More advice?
I know I have some bibliophiles on this list. I have about half a dozen old books. (Old meaning over 100 years.) They're not in great condition--given what I read on the web, I would say 'Good' at best. Recgnizable authors in some cases--Dumas, Scott, a collection of Greek mythology by Nathaniel Hawthorne--and I don't know if I should bother shopping them or just put them in the bin with everything else.
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Personally, I check all my hardbacks against half.com before hauling them to half-price or whatever. Hardbacks are often short runs, and while 95 percent of them end up selling for 75 cents, that other 5 percent can sell for substantial amounts. Even check the ones you think are in crappy condition -- my biggest prize was a ex-library copy of Solaris that turned out to be the first American edition. I was able to consign it to Other Change of Hobbit and they sold it for $300 bucks. But several others went for $50-ish.
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Older books you have to check on abebooks -- normally for collector's items the store selling them will have a fairly extensive description so you can place if yours is spendy or or a later, cheaper version.
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But I purged a third of my collection, got something close to a thousand in credit, which I either used or sold off to friends for half-price, and $100+ in cash. Granted, this was several years back -- don't know how much they are buying in the recession. I think out of something like 20 boxes of paperbacks I hauled in, I only had to take back about 2 boxes worth (they went to the library.)
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At the very least, the collection of Greek mythology by Hawthorne sounds lovely!
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