Friday, November 13, 2009

Yes, It's My Favorite Time of Year Again

It's November, and that means county public library sale time! As I have been for the past couple of years, I volunteered to help and as a perk got first pick of the books I was unloading. I had a nice haul:

Charles II by Ronald Hutton
Isabel of Burgundy by Aline Taylor
Eleanor of Aquitaine by Desmond Seward
Food in History by Reay Tannahill
Sex in History by Reay Tannahill (they weren't together, I just got lucky)
King James by Antonia Fraser
Henry the Eighth by Francis Hackett
Elizabeth I by Paul Johnson
The Goldsmith's Wife by Jean Plaidy (I had this one, but my copy was too fragile for reading)
The Other Queen by Philippa Gregory (hey, it was $2)
Louis XIV by Ian Dunlop
Monarchy by David Starkey
Wheel of Fortune by Susan Howatch
The White Queen by Philippa Gregory (I can take Melusine for $2, and I did like parts of it)
The Days of Duchess Anne: Life in the Household of the Duchess of Hamilton by Rosalind Marshall (I have no idea who this is, but it might come in handy one day)
Abe by Richard Slotkin
The Rise and Fall of Anne Boleyn by Retha Warnicke (I was really excited to find this one, and let out a whoop. Well actually, being an introvert, I said, "Isn't that nice," in an undertone).
Louis and Antoinette by Vincent Cronin
Life on a Medieval Barony by William Stearns Davis
The Spider King by Lawrence Schoonover (I think I had this one already, but I couldn't find it the other day)
England's Mistress: The Infamous Life of Emma Hamilton by Kate Williams (I rescued this one from the romance section, where it was languishing next to books with bare-chested Scotsmen on the cover)
The Queen's Husband by Jean Plaidy
Queen in Waiting by Jean Plaidy (I have this one, it turns out, but I got so excited about finding old Jean Plaidy paperbacks that I decided to take a chance and get it anyway)
A Coffin for King Charles by C. V. Wedgwood
The Fifth Queen by Ford Madox Ford
Henry VIII: Images of a Tudor King by Christopher Lloyd and Simon Thurley
Elizabeth: Captive Princess by Margaret Irwin
Anne Boleyn by Norah Lofts (as usual, the Tudors were well represented at this sale)
Medieval Warfare Source Book by David Nicholle (Vol. 1. No, I didn't see volume II)
Harold II: The Doomed Saxon King by Peter Rex
The Plantagenet Prelude by Jean Plaidy (another duplicate--I really need to bring a list)

Goofiest question a customer asked me: "Are there any good books here?" My answer, "What do you like to read?" Customer: "I don't know."

Book that will probably get a title change if it's ever reprinted: Gay Monarch: The Life and Pleasures of Edward VII.

Number of copies of The Autobiography of Henry VIII in the Biography section: 1 (usually I pull three or four out of there).

Most underloved area of the book sale: Westerns

Times I appeared on TV tonight, according to my daughter, when the local news channel did a broadcast about the sale: 1. My daughter says that I have my back to the camera and am rubbing one foot with the other. My feet were aching by then.

Anyway, the sale was held in a former grocery store. As you can see, the romance paperbacks fit quite nicely in the frozen food area:



I probably shouldn't go back, but I probably will give into temptation (especially since many books were still in their boxes when I left today because of lack of shelf space).

12 comments:

mzjohansen said...

OMG That is one amazing haul! You must live near a large, very good library! The grocery store is the perfect place too. We generally cram ours in to the gym at the middle school! Comgrats on those goodies!

Minnie said...

Impressive haul of books: well done, you!
Equally impressed by your blog. Am keen (albeit stunningly ignorant) mediaeval history explorer. Also love wit & humour. So 'chapeau', as they say where I sit.
Also appreciated some of your links - notably Edward II + the Yorkist blog.
Thank you, Susan.

Kathryn Warner said...

Wow, what a great haul! I'm so envious!

Susan A said...

Yes, that is a great haul. Congrats.

Carla said...

Impressive list. Have fun reading all those! Should keep you busy for a while :-)

Anerje said...

You are so lucky! I have a few of those books - 'Anne Boleyn' by both Warnicke (don't get too excited), and Norah Lofts ( a great coffee table book), and 'Henry VIII' by Hackett. I have a few of the Plaidys as well.

Btw, Desmnd Seaward once wrote a good book on Richard III - 'England's Back Legend'. ver read it?

trish wilson said...

It's Desmond Seward actually but thanks Anerje for the tip. Seems his Richard III to judge by reviews is a pretty balanced book which Amazon is flogging for as little as $1.50.

He's also written a Brief History of the Hundred Years' War and ditto the War of the Roses which are fairly recent publications.

Not that I'm paying a cent or waiting for the not so loyal Royal Mail to deliver. The BL has all his works so when the back-end of Hurricane Ida blows out I'll blow downtown.

Not that I'm a miser - just thanks to my taxes I've already paid up.

Double if you think of my council tax and library service which doesn't appear to be as good as Sue's

Susan Higginbotham said...

Thanks, all! Oddly, I have a lot better luck finding books at the library book sale than I do in the library itself! My interests are just a bit too specialized, I guess.

I went back yesterday and got 15 more books, including Desmond Seward's book on the Hundred Years' War. Now just to find a place to put 'em!

Caroline said...

I read Seward's bio on RIII a few months ago, and overall I thought it was a well researched book written from a traditionalist viewpoint.
My only problem is that Seward is sort of like the anti-Murray Kendall. He gets a bit overwrought in some places (Seward makes the claim that if RIII had survived Bosworth, he probably would have been the worst English tyrant ever, but who knows?) and he tends to make the mistake of judging RIII's behavior by contemporary standards, not those of the 15th century. He also disses "lady novelists" who are sympathetic to RIII in the last chapter, which I thought was sexist and quite unnecessary.
Charles Ross' bio is more balanced, but written in a much dryer, academic style.

4everQueen said...

What a fun blog Susan! I am so jealous of you right now, i wish i could be there mingling and smelling like a book myself (LOL).
Sounds like you had lots of fun and knew what you wanted, not like that funny person that probably ended up at the booksale by mistake--LOL.

Melisende said...

What a haul!!!! You lucky thing - I am envious!

Alison said...

I'm so jealous, our library booksales are never this good. I have the Duchess Anne book, it's really good actually.