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Monday, November 29, 2010

A New Set of Online Bookselling Flashpoints and a Relatively Common 3 Figure Book

2010 was an eventful year for the Republics of Haiti and South Africa, for very different reasons.  Haiti was rocked by a devastating earthquake that killed hundreds of thousands and left over one million people homeless.  More recently, it has been flooded and is experiencing an outbreak of cholera.  South Africa, on the other hand, became the first African nation to host the World Cup, and received stellar marks for successfully hosting the event, despite the popularity of the blaring and some might say annoying vuvuzuelas.  For the record, I thought that their collective shriek added to the atmosphere and excitement of the matches, except when the US team went down a goal to Ghana, and then I found them the cause of a severe headache.

I realize that there is not much of a similarity between the two countries, and that my recent spike in sales of books about the two countries is mostly pure coincidence, however, I do think that their heightened exposure on the world news scene has resulted in at least a temporary renascence (forgive me for the use of the big word, but I was reading Edna St. Vincent Millay before bed last night).
Below I have highlighted several books I have sold recently, along with several that I have recently listed and one or two I hope to find before the well runs dry.  I hope you find this information helpful, and that you give books related to Haiti and South Africa a second glance on your next book buying excursion.

If you learn one thing from this entire article, I hope that you memorize the dust jacket for this photobook, which has experienced a recent spike in demand, a shortage in supply, and is a relatively common book which I have come across a handful of times in the past two years.

House of Bondage By Ernest Cole (A South African Black Man Exposes in His Own Pictures and Words the Bitter Life of His Homeland Today)- Check out the Amazon detail page by clicking on the link and you will find that your copy will sell quickly in the $200-400 range, depending on condition.  Thumb through this amazing volume before you list it, the photographs are riveting, if not horrific and sobering.

I recently listed this language dictionary for $150 due to its relative scarcity and for being the most comprehensive reference of its kind.  On a related note, I have found that the more obscure the language of the dictionary, the higher the potential value.  Haitian-English Dictionary

OK, so this one has nothing to do with what I've just written about, but I'm including it anyways because it is a slim and specific paperback volume that I just listed for $75 (for an ex-library copy).  It is a regional African cuisine cookbook from Ghana, whom I did mention above and must give credit to their national soccer team, The Black Stars.  Authentic African Cuisine from Ghana

Even relatively outdated paperback textbooks from Academic Presses (think Westview and any University) have been fetching $20 and up for me this past year.  Here are two examples:



Here's a few more books on South Africa I have sold in 2010:
 













Finally, a few that I'm hoping to come across before the trend passes:

A Civilization That Perished: The Last Years of White Colonial Rule in Haiti















Please feel free to share your comments below, including any books on South Africa and Haiti you have sold for $20 and up in the past, or any you have sold since reading this post.

14 comments:

TC said...

Have had my copy of the Langston Hughes book for several years now. It may eventually sell, but it is Ex-Library in poor condition.

Many thanks for the heads up on the Scottish Rites book in a past post. My copy had been sitting at the bottom of my "to list one day" pile, but after reading your post, I sold it a few weeks later at about $40.

Kristian Strom said...

Thanks for your thoughts and comments TC:)

I am surprised to hear you have a copy of the Langston Hughest in Haiti book, as I thought this might have been one of the most scarce of all. My copy was in Near Fine condition, so I suppose that certainly helped it to sell, although you never know when someone will be looking for a reading copy.

I am so glad to hear that the post on the "Morals and Dogma" book motivated you to list your copy. Since that post, I have sold at least 3 more copies, so make sure to keep looking for it!

Tess said...

House of Bondage is indeed wonderful. I sold it earlier this year, but have never had one prior to that, nor since. I was surprised to hear you say it's common, but I guess it's just eluding ME! Once you have one you'd recognize it across a football field.

Mary Grace said...

I will be keeping my eyes peeled for these books. Thanks for the info! =)

Michael said...

Thanks for the flashpoints and even more thanks for how to spot them coming at us in the news. I had a Morals and Dogma sitting around here forever and in a fit of "junk removal" sent it to the Salvation Army. Suppose I need to rethink selling methods.
Favor to ask. Please put a link to older posts when you refer to one. Helps me make a quick jump to another article and I promise another comment too.
TIA. The Booksailor.

Kristian Strom said...

Hi there Tess, good to hear from you as always:) I suppose that's why I used relatively common, even though I despise adverbs. Considering it was published by Random House, one should have more luck with this title than some obscure press photobook.

Kristian Strom said...

Michael, thank you for your constructive comment. I will make a sincere and concerted effort to include links to previous posts when I reference them. Sorry to hear about your "Morals and Dogma," but I can almost guarantee you will be finding another copy before you know it!

Anonymous said...

Do you people have a facebook fan page? I looked for one on twitter but could not discover one, I would really like to become a fan!

Kristian Strom said...

Thanks for commenting, you can find the Facebook fan page here or by searching for LowestCostBooks.com:

http://www.facebook.com/?ref=home#!/pages/LowestCostBookscom/345227275680

Richard said...

I too have recognized the “Haiti” flashpoint and have picked up books I might otherwise pass. Here is one I picked up w/out jacket and quickly sold but not for high dollar (18 – 20) “Haiti; the Politics of Squalor” 1971 isbn 0395121051.
Due to the date and condition I probably would not have bothered last year.
I also had a nice sale of a hardbound catalog of Haitian art privately published by a Miami gallery. Three figures!! Had the book for over two years and sold in the spring.
Can’t believe I have not yet found a dictionary as I often scout in Miami.

Richard

Richard said...

I too have recognized the “Haiti” flashpoint and have picked up books I might otherwise pass. Here is one I picked up w/out jacket and quickly sold but not for high dollar (18 – 20) “Haiti; the Politics of Squalor” 1971 isbn 0395121051.
Due to the date and condition I probably would not have bothered last year.
I also had a nice sale of a hardbound catalog of Haitian art privately published by a Miami gallery. Three figures!! Had the book for over two years and sold in the spring.
Can’t believe I have not yet found a dictionary as I often scout in Miami.

Richard

Kristian Strom said...

Richard,
Thank you for the wonderful tips! You will find the dictionary soon, now that you have mentioned it;) The art catalogue sounds interesting. I have been looking at your Ebay listings via Facebook, well done!

Anonymous said...

I think one of your advertisements caused my internet browser to resize, you might want to put that on your blacklist.

Kristian Strom said...

Thanks for the feedback. I'm not sure which ad might have done this, but I be sure to look into this.