You know how you can see something, yet not really notice it? That’s what happened when I came upon this book during an end of the year weeding session in my K-2 school library:
In the course of weeding, I’ve come across older books that have quietly stuck around – mostly because they’re classics and no one had the heart to take them off the shelves or update the copy, despite being seriously dated. I had seen this one before, but had never looked at it closely. I opened the front cover to see if I could find when it was added to the library. I was surprised with what I saw:
While weeding I’ve seen books in our collection from the 80s and 70s – but early 40s? This was a first. That’s 71 years old. FYI, here’s what was happening in the world in 1942:
Franklin Delano Roosevelt was President. Muhammad Ali was born. The United States was involved in World War II. The film Casablanca premiered. The fifth Caldecott Medal was awarded to Make Way for Ducklings.The date made me wonder when The Velveteen Rabbit was published, and if we had a truly rare book on our hands. A quick search revealed that the first edition came out in 1922. I knew our copy was added to the library in 1942, but could the book be older? Unfortunately, the cryptic copyright page didn’t offer too many clues:
All I had to go on was the “CL” (which in Roman numerals equals 150) above the title. I went to used and rare bookseller AbeBooks to see what I could find. There I stumbled upon a listing for a first edition:
That perked my ears up a bit. While I knew our copy was likely far from a first edition, jacketless, and full of library markings, I felt profits from its sale could still (conservative scenario) pay for a second story and/or book carwash to be added to the library.
(video via Book Patrol)
I included the “CL” in my search and came back down to earth:
While I know ours was printed, at the latest, in the early 40s (while this listing is for a copy published in the 50s), this is the only mention of the “CL” I could find, so I’m assuming this is somewhere in the ballpark of our copy. Mystery (probably) solved.
I turned to the back of the book and pulled out the date due card:
Scanning the names, it made me wonder if these folks are still around, and where they might be. Maybe one of them remembers visiting their school library and picking a copy of The Velveteen Rabbit off the shelf, over half a century ago.
We are currently offering this content for free. Sign up now to activate your personal profile, where you can save articles for future viewing
Add Comment :-
Be the first reader to comment.
Comment Policy:
Comment should not be empty !!!