In the era of iPhones, is rare book collecting an increasingly quixotic mission?

Rare book collecting and dealing seems to be on the rise, despite the advances of technological innovation.
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By Stephen Smith

Books are like people. They have human characteristics. A book has a spine, as we know, and according to antiquarian booksellers, it also has joints (where the covers meet the spine) and a crown (the top of the spine). We are able to grasp a book in more senses than one, to hold it as we might hold another person's hand. The sale of an old, rare book is not simply a matter of exchanging pages for money, trading one set of dry leaves for another. Besides the narrative told in its pages, there is the history of the book's time in the world, the people who have touched it and the lives it has touched. 

A case in point is a 400-year-old copy of Don Quixote, considered the first novel in western literature. It's a second edition, from 1605, and is expected to fetch £500,000 when it goes under the hammer in Paris on December 14. Cervantes' romance about a man's adventures in pursuit of noble ends finds an echo in the fortunes of the bundle of wood pulp and calfskin in which it is bound.

___STEADY_PAYWALL___

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