Ordinarily, this is where I would wheel out my "as new" Billings (ignoring the fact that that is about the extent of My Sil collection).
Mr. Underhill wrote:
@Stu wheel it out!
Then I would have to remove it from its dark cave. There is a thread on here somewhere lost in the mists of time with some proper pictures. Can't find it, though.
Stu wrote:
Oh, here we go. Found it
https://www.tolkienguide.com/modules/n ... hp?topic_id=2751&start=10
So, if I followed the thread correctly, you were able to get that one new, just many years after the publication? That's so cool Stu
Mr. Underhill wrote:
Stu wrote:
Oh, here we go. Found it
https://www.tolkienguide.com/modules/n ... hp?topic_id=2751&start=10
So, if I followed the thread correctly, you were able to get that one new, just many years after the publication? That's so cool Stu
Yeah, I bought it circa 2002, I think (from a box of new GA&U stock).
I really like the looks of the A&U hardbacks from the '70s - until HarperCollins took over. If they're all on a shelf, they blend in with one another really well: the first edition Silmarillion really goes with the Lord of the Rings hardbacks (from 1973), as well as the first edition of Unfinished Tales, The Complete Guide to Middle-earth, and others such as Letters.
I know there's some here who don't care for matching editions, though, to me, all titles part of a design style look like....well, a collection.
That said, there have been some nice 'unique editions' throughout the years (ie: Michael Hague's & Jemima Catlin's Hobbit as well as certain editions of LotR, like the hardbacks from 1987 that feature Tolkien's artwork on the covers of the dustjackets. Nice set, though no other titles blend in with that particular style, in terms of design)
I know there's some here who don't care for matching editions, though, to me, all titles part of a design style look like....well, a collection.
That said, there have been some nice 'unique editions' throughout the years (ie: Michael Hague's & Jemima Catlin's Hobbit as well as certain editions of LotR, like the hardbacks from 1987 that feature Tolkien's artwork on the covers of the dustjackets. Nice set, though no other titles blend in with that particular style, in terms of design)