Welcome to First Edition ID - This site is dedicated to helping collectors identify true first edition books.
Here are the books in the What's New category. Click on a thumbnail to see first edition points (and photos).
 

The Angel Esmeralda - DeLillo

The Angel Esmeralda

The Marriage Plot - Eugenides

The Marriage Plot

Open City - Cole

Open City

The Buddha in the Attic - Otsuka

The Buddha in the Attic

Salvage the Bones - Ward

Salvage the Bones

Tortilla Flat - Steinbeck

Tortilla Flat

Coming of Age in Samoa - Mead

Coming of Age in Samoa

Stone Arabia - Spiotta

Stone Arabia

Binocular Vision - Pearlman

Binocular Vision

The Russian Debutante's Handbook - Shteyngart

The Russian Debutante's Handbook

The Black Prince - Grau

The Black Prince

Truman - McCullough

Truman

The Godfather - Puzo

The Godfather

The Help - Stockett

The Help

The Tiger's Wife - Obreht

The Tiger's Wife

The Art of Fielding - Harbach

The Art of Fielding

Like Water for Chocolate - Esquivel

Like Water for Chocolate

Star Spangled Summer - Lambert

Star Spangled Summer

The Peter Principle - Peter

The Peter Principle

The Perfect Storm - Junger

The Perfect Storm

The Golden Apples - Welty

The Golden Apples

The Secret Life of Bees - Kidd

The Secret Life of Bees

Pilgrim At Tinker Creek - Dillard

Pilgrim At Tinker Creek

The Emperor Of All Maladies - Mukherjee

The Emperor Of All Maladies

The Orchard Keeper - McCarthy

The Orchard Keeper

A Visit from the Goon Squad - Egan

A Visit from the Goon Squad

The Kenworthys - Wilson

The Kenworthys

The Robber Bride - Atwood

The Robber Bride

Breaking Dawn - Meyer

Breaking Dawn

The French Lieutenant's Woman - Fowles

The French Lieutenant's Woman

Shadow Tag - Erdrich

Shadow Tag

Lord of Misrule - Gordon

Lord of Misrule

I Can't Wait Until Tomorrow... - Namath

I Can't Wait Until Tomorrow...

The Man from St. Petersburg - Follett

The Man from St. Petersburg

Back Roads - O'Dell

Back Roads

Freedom - Franzen

Freedom

The Lords of Discipline - Conroy

The Lords of Discipline

The Stonemason - McCarthy

The Stonemason

Mother of Pearl - Haynes

Mother of Pearl

Doctor Zhivago (UK) - Pasternak

Doctor Zhivago (UK)

Gift from the Sea - Lindbergh

Gift from the Sea

Birdy - Wharton

Birdy

Other Voices, Other Rooms - Capote

Other Voices, Other Rooms

Songs of the Humpback Whale - Picoult

Songs of the Humpback Whale

Through a Glass Darkly - Koen

Through a Glass Darkly

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Rowling

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince - Rowling

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince

A Lost Lady - Cather

A Lost Lady

V. - Pynchon

V.

The Stand - King

The Stand



Is your book valuable?


People run across old books everyday, and one of the first questions they ask is – How much is it worth? The best way to determine book value is to find out how much people are selling a comparable book for in the market on places such as eBay.com and AbeBooks.com. But the key phrase here is “comparable book”. So before you can say that your book has the same value as an expensive one you see listed, you first need to evaluate your book to make sure it has all of the same points (or attributes).

The first step in evaluating a book is to identify whether it is a first edition. Generally speaking these are the most desirable books. A signed first edition is even better, and some limited editions can have value, but as a rule of thumb your book should be a first edition to have a shot at being something of value to collectors. There are exceptions to this rule in cases where a first edition is very scarce or very expensive to the point where collectors turn to a second printing as an affordable alternative, but these instances are few and far between.

What is so special about first editions? Collectors are drawn to books that are as close as possible to the author’s original work, so they want the first book that was published for a particular novel. But they aren’t just looking for any first edition. They want the first printing of the first edition. Sometimes if the author is established, the very first printings are special signed and numbered books that are produced before the books that show up in stores (those books are then called “first trade editions”). First printings of first editions are sometimes simply called “first editions”, while second printings of first editions are called “later printings”.

How do you know if you have a first edition? Clicking on the thumbnails above will take you to FirstEditionPoints.com where you will see photos of the true first edition. You can use this information to decide whether you have a first edition, or something published later. You can then click on pre-filled links to see the prices people are charging for comparable books on eBay.com and AbeBooks.com. To get started use the menu on top to see thumbnails for National Book Award Winners, Classics, Science, Politics, History, Sports, Crime, and Oprah’s Book Club Picks.