price Guide listed the book for $780 in VG+ condition, which is probably a bit low, since eBay auctions tend to be closer to wholesale then retail. Market price should be in the $1200 range.


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The information offered on the website and blog is offered free of charge. If you find the information useful, then kindly link or share the post with a parent, teacher, librarian, bookseller, or collector. Thank You.


Eloise (1955)

First Edition Identification

Eloise, written by Kay Thompson, illustrated by Hilary Knight
Simon & Schuster, 1955

Children's Picturebook Price Guide Value:  $3,000 VG+ 

Essential Identifying Points

Copyright page:  Line states “NEW YORK 20, N.Y.,” followed by line “FIRST PRINTING,” followed by line “LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOG CARD NUMBER:  55-11039.”

Page 50 on the true first state book makes reference to ‘Lily Dache”; in later state copies this reference is changed to “Coco Chanel.”


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The information offered on the website and blog is offered free of charge. If you find the information useful, then kindly link or share the post with a parent, teacher, librarian, bookseller, or collector. Thank You.


Madeline (1939)

First Edition Identification

Madeline, written & illustrated by Ludwig Bemelmans; Viking, 1939

1940 Caldecott Honor Award 

Children's Picturebook Price Guide Value:  $4,000 VG+ 

Essential identifying point
Title page:  Line with “Simon & Schuster” followed by line with “1939.” 

 

 

Non-essential
DJ flap price "$2.00" 

The myth has propagated on the internet that the first printing book includes an error that was corrected in subsequent printings, with 12 girls ‘breaking bread’ instead of 11 (with Madeline in the hospital, there is supposed to be only 11 girls dining).  This “12 girl error” was used in many, many subsequent printings, and is therefore not a method to identifying a true first printing.


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The information offered on the website and blog is offered free of charge. If you find the information useful, then kindly link or share the post with a parent, teacher, librarian, bookseller, or collector. Thank You.


May 24, 2006

Objective - Children's Picturebook Price Guide

We are striving to establish this book as the definitive guide to collecting children’s picturebooks, with the intention of publishing a new edition annually. If people knew how much first edition picturebooks were worth, then perhaps more people would enter the hobby. This would bring a greater number of collectible books to market, and would also increase liquidity.

The children’s book collector market, which is one of the hottest areas within the general book collecting hobby, currently lacks an authoritative price guide. From the book’s introduction:

“The objective of this Price Guide is to expand the children’s picturebook collecting hobby by providing visibility to the estimated market value of first edition picturebooks. Our hope is that the general population will come to understand that first edition children’s picturebooks have significant market value, and in turn, will lead to new collectors being attracted to the hobby.”


Links Are Our Friends

The information offered on the website and blog is offered free of charge. If you find the information useful, then kindly link or share the post with a parent, teacher, librarian, bookseller, or collector. Thank You.