I seem to remember reading somewhere that there are 2 versions of the S/L MY PRETTY PONY tray case. The 1st edition the title on the spine is horizontal & on the 2nd edition it was vertical. Can anyone verify this?
I seem to remember reading somewhere that there are 2 versions of the S/L MY PRETTY PONY tray case. The 1st edition the title on the spine is horizontal & on the 2nd edition it was vertical. Can anyone verify this?
My dilemma. I recently moved and apparently the area I live in my collectible insurance won't cover flood damage. They won't give it to me because of the "risk." Nothing got damaged but it is about the future "maybes." I have amassed a nice collection, so if there is another hurricane, I would have to take everything with me just in case. Many King books aren't that valuable. You know, the many novels of high volume print runs like Cell, Lisey's Story, Insomnia, etc. Many firsts that don't hold weight, but take up space so to speak. Some of his newer novels, CD makes a great slipcase for them which raises their value, but most seem to not care when it comes to resell.
I have been kicking around the idea that attempting to become a completion-ist collector, financially and space wise, will be improbable for me personally. I have also been thinking since I have Insomnia S/L and the gift edition, that the other first edition isn't worth having around as the value is nil (as an example of many of King's books). But, there are some valuable normal trade editions like It, Firestarter, Shining, Carrie, etc that are worth obviously holding onto and collecting.
What would you do? Is there a cut off for normal trade hardbacks to not collect based on value down the road? Am I over thinking this and should hold onto everything even though many trade hardbacks are worth just 10.00 bucks? Is there a timeline that collectors stop collecting? Are there people out there that only collect lettered, S/L, and gift editions only, but own some first editions that end with It or Misery or a certain period? Any thoughts and hindsight would be great!
I do know some collectors collect only what they love (certain books or stories). But being a horror fan of one of the greatest writers that I admire, I'd buy the bad stories simply because of who King is and what he represents to the horror genre.
Words have no power to impress the mind without the exquisite horror of their reality. Edgar Allan Poe
I look at my growing collection and wonder what I got myself into.
I love and I have to have 1st edition 1st printing (Flatsigned by King) of all of Kings books. That is my "poor mans" collection, many of them have been with me since my teenage years.
I love my s/L books. getting them at sale price makes me think how I wish I was collecting as long as others on this site. Imagine (like many members here) buying Six Stories, The STand, etc... at issue price! Some here bought several copies!
I wish I would have stopped at these two categories. I made the mistake of collecting the doubleday years from CD and anniversary editions of PS publishing --- I could live without these budget draining collections. But I already have them....
I wishi I did not start collecting all the first appearances, but I got them too....
My point is, its your collection and your rules.... 1st editions 1st printings take up one entire Billy book shelf,
I DO NOT COLLECT for value based on what is going to happen down the road.... Look at Beanie Babies, Precious Moments, Bill Cosby collectables, you do not know what is going to happen. Collect what you love and be happy with what you got.... Make your own rules.....
Buy flood insurance. When a hurricane comes that you have to leave for, take a box of the ones most important to you and put the ones you want to try to save in plastic and as high up as you can. That's what I do. I live about 5 minutes from Galveston Island and you just can't worry about taking a bunch of stuff when the monster storm is heading for you. The threat of another Carla, Alicia or Ike smashing thro doesn't stop me from collecting what I want. And believe it or not, and maybe it's heresy, but they are just books.
Lurker is correct. Buy flood insurance. The company that writes your collectible policy might not offer it, but it is available.
"One day you're going to figure out that everything they taught you was a lie."
Thanks guys. My insurance company does not have flood insurance, so I will have to shop around. As for what you are saying Brian, I do understand what you are saying about making my own rules. I'm just trying to figure out if huge run copies are worth having if I need to run for the hills. I do collect for the hobby and enjoy what I have, but I do try to think about down the road value. My younger years I collected baseball cards at the worst possible time. The ones with thousands of the same cards out there that today have zero value. Down that road, those cards are now a bonfire .
Words have no power to impress the mind without the exquisite horror of their reality. Edgar Allan Poe
As for flood insurance, with the damage that my area took, I feel the rates will be astronomical.
Words have no power to impress the mind without the exquisite horror of their reality. Edgar Allan Poe
First off, I hope you never need to use said insurance but definitely good to have!
I understand what you're saying here and I've thought about it as well. What I've done is when I get an S/L or a flatsigned book I no longer feel the need to keep the first trade edition(speaking on later published books, obviously not Carrie, The Shining etc. That would be just plain silly! lol) For example I recently bought a first edition flat signed Cell and gave my unsigned trade edition to a friend. But I'm not one that needs to have two or three of everything and it's a storage issue as well so that's my personal preference. As you stated there are so many of these later editions being published that firsts seem pretty easy to come by.
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Flood insurance is a national program under FEMA. FloodSmart.gov
Any agent should be able to get you coverage.
Dumb (and late) question : there was no SK desk calendar for 2016?
Any for 2017?
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Nope. 2015 was the last one.
Wanted list:
Ubris
Question in general. When a TPB and THC of a book is released at the same time; which one is considered the true 1st?
You don't know my kind.....You don't my mind.....Dark necessities are part of my design.....
Another one that comes to mind is The Bachman Books. There's also the U.K. editions which are released at the same time as a TP, although they're a limited release. To me the HC is the 'true 1st' even though the release date is the same.
Edit. With Storm, the TP would be the true first. The only HC was a BCE.
I also have a memory that Danse Macabre (MacDonald - UK) was published simultaneously in paperback, but I just checked the catalogue and it doesn't mention this, so I'm probably wrong.
The 1st trade hardcover, if there is one, is preferred. There would no doubt be a lower number of hardcovers published. The trade paperback, if released at the same time, is also collectible although less so.
For instance, The Bachman Books in hardcover in reasonable shape would be hard to find for less than $100+ with anything approaching fine going for at least $150. A softcover version in fine condition can be found for $30.
"One day you're going to figure out that everything they taught you was a lie."
Back cover on the Bachman Books 1st edition paperback "This cover was also used as the wrap-around cover for the proof" which leads me to assume that the paperback is the true 1st edition.
also this ad is in the back of the 1st edition paperback & not in the hardcover.
and this is the back cover on the Special Hardcover Collector's Edition. (note no barcode.)
thus fewer hardcovers were printed & there was a $10.00 price difference between the two books.
& 275,000 more paperbacks.
NEW QUESTION! Did the hardcover Bachman Books go into a 2nd edition or are there only 25,000 hardcovers?
Thank You!