Rare Book Monthly

Articles - December - 2025 Issue

Cartouche 1799, The Journal of a Serial Lover

Portrait of a misdated political book that portrays a fake and bigger than life bandit!

 

Les Amours de Cartouche...

 

Louis-Dominique Cartouche was the 1st French public enemy. The rich feared him, but the others liked him because he gave them the opportunity to laugh at an incompetent and corrupted regime. Cartouche was broken alive on the wheel in 1721, as the scapegoat of a deteriorating society, and hundreds of his alleged accomplices were executed in his wake. His “official” biography, La Vie et le procès de Cartouche...* (Paris, 1721) depicts him as a villain—but things changed with the Révolution (1789). That’s when a discreet and somehow forgotten little book was anonymously published in London—more likely Paris. This revised history turned Cartouche into the romantic figure that he still is in the French popular culture.

 

Post Révolution Book

 

Les Amours de Cartouche... (Londres, no date) is Cartouche’s fake and posthumous autobiography. Probably because of the lewd passages, most historians have overlooked its importance, but when I realized it had shaped the myth as we celebrate it today, I did my best to rehabilitate it—I reprinted it in 2014. A modest effort, I must say—but it was a start. The first edition of Les Amours de Cartouche... is very rare. It was, the title page reads, printed in London—a forgery, worthy of Cartouche. And it came without a date. At one point, someone decreed that it was published in 1760. Might be Sotheby’s that sold one of the only two copies that went for auction over the last 30 years (source: the Rare Book Transaction History)—sold for £230 in 1995. I guess most auction houses have reproduced Sotheby’s’ description, and J. Rustin, in his scholarly article L’Histoire véritable dans la littérature romanesque du XVIIIe siècle français (Persée, 1966) did no better. It shows that he never actually read it, or held a copy in his hands, as the full title says it all:

 

Cartouche’s Love Affairs, or the Singular and Gallant Adventures of this too famous a man, that have never been published, the manuscript of which was found in La Bastille after it was taken.

 

La Bastille was the royal prison located in Paris. It was taken in 1789, as the birth act of the Révolution. Although the later editions, including Tiger’s, mention that the said manuscript was actually retrieved from a “shed in Bicêtre (a prison) following the death of Duchatelêt, Cartouche’s former accomplice who gave him away,” the first edition remains sovereign. But it came without a date, so maybe there is an edition from 1760? This is clearly not the case, as Sotheby’s copy is easily identified—it once belonged to Archibald P. Primrose (1847-1929), a former British Prime Minister and a noted bibliophile. He even wrote, on the last page: “August 1905. Amusing but of course spurious.” And it is the copy I’m holding in my hand while writing this article—so, no doubt, it was published after 1789. The earliest Tiger’s edition I could find is from Year X—1802. The first edition uses the “f” symbols to reproduce the “s” sound that was abandoned around the year 1800, so 1799 is a reasonable guess. As a matter of fact, this little book has a post-1789 tone. We don’t know who wrote it, but the “esprit”, the style or the use of semicolons, are the works of a talented writer. Doing justice to the epic adventures of Cartouche, our author turns him into a gallant French Robin Hood, who stands against the evil “ancien régime”. He was none of that, of course—but fiction is sometimes stranger than truth.

 

Cartouche’s story was linked to fiction from the start—the playwright Legrand went to visit him in prison to write Cartouche, ou les Voleurs (Paris, 1721)**, and gave the first representation in Paris while the robber was in jail, waiting to be executed! At the time, fiction came as a way to somehow go round censorship—in 1799, the royal censors were no more, and books sprung from every street corner, as the number of booksellers doubled between 1780 and 1800. At last, Cartouche could express himself, or be expressed, in full swing! That’s what this incredible little book is all about. Forget about the made-up parts—there are as many as in the “official” biography—, read between the lines and you’ll find; if not the “real” Cartouche, at least the true myth.

 

