Rare Book Monthly

Articles - August - 2025 Issue

Our Weekly Auction Updates have Additional Top 25s

Try Maps and Music Top 25s

Try Maps and Music Top 25s

Our Weekly Auction Updates are becoming more robust.  As the auction market has broadened, it has become practical to provide more versions of Top 25s on a weekly basis. This week we have added Maps and Music to our long standard Top 25 by price across all categories. On our Top 25 (by sales price), you now see links with names like Maps and Music.

 

Sports memorabilia, the sciences, manuscripts and arts are under consideration.

 

We believe these subject-centric reports will both inform and strengthen these categories.

 

If you have suggestions about categories, we’ll consider your views.

 

And here is a direct link to this page.

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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