The 7-Sign Quick Value Check
Work through these in order. Any single positive result means the book is worth a closer look. Multiple positive results mean you should contact me or another qualified dealer before donating or discarding.
Sign 1: First Edition Indicators
Open the book to the copyright page — the page directly behind the title page. You are looking for three things:
The words "First Edition" or "First Printing" or "First Published." Not all publishers print these words, but when they appear, they are definitive.
A number line that includes "1": Most modern publishers print a row of numbers (10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1). If the number 1 is present, this is a first printing. If the lowest number is 2 or higher, it is a later printing.
Matching dates: If the copyright date matches the publication date, and there is no mention of subsequent printings, you may have a first edition. Different publishers use different conventions — my First Edition Identification Encyclopedia covers 200+ publishers.
Sign 2: Dust Jacket Present
The dust jacket — the paper wrapper around a hardcover — is often the single most important factor in a book's value. A first edition of F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby without its dust jacket is a noteworthy collectible. With the original dust jacket, it is one of the most valuable books in American literature.
Even torn, chipped, or faded dust jackets add significant value. Never throw away a dust jacket, and never tape or glue a damaged one — that reduces value further. If you find loose dust jackets that have been separated from their books, save those too.
Sign 3: Author Signatures or Inscriptions
Check the title page, the half-title page (the page before the title page), and the front free endpaper (the first blank page). Look for handwritten signatures, personal inscriptions, or bookplates.
An authentic author signature can multiply a book's value dramatically, especially for authors who signed infrequently or are now deceased. Association copies — books inscribed to someone notable in the author's life — are among the most valuable books in collecting.
Be aware that not all signatures are authentic. Some are secretarial (signed by an assistant), and some are forgeries. If you believe you have a signed copy by a notable author, contact me for a free authentication assessment.
Sign 4: Pre-1900 Publication Date
Any book published before 1900 automatically deserves a closer look. Books from the 1500s through 1700s are almost always worth professional evaluation, regardless of title or author — they represent a period when books were produced in small quantities by hand.
For 20th-century books, the prime collecting period is the 1920s through 1970s, when many now-canonical American and British literary works were first published in relatively small print runs.
Sign 5: Quality Binding
Examine the binding material and construction. Value indicators include full leather (calfskin, morocco, or pigskin) with gilt tooling on the spine and covers, vellum or parchment bindings, hand-marbled endpapers, raised spine bands, and gilt or gauffered page edges.
Fine press books from publishers like Kelmscott Press, Doves Press, Ashendene Press, Limited Editions Club, and Heritage Press used premium materials and limited print runs. Check the colophon (usually at the end of the book) for production details.
Sign 6: Special Features
Flip through the book and look for fold-out maps, hand-colored plates, tipped-in original photographs, woodcut or engraved illustrations, tissue guards over plates, and limitation pages (e.g., "Copy 47 of 500, signed by the author").
Maps and hand-colored plates can be individually valuable to print dealers and framing shops, sometimes exceeding the value of the book itself. Do not remove them — they are worth more as part of the complete book.
Sign 7: Regional or Local Significance
Books about your local region — city histories, county atlases, business directories, trail guides, and works by local authors — often have more value than you would expect. In New Mexico, books about the Santa Fe Trail, Pueblo cultures, the Manhattan Project, Route 66, and the Taos art colony are actively collected.
My Rare Books of New Mexico guide covers 200+ New Mexico-specific titles and topics with collecting significance.
What Is Almost Never Valuable
Just as important as knowing what to look for is knowing what to skip. These categories almost never have significant monetary value, though they are always worth donating rather than discarding:
- ✗Book club editions — identified by a blind-stamped dot or square on the back cover, no price on the dust jacket flap, and smaller dimensions than the trade edition
- ✗Reader's Digest condensed books — extremely common, no collector demand
- ✗Post-1960 encyclopedias — World Book, Britannica 15th edition, Funk & Wagnalls, Compton's (see my encyclopedia guide)
- ✗Mass-market paperbacks in poor condition — unless they are very early printings of significant titles (see my vintage paperback guide)
- ✗Textbooks less than 5 years old — they lose value with each new edition, though I still accept them for donation to students
- ✗Ex-library copies — stamps, labels, and security strips reduce value substantially, though early library bindings (pre-1900) can still have historical interest
Not Sure? Send Me a Photo
The fastest way to find out if your book has value is to text me a photo of the title page and copyright page. I respond to every inquiry personally, usually within a few hours. No charge, no obligation, no sales pitch.
Text for Quick Assessment
Send photos of the title page, copyright page, and spine. I will tell you what you have and what it is worth.
Text 702-496-4214Free Pickup for Collections
Have a whole collection? I come to you for free, evaluate everything on-site, and take whatever you want to donate.
Call 702-496-4214Frequently Asked Questions
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Related Guides
First Edition Identification Encyclopedia
200+ publisher identification methods in one reference
Old Books Worth Money
Categories of books that consistently attract collector interest
Free Book Evaluation
How my free evaluation service works — text, call, or in-person
Found Old Books in the Attic?
Triage guide for discovered collections