* www.rarebookhub.com/articles/1406

** www.rarebookhub.com/articles/2008

Rare Book Monthly

  • Aste Bolaffi, June 17-18: Galileo Galilei. Dialogo sopra i due massimi sistemi del mondo tolemaico, e copernicano. Firenze, 1632
    Aste Bolaffi, June 17-18: Saverio Manetti. Storia naturale degli uccelli. Firenze, 1771-76
    Aste Bolaffi, June 17-18: Fortunato Depero. Depero futurista. Rovereto, 1927
    Aste Bolaffi, June 17-18: Nicolas Visscher. Atlas minor sive totius orbis terrarum contracta delineat ex conatibus. Amsterdam, circa 1649-95
    Aste Bolaffi, June 17-18: Andreas Vesalius. Anatomia. Addita nunc. Antiquorum Anatome. Venezia, 1604
    Aste Bolaffi, June 17-18: Tristan Tzara and Salvador Dalì. Grains et Issues. Parigi, 1935
  • Bonhams, June 14-23: Franklin D. Roosevelt Presentation Gold Pocket Watch. Estimate: $20,000 - 30,000
    Bonhams, June 14-23: Presentation Copy of the First Issue of the Lincoln Douglas Debates Signed by Abraham Lincoln in Pencil to a Sangamon County Illinois Republican. Estimate: $150,000 - 250,000
    Bonhams, June 14-23: A Senate Resolution Signed in the Tense Days After the Union's Humiliating Defeat at the First Battle of Bull Run. Estimate: $80,000 - $120,000
    Bonhams, June 14-23: Seven Passages to a Flight, an Artists Book with a Story Quilt by Faith Ringgold, the Publisher's Own Copy. Estimate: $80,000 - 120,000
    Bonhams, June 14-23: A New Charter for Virginia, A Response to the First Armed Rebellion in the American Colonies. Estimate: $15,000 - 25,000
    Bonhams, June 14-23: Earliest obtainable printing of the Bill of Rights. Estimate: $8,000 - 12,000
    Bonhams, June 14-23: Edward Curtis Orotone. Estimate: $7,000 - 9,000
    Bonhams, June 14-23: Owned by Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis: A Butter or Dessert Plate from FDR's State Dinner Service. Estimate: $3,000 - 5,000
    Bonhams, June 14-23: An Early Large-Format Plan of the City of Washington. Estimate: $1,500 - 2,500
    Bonhams, June 14-23: Containing the First Map to Name the Hudson River. Estimate: $20,000 - 30,000
    Bonhams, June 14-23: America's First Major Novelist, a Complete Chapter in Autograph Manuscript by James Fenimore Cooper. Estimate: $15,000 - 20,000
    Bonhams, June 14-23: The Only Full-Length Book by Jefferson, with the Justly Famous Map. Estimate: $12,000 - 18,000
  • June 25, 2026
    Doyle, June 25: Houdini's biography, boldly signed. $3,000 to $5,000.
    Doyle, June 25: A volume from Abraham Lincoln's library, signed just before heading to Washington for his inauguration. $20,000 to $30,000.
    Doyle, June 25: A very early Confederate recruiting manual belonging to the chief commissary in Lee's Army. $600 to $800.
    Doyle, June 25: Rare hand-colored lithographs of the life of Napoleon. $20,000 to $30,000.
    Doyle, June 25: The "Holster Atlas" of the American Revolution. $5,000 to $8,000.
    Doyle, June 25: Jewish ceremonies in fine hand-colored engravings. $7,000 to $10,000.
    Doyle, June 25: A very rare work on Turkish military costume. $1,000 to $1,500.
    June 25, 2026
    Doyle, June 25: The most important illustrated work on the Mexican-American War. $10,000 to $15,000.
    Doyle, June 25: The finest illustrated book on Afghanistan. $10,000 to $15,000.
    Doyle, June 25: Henry Justice Ford St. George rescues the Princess from the horrible Dragon. $2,000 to $3,000.
    Doyle, June 25: A rare work of Prussian Army uniforms under Frederick William II, with exquisite hand-colored engravings. $800 to $1,200.
    Doyle, June 25: Lenny Bruce typed letter signed to a Village bohemian during his obscenity trials, with a manuscript note and drawing. $300 to $500.
    Doyle, June 25: Schiff's scarce Shanghai Sketchbook. $300 to $500.
    Doyle, June 25: The first accurate published representation of the American flag. $2,000 to $4,000.
  • Old World Auctions (June 17): Lot 123. Celebrate 250 Years of Independence with Original Stars and Stripes (1790) Est. $1,400 - $1,700
    Old World Auctions (June 17): Lot 20. Keulen's Spectacular Chart of the World Featuring California as an Island (1728) Est. $12,000 - $15,000
    Old World Auctions (June 17): Lot 42. Schedel's Ancient World Map with Fantastic Humanoid Creatures (1493) Est. $14,000 - $17,000
    Old World Auctions (June 17): Lot 591. Matching Set of 3 Stunning Globe Gores of Eastern Asia from Coronelli's 3.5 Foot Globe (1688) Est. $5,500 - $7,000
    Old World Auctions (June 17): Lot 9. Speed's Popular World Map with Allegorical Representations of the Elements (1651) Est. $14,000 - $17,000
    Old World Auctions (June 17): Lot 168. First Separate Map of Kansas & Nebraska Territories (1854) Est. $5,500 - $7,000
    Old World Auctions (June 17): Lot 43. Only Macrobius Map with Britain Attached to Europe (1515) Est. $800 - $950
    Old World Auctions (June 17): Lot 250. Rare Map of Boston and One of the Earliest Maps of the Revolutionary War (1775) Est. $2,000 - $2,300
    Old World Auctions (June 17): Lot 79. Schenk's Uncommon Map Featuring Two Figurative Title Cartouches (1696) Est. $1,200 - $1,500
    Old World Auctions (June 17): Lot 681. Hand-Colored Image of the Annunciation to the Shepherds (1502) Est. $800 - $950
  • Sotheby's Book Week
    2 June - 9 July
    Sotheby’s, June 25: Smith, Adam. The Wealth of Nations, on its 250th anniversary. $180,000 to $250,000.
    Sotheby’s, June 17: Fontana, Lucio. Concetto Spaziale. 1967. Leporello en papier doré. Bel exemplaire signé. €4,000 to $€,000.
    Sotheby’s, June 25: Fitzgerald, F. Scott. "So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past”. $150,000 to $200,000.
    Sotheby’s, June 25: Washington, George (as First President). Washington decries “an ostentatious imitation, or mimickry of Royalty” in his Presidency. $250,000 to $500,000.
    Sotheby’s, June 17: Lope de Vega. Rare manuscrit autographe signé de la préface dédicatoire de "El Cardenal de Belen" (le cardinal de Bethléem), pièce composée en 1610. €40,000 to €60,000.

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