Featured What’s Your White Whale?

Discussion in 'Books' started by Dave Whaling Books, Feb 21, 2019.

  1. Looks like I found my people! What a tremendous place with fascinating discussions!

    Here’s a topic for discussion: What’s Your White Whale? What book(s) would you love to own but probably never will because either…
    • Cost, way too high for you to justify… or
    • Rarity, no matter how hard you search, the probability of finding the volume is remote.
    For me yes, First Edition of Melville’s Moby Dick is on the list. But at $50,000 +/- not in my league. But I am working on some other collections that are in my wheelhouse and help with “driving off the spleen and regulating the circulation.”
     
    McAdder, Joe2007, Any Jewelry and 6 others like this.
  2. komokwa

    komokwa The Truth is out there...!

    Tangible Visions by Wardwell...
    but I finally found a signed copy...not too long before he passed away.
     
  3. bobsyouruncle

    bobsyouruncle Well-Known Member

    Welcome!
    Author signed Winnie the Pooh
     
  4. That is on my wife's list... or at least a first edition.
     
    Christmasjoy and bobsyouruncle like this.
  5. komokwa

    komokwa The Truth is out there...!

    SIDEBAR.......4 you and your wife DWBooks......enjoy....

     
    wenna and Dave Whaling Books like this.
  6. Marie Forjan

    Marie Forjan Well-Known Member

    I want a copy of Laura in good condition with dust jacket. I am sure I will never find it but I look where I find books :)
     
    McAdder, judy, Debora and 2 others like this.
  7. bluumz

    bluumz Quite Busy

    Stones for the Rampart, aka Stones on the Barricade, (ENGLISH VERSION) by Aleksander Kaminski.

    This book was originally written in Polish under the title Kamienie na Szaniec in 1943. I've been looking for the 1944 English language version for several years now and have never yet found one. It tells the true life story of a group of scouts called ''Szare Szeregi'' (Gray Ranks) during the early years of the Nazi occupation of Warsaw. My teenage father was a member of this group all the way through the Warsaw Uprising of 1944, after which he was captured and placed in a German POW camp for the remainder of WW2. It's difficult to find much info written in English about the Gray (aka Grey) Ranks.

    I only know a smattering of Polish words and phrases and could never get through the book in Polish, even with the help of Google translate (which doesn't handle Polish very well).
     
  8. Pat P

    Pat P Well-Known Member

    Welcome, Dave. :)
     
  9. Bakersgma

    Bakersgma Well-Known Member

    Tommy Tomato - a strange little book that my Mom had from her childhood. All the illustrations are photographs of the characters made out of the vegetables in their names. Colonel Okra, for instance. I read it a lot as a child as did my siblings as they came along and I was amazed to find it again when helping Mom move in 1999. Both my sister and I know it was there. But when it came time to clean out the house after moving mom into assisted living, it was gone! :( My baby sister really wants a copy too and everyone else knows, so if one of the others has it, they're not saying. I've tried Googling it, but there's a much more recent cartoon character by that name and that's all I've found while searching.
     
  10. moreotherstuff

    moreotherstuff Izorizent

    The Kelmscott "Morte d'Arthur" (William Morris).

    Golden Cockerel "Gospels" (Eric Gill).

    I can't even afford the facsimiles.
     
  11. Ghopper1924

    Ghopper1924 Well-Known Member

    What a fantastic idea!!

    There are dozens. Here's a few:

    The Coverdale Bible. First English bible from 1535. At half a million dollars, it's not going to happen. There are so many bibles in the world, why not choose this landmark work? If it helps, I'd build a room on my house just to put it in. It's fun to dream, right? The principle author, William Tyndale, was martyred for his trouble. Can you imagine that kind of belief and dedication?

    Signed first editions of Tolkien's Lord of the Rings. Seems like I've seen them for a variety of prices, none of which fit my budget. My sentimental fave books of all time.

    The Wizard of Oz. Since I'm dreaming, it might as well be signed and included with the first dozen or so Oz titles, all first editions. Estimates are well over $100K for the bunch. See above for why I'll never have them :(

    Joyce Carol Oates: 'By the North Gate' a signed first edition is not totally unrealistic. Her first book from 1963. She's one of the last of the living literary titans: Brilliant, prolific, learned, and although her work is very dark, she's very funny in person.

    Daniel Burnham: 'Plan of Chicago." I do alot of architectural history work in Chicago, and this limited edition from 1909 is central to understanding how the visionary City Beautiful movement shaped - and might have shaped - the city. A first edition will require some rabid saving, but I'll get one eventually.

    'The Architectural Works of Graham Anderson Probst & White.' This one I actually did get, and it proves the above about getting first editions. 2 volumes on acid free, handmade paper from 1933. I know, I know, it's a specialty title of little interest to most people, but these guys designed hundreds of U.S. buildings in the early and mid 20th century, and most of them are still standing. The Wrigley Building, the Field Museum, etc. etc. etc. Printed in an edition of only 300, they were never sold. Each volume weighs 20 pounds.


    Some of the titles and the reason folks want them up above is very interesting. I'm intrigued by Stones for the Rampart, the first edition (of course!) of Moby Dick, the Kelmscott 'Morte,' and what's the story with 'Tangible Visions?'

    Actually, I'm interested in all of these books. I always love finding out more about interesting books and the people that want them.
     
  12. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

    Make Do With Spring by Emery Bonett. Published in the UK by William Heinemann in 1941. A copy not to be found anywhere.

    Debora
     
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  13. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

    If it's this Tommy Tomato, I can understand why you'd find it charming.

    https://www.abebooks.com/servlet/Bo...mato&sortby=17&cm_sp=snippet-_-srp1-_-title19

    Debora
     
  14. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    Author-signed first editions of the Narnia Chronicles or the Screwtape Letters.
    The same for Asimov's I Robot or Ray Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles or Zelzney's Amber Chronicles

    I wouldn't mind an original King James Bible either, the original translation that is. The current one was revised in the 1760s if memory serves. There's a rumor Shakespeare was on the original writing team.

    As for the Tyndale one... if you happen across a spare, I'll take one.
     
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  15. Bakersgma

    Bakersgma Well-Known Member

    Last edited: Feb 21, 2019
  16. Pat P

    Pat P Well-Known Member

    I'd love to have a copy of Pierre-Joseph Redouté's Choix Des Plus Belles Fleurs or his Les Roses from the early 1800s. I'm in a bit of a state of reverie just thinking about seeing these books in person. :)
     
    Last edited: Feb 22, 2019
  17. wiscbirddog

    wiscbirddog Well-Known Member

  18. Pat P

    Pat P Well-Known Member

    Thanks, wiscbirddog. The eBay listings are for relatively recent reproductions, while the original books were published in the early 1800s. Those originals are the ones I'd drool over, with their hand-painted illustrations!

    This is the least expensive copy on abebooks.com of an original copy of Choix des Plus Belles Fleurs...
    https://www.abebooks.com/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=30012520053&searchurl=yrh=1850&bi=0&ds=30&bx=off&sortby=17&tn=Choix+Des+Plus+Belles+Fleurs&an=redoute&recentlyadded=all&cm_sp=snippet-_-srp1-_-title2
     
    Last edited: Feb 22, 2019
    Ghopper1924 likes this.
  19. wiscbirddog

    wiscbirddog Well-Known Member

    GASP! Guess you'd probably need to win the lottery, eh?
     
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  20. Pat P

    Pat P Well-Known Member

    Gasp, indeed! :)
     
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