My Collection: Dover Thrift Editions


Over the years, I have collected a number of Dover Thrift Editions, Unabridged books. Everytime I go to a bookstore, be it a second-hand shop or a big commercial one, I never forget to stroll by the classic literature section and hunt for these gems. When I first noticed these on the shelves years back, they were overflowing with brand new copies and titles, some even come in boxsets. But of course, I cannot buy them all! So, I made sure I get a copy or two, whenever I had extra cash.

Despite the bad reviews by some picky collectors like this one who replied on a forum at yahoo about the difference of an unabridged vs. abridged:

Dover Thrift editions are cheaper (as in, the paper is low quality and the binding isn't always that great) and uglier. They usually don't have as much supplemental material, like detailed explanatory notes or introductions and critical essays by great scholars.

I still consider these books as gems, firstly because they are unabridged. By just basing on its definition, it has not been reduced in size by omission, not shortened by leaving out some parts, not condensed and containing the original content. Although indeed, because of the low cost, it sacrifices most of the supplemental material.

Secondly, they are not ugly. I’ve been looking all over the net for what kind or gsm of paper they used, or whether they use recycled paper or not, unfortunately, I found nothing. In Dover's wiki page it states that they used to be keen on the quality, but the current ones are "not manufactured to this exemplary standard anymore due to cost-cutting economic measures". Not clear though when it started, but it is indeed called “thrift” for a reason. And since I acquired my books in different occasions in the course of several years, when arranging them next to each other on the shelf, you will clearly notice the different shades of the aging paper. As I said, they are not ugly, instead I find the fading color beautiful in its own way. The rustic, antique feel to it and the scent of aged paper are all reminiscent of the times when I used to treat my old school library as a temporary shelter of peace and escape inside the busy campus.

Lastly, they are inevitably now becoming rare. Count a few more years and they will in the long run be really hard to find, as all books may eventually die a slow death as the digital era comes to a peak and less and less trees remain. I may be wrong, but I am speaking in regards with copies from this south eastern part of the world.

I noticed that as the years pass, these books slowly dissipate. As their numbers deplete, sometimes, you would even chance upon books with tons of writings on them at second hand shops, with only one copy left. Then the dilemma strikes you, whether to buy it or not. It’s either the previous owner used it for a book report and jotted down notes unto them for lack of other source of writing material (or laziness to find/use one); or, it’s as if the one who analyzed the poetic lines with circles, underlines, question marks, synonyms and gibberish phrases, with barely legible handwriting, then ‘cleverly’ writes on the first page as a subtitle “Complete and Comprehensive” thought they were giving the next reader a favor. Duh? Can’t these people realize that writing on books meant for reading ONLY is like adding another line, color or shape on a painting done by someone else? It’s like writing on a wall of a museum “I was here” to add their mark. It’s not only vandalism, it’s sacrilege!

Oh wait, this post is not supposed to end with rants though. Before I get too carried away, click below for the list. I will be updating this list as I acquire new books. This will serve as my mini inventory, although I wish I had the time to document all my books! Can someone please already invent an app to compile the info of books by desired order (author, publication, genre, et.al.), by just taking a photo? Haha!

My Collection: Dover Thrift Editions List

P.S. If there is such an app, please do tell me.

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My Collection: Dover Thrift Editions List

I am open for trades. And, for those who are willing to let go of their Dover Thrift books, especially those that are not in this list, feel free to contact me. ^_^

Author Title
  Abbott, Edwin Abbott   Flatland - A Romance of Many Dimensions
  Aristophanes   Lysistrata
  Baudelaire, Charles   Selected Poems from 'Flowers of Evil'
  Blake, William   Blake's Selected Poems
  Buchan, John   The Thirty-Nine Steps
  Burns, Robert   Poems and Songs
  Cather, Willa   My Antonia
  Cather, Willa   O Pioneers!
  Dickens, Charles   The Cricket on the Hearth and Other Christmas Stories
  Dostoyevsky, Fyodo   Notes from the Underground
  Douglas, Frederick   Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglas
  Dunbar, Paul Laurence   Selected Poems
  Eliot, T.S.   The Wasteland, Prufrock and Other Poems
  Fitzgerald, F. Scott   The Beautiful and Damned
  Flaubert, Gustave   Madame Bovary
  Franklin, Benjamin   The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin
  Freeman, Mary E. Wilkins   The Revolt of "Mother" and Other Stories
  Frost, Robert   The Road Not Taken and Other Stories
  Gide, André   The Immoralist
  Gilman, Charlotte Perkins   The Yellow Wallpaper and Other Stories
  Goldsmith, Oliver   She Stoops to Conquer
  Hardy, Thomas   Tess of the D'Urbervilles
  Housman, A.E.   A Shropshire Lad
  James, Henry   Daisy Miller
  Jewett, Sarah Orne   The Country of the Pointed Firs
  Johnson, James Weldon   The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man
  Kafka, Franz   The Metamorphosis and Other Stories
  Keats, John   Lyric Poems
  London, Jack   The Call of the Wild
  Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth   Evangeline and Other Poems
  Maupassant, Guy de   The Necklace and Other Short Stories
  Melville, Herman   Bartleby and Benito Cereno
  Molière   Tartuffe
  Ovid   The Metamorphoses, Selected Stories in Verse
  Poe, Edgar Allan   The Gold-Bug and Other Tales
  Poe, Edgar Allan   The Raven and Other Favorite Poems
  Rilke, Rainer Maria   Letters to a Young Poe
  Rossetti, Christina   Goblin Market and Other Poems
  Shaw, George Bernard   Heartbreak House
  Sheridan, Richard Brinsley   The School for Scandal
  Sophocles   Electra
  Sophocles   Oedipus Rex
  Sterne, Laurence   A Sentimental Journey
  Stevenson, Robert Louis   The Body Snatcher and Other Tales
  Stevenson, Robert Louis   The Suicide Club
  Tolstoy, Leo   The Kreutzer Sonata and Other Short Stories
  Voltaire   Candide
  Washington, Booker T.   Up From Slavery
  Wells, H.G.   "The Country of the Blind" and Other Science-Fiction Stories
  Wells, H.G.   The Time Machine
  Wells, H.G.   The War of The Worlds
  Wharton, Edith   Ethan Frome
  Wilde, Oscar   The Ballad of Reading Gaol and Other Poems
  Williams, William Carlos   Early Poems
  Witman, Walt   Civil War Poetry and Prose

*Hopefully soon, I would have the time to take photos of each book, front and back, and add them as clickable links here.

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