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Book collecting: Remainders

If you are a book collector, you should not ignore remaindered books. Remaindered books are those books you often see piled high on tables in front of Borders or Barnes & Noble, selling at a fraction of their original price. Books are remaindered when they are no longer selling well, and publishers want to get rid of them. While the publishing company takes a loss when it remainders a book, it gains valuable warehouse space.

For the collector, the bargain price of remainders is a positive thing. However, there is a down side to remainders. Many of them are marked with a remainder mark, often just the slash of a marker, sometimes the ink stamp of a star or some other emblem, on the bottom edges of the book.

Not all publishers mark their remaindered books. So if you are perusing remaindered books at your local book store, look the book over carefully for remainder marks. If there are none, and you want the book, you have found yourself a bargain.

By the way, sometimes you can get rid of the remainder mark, particularly if it was not done with a marker. Here is how you do it. Pull the front and back covers slightly open and grab the rest of the book and hold it closed tightly. Then hand sand the remainder mark off. Start with a fine grade of sandpaper. If that doesn't work, try a coarser grade. Work slowly and carefully. If you see that sanding is not working or you start damaging the book, stop immediately.

Fiction is remaindered by the ton. Some collectors speculate by buying first edition remainders of novels by new authors. An unknown author's first book is worthless, however, if he or she becomes famous, then his or her first book will generally be the most valuable book of all his or her works.

For example, when Albany, New York author William Kennedy wrote his first book The Ink Truck, it was worth very little. When he won the Pulitzer Prize for Ironweed and it was made into a movie, his first book became very valuable. I located a copy, without its dust jacket, in a thrift store and was still able to sell it for a decent price. The problem is guessing who is going to become famous and who isn't. That takes a lot of skill and luck.

If you are a collector, you should also consider remainders if you have a hole in your collection. If you are collecting books by hippie leaders and don't have a copy of Abbie Hoffman's Steal This Book, a remaindered reprint can fill the bill until you find an original copy. I came across remaindered reprints of Steal This Book for five dollars each at a WaldenBooks discount store.

If you are not really interested in the monetary value of your book collection, but are simply interested in collecting interesting books on a particular subject, either for reading or research, then seriously consider remainders. They will enable you to get more book for the buck. If you don't care about remainder marks, you can even order from catalogs or websites of remainder retailers like Daedalus Books, The Texas Bookman, Powell's and Book Depot. I order from all of these remainder houses and have been pleased by the books I have purchased.

Remaindered books are an important part of the book trade. Whether you are a bookseller, a collector, or a reader, you cannot afford to ignore them.

Learn more about this author, Dan Weaver.
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Book collecting: Remainders

  • 1 of 2

    by Dan Weaver

    If you are a book collector, you should not ignore remaindered books. Remaindered books are those books you often see... read more

  • 2 of 2

    by Scott Knickelbine

    If you're a book collector, you probably need to pass the remainder bin by. Why? 1) By definition, remainders are ... read more

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