--
E' mai possibile, oh porco di un cane, che le avventure
in codesto reame debban risolversi tutte con grandi
puttane! F.d.A
Coins, travels and more:
http://s208.photobucket.com/albums/bb120/golanule/
http://gogu.enosi.org/index.html
Yes, it is, and you have seen it with your own eyes. Secondary-market book
prices can be all over the place. Earlier today, just out of curiosity, I
checked for prices of the Breen Encyclopedia and found that they can be
bought for as little as $160 or as much as $662.27 (how's that for a strange
price?) on Abebooks. I will hazard a guess that these items have been
consigned by someone who either has seen other grossly overpriced items on
one website or another or is looking for an uninformed buyer to come along,
or both. Amazon will act as a broker for most anything they think they can
make a buck on, as will all of the antiquarian book clearinghouses.
James the Book Freak
As you may be aware, for the last several years the Charlton Catalogue has
featured an in-depth study of a different dies varieties of various coin sets
(this year it is the Victoria 5 cent coins).
Thus prior issues of the catalog retain value as a reference book, although I
wouldn't pay anywhere near the prices mentioned.
> Yes, it is, and you have seen it with your own eyes.
...and I can't believe my eyes as I said!
AFAIK those catalogues were issued in tenths of thousands and certainly they
are not a rarity at all!
> Secondary-market book prices can be all over the place. Earlier today,
> just out of curiosity, I checked for prices of the Breen Encyclopedia and
> found that they can be bought for as little as $160 or as much as $662.27
> (how's that for a strange price?) on Abebooks.
Well, Breen is Breen and Charlton Catalogue is not in the same league!
The difference of price of course is huge (highest/lowest) but...we are
talking about Breen and we have seen in the past it can score quite high
prices on eBay...
> I will hazard a guess that these items have been consigned by someone who
> either has seen other grossly overpriced items on one website or another
> or is looking for an uninformed buyer to come along, or both.
Well, when books are consigned to Amazon for sale, they say it in the
description.
In the case of the links I gave above it seems that the books are sold
directly by Amazon.
Thanks anyway James!
--
E' mai possibile, oh porco di un cane, che le avventure
in codesto reame debban risolversi tutte con grandi
puttane! F.d.A
Coins, travels and more:
http://s208.photobucket.com/albums/bb120/golanule/
http://gogu.enosi.org/index.html
> Amazon will act as a broker for most anything they think they can make a
Indeed!
And let's not forget that these catalogues were produced in tenths of
thousands so I wouldn't say they are that rare!
rgrds
For the record, if you go to those links and click on "these sellers" (I
just did to double-check my claim) you will find that the books are for sale
by entities other than Amazon, not by Amazon itself. The booksellers
normally list the same books with multiple clearinghouses, and give the
clearinghouse a listing fee plus a substantial percentage of the selling
price in exchange for the privilege of reaching a worldwide market, just as
an eBay seller would have to do. Amazon is, to use the wording of eBay,
"just a venue," and does not have the warehouse space to stock, nor the
staff to inventory, out-of-print publications.
James
Well, in this case you are right James!
rgrds
--
E' mai possibile, oh porco di un cane, che le avventure
in codesto reame debban risolversi tutte con grandi
puttane! F.d.A
Coins, travels and more:
http://s208.photobucket.com/albums/bb120/golanule/
http://gogu.enosi.org/index.html
> The booksellers normally list the same books with multiple clearinghouses,
I think there may be a problem with some books that have similar titles.
Clearly. there was some confusion somewhere because I can't imagine a
merchant gaining the confidence of a customer by selling or even advertising
a $10 book for $80 especially when it's in print and very common.
--
Richard
http://coins.richlh.com/MyCoinLinks.htm
http://www.richlh.com
Don't lament that the rose bush has thorns. Rejoice that the thornbush has
roses. [Ancient Egyptian Saying]
"gogu" <Ruminii_Sug_Pul@la_Greci.com> wrote in message
news:hg64lk$2gec$1...@ulysses.noc.ntua.gr...
You know that, and I know that, but there are people who don't know that,
and they are the ones the sellers hope to exploit. Wait, isn't it the same
way with coins?
James the Analogist
One seller or two sellers, maybe, But every seller on Amazon? I doubt it.
I see this all the time on amazon it's just a few sellers hoping to
find some suckers with books that are recent remainders. You don't see
other books because the ones that are priced fairly sell and you are
just left with the high dollar listings.