Rare Book Monthly

Articles - May - 2020 Issue

AbeBooks Presents Their Top 10 Most Expensive Items for the First Quarter of 2020

Packing the National Union Catalog. It was shipped on pallets by truck (AbeBooks photo).

Packing the National Union Catalog. It was shipped on pallets by truck (AbeBooks photo).

AbeBooks has released their list of the Top 10 highest prices paid for books and related material on their website during the first three months of 2020. The items are as different as can be, covering many subjects, styles, and localities/languages. However, the biggest variation is in their size. They go from a single sheet to a set of 754 folio volumes. The single sheet cost three times as much as the 754 volumes. Here is AbeBooks' Top 10 list.

 

10. A facsimile of the Lindisfarne Gospels. The facsimile was published in 2002, but the original illuminated manuscript dates back to around 800. Lindisfarne is a “holy island” off the northeast coast of England. $8,870.

 

9. The National Union Catalog (NUC). A reference catalogue of all books in the Library of Congress and some other U.S. libraries published before 1956, this is the largest book ever published. It consists of approximately 12 million listings, in 754 folio volumes, with 530,000 pages, and weighs three tons. Started in 1909, this first and only edition was published in 1968. $9,000 (or $1.50 per pound).

 

8. Sylvicultura oeconomica, oder haußwirthliche Nachricht und naturmäßige Anweisung zur Wilden Baum-Zucht, by Hans Carl von Carlowitz, published in 1732. This is the first German book on forestry. $9,360.

 

7. The Town and the City, by Jack Kerouac, published in 1950. This is a signed first edition, first printing, published seven years before On The Road. $10,000

 

6. La Grande Danse Macabre des Vifs, by Martin van Maële. A rare set of four series of acquatints by van Maële, an erotic illustrator, from a 1905 book of the same name. It translates to “The Great Strange Dance of Life.” $10,010.

 

5. Eau - Forte #8, by Pierre Soulages. One of 200 copies of a 1957 signed print by the French artist. Soulages has been described as one of the world's greatest living artists (he is 100). $11,025.

 

4. Moonraker, by Ian Fleming, published in 1955. It's by Ian Fleming. Of course it's expensive. This is a first edition, first impression, in a first state dust jacket of the third James Bond novel. $12,735.

 

3. The Federalist, by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison and John Jay. Published in 1788, this first collection of previously published individual essays was used to convince Americans to support the adoption of their constitution. $14,000.

 

2. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, by Lewis Carroll. This much later edition (1969) is valuable because it is one of 200 copies of an edition illustrated and signed by Salvador Dali. $23,600.

 

1. Map of Arabia, by Ptolemy. Naturally, this is not from Ptolemy's time, but it is still very old. It is a single sheet taken from the 1482 Ulm Ptolemy, an atlas published in Ulm, Germany. $27,880.

Rare Book Monthly

  • Sotheby’s
    Fine Manuscript and Printed Americana
    27 January 2026
    Sotheby’s, Jan. 27: An extraordinary pair of books from George Washington’s field library, marking the conjunction of Robert Rogers, George Washington, and Henry Knox. $1,200,000 to $1,800,000.
    Sotheby’s, Jan. 27: An extraordinary letter marking the conjunction of George Washington, the Marquis de Lafayette, and Benjamin Franklin. $1,000,000 to $1,500,000.
    Sotheby’s, Jan. 27: Virginia House of Delegates. The genesis of the Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights. $350,000 to $500,000.
    Sotheby’s
    Fine Manuscript and Printed Americana
    27 January 2026
    Sotheby’s, Jan. 27: (Gettysburg). “Genl. Doubleday has taken charge of the battle”: Autograph witness to the first day of the Battle of Gettysburg, illustrated by fourteen maps and plans. $200,000 to $300,000.
    Sotheby’s, Jan. 27: President Lincoln thanks a schoolboy on behalf of "all the children of the nation for his efforts to ensure "that this war shall be successful, and the Union be maintained and perpetuated." $200,000 to $300,000.
    Sotheby’s, Jan. 27: [World War II]. An archive of maps and files documenting the allied campaign in Europe, from the early stages of planning for D-Day and Operation Overlord, to Germany’s surrender. $200,000 to $300,000.

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