I wanted to buy this book, but every page is ruined…


I wanted to buy this book, but every page is ruined…











A History of Warfare • John Keegan, renowned historian. I have a lot of his books.
History Channel: The Civil War • This was only seventy-five cents, and I learned two things just from the introduction.
Two Centuries of Warfare • This is a huge book, full of pictures and illustrations in addition to text.
Aircraft of World War II • A reprint of an older book with many diagrams of warplanes.
Vietnam: The Helicopter War • Nice to have a book focused on the choppers.
World at War: 1945 to the Present Day • One of three books, now I have to find the other two.
A Year in the Live of Downton Abbey • The fourth book I have about the show (that I have all of the Blu-rays of!)
The Great Book of King Arthur & His Knights of the Round Table • My dad picked this up for free from somewhere. It’s only a few years old and is on quality paper.
The Annotated Memoirs of Ulysses S. Grant • This replaces my older, non-annotated version. Better size, paper, and content.
Cataclysm • Any World War I book, I’ll pick up.
Death or Glory • My only book on the Crimean War (to my knowledge), which is the first war journaled in any real number of photographs, and a precursor to how the Civil War would be fought.
Nothing but Victory • I took a chance that this wasn’t in my dad’s library already, and it wasn’t. For a buck-fifty, it is fairly new, in perfect shape, and has a good number of pages. I can’t pick up every Civil War book I want because of space, but this one was worth it.
Hindenburg • I paid full price for this one, because lately I have gone from being totally uninterested in airships, to very interested. Airplanes always appeared to be far more exciting than a big, fat, slow airship, but upon further inspection, they are really interesting. They were for a time, airliners in the sky, and some even had a lounge with a piano for guests!
Time/Life The Epic of Flight: The Giant Airships – The First Aviators • On the same topic, I passed on these books a long time ago, in an effort to save space as there were some books in this set I wasn’t interested in, so I decided to keep an incomplete set. However, I’m now interest in Airships, and those who took real risks in creating and testing the first airplanes. Now, as I look at this set, there are only two or three that I am uninterested in acquiring.
Scharnhorst • I’ve read about this ship in other books, but this is the first book focused on just the Scharnhorst. It was fairly new, and half-off, so, a great deal.
Shoot for the Moon • I’m more interested in the moon landing, wheres previously, I wasn’t. It is actually fascinating and it’s a shame people aren’t into this topic more.
The Mighty Eighth • I have another book by this title, but it is a less graphical one by a different author. The bomber missions are incredibly interesting when the reader tries to imagine himself in the same situation as the men who were there.









As a collector of books,(or, as I like to think of it, Assembler of the Grand Library of the House Rydberg) I present to you a common problem; on the left, is the first American edition of Manfred von Richthofen’s (aka The Red Baron) autobiography. On the right, is the 1995 Barnes & Noble reprint. I already had the reprint in my library, and while at the thrift store, I came across the older version, and was impressed by the wonderful cover.
Visually, I knew I didn’t have a book with that cover art, so to be sure, I checked my extensive and detailed list, and verified that I had the copy on the right, but I’d listed the author as “Stanley M. Ulanoff”, who was actually only the editor of the book. I didn’t remember this book as Richthoven’s autobiography, but only as a book about him. So, thinking this was a completely different book on the Red Baron, and an autobiography to boot, I bought this older version ($2.00).
Upon filing this away in its proper place on the shelf, I discovered that I now I have two copies of the same book. This kind of thing can easily happen, when a book is republished in a different decade, with a different cover, and I usually catch these 99.9% of the time when I check my list. Woe to me if I don’t check it the sacred list!
My further dilemma, however, is that the book on the left is such a delight with this really neat cover art, the old-book smell (1969), and yellowed paper with deckle edges. The reprint (1995) has a very generic cover, (someone just took Richtoven’s photo and slapped it on there with a solid white background and burgundy border) and normal-cut, non-faded solid-white pages.
So, the dilemma: which one do I keep? Shelf space is precious, and I can’t afford the space to start collecting different versions of the same book. The newer version’s only real selling point to me is that the paper is clean and white, and there is something about that which has a benefit all its own. I can’t explain it. I’m definitely not going to let the older version go, but I don’t want to let the newer version go. I’m the kind of guy who likes books in both old and beat-up, as well as brand-new condition. Each version has its own appeal.
I’m leaning toward keeping both of them, anyway. Neither is a large book, they are both the same size. I’m not sure of the method, but this newer version is a seemingly scanned-to-print copy and not a re-worked new version, so, a true copy down to the inside illustrations. And that art on the older edition is so good, with the large title and Iron Cross (And no, that has nothing to do with the Swastika, it is a native Prussian/German symbol/award that was commissioned by Frederick William III in 1813, and is still used today in the German Armed Forces.)
I’d inquire of anybody who acquires books as to whether this is a common problem, but I know if a person has a library of any great volume, than they occasionally have this most distressing dilemma. It is a far better problem to have than say, having books disappear from the shelves!
I recently finished a book by Eddie Rickenbacher, the United States’ ace, and it was the same size but in a deluxe format, gilded pages and all. A very interesting topic and recalled first-hand from the men to experienced the first air combat in human history.

A great day collecting books!
The Great Pyramid Decoded • Detailed but readable information and thoughts on the mysteries and facts about the Pyramids.
The Russian Empire 1801-1917 • I left this one last week, as it was beat-up and full-price, and gambled it would still be around this week at half… and it was! I did a lot of Photoshop on the very much beat-up and ripped cover (it’s not perfect, but a lot better! It’s good to know how much time to, and not to spend on some of these things!)
The Red Baron • I knew of this books’ existence, being the one with this title that was written by the Red Baron himself! Glad to have found it.
Other Clay / Beyond the Beachhead • First-hand accounts, my favorite kind of history book.
Blood and Treasure • I’m a Daniel Boone / Davey Crockett guy, but I don’t actually know a lot about them.
Supremacy at Sea • This one was only published last year, and I got it at 1/5th the originally discounted new price!








This book features 176 paintings of World War II by John Hamilton. Looking at the research these photos required, and the skill, talent, and dedication by Hamilton, it is most impressive. I almost missed this book as it was in a random section of the thrift store’s books, and not where it was supposed to be!
John Singer Sergeant is a better artist than all of the “artists” of Modern Art put together.





This World War I book, I actually didn’t have, and it has an introduction by John Keegan. Published in 1980, I find it hard to believe I haven’t seen this book before at all of the book sales and thrift/book stores I’ve frequented over the years!
The Demon of Unrest was published within the year, a 2024 book and still has the original $18.99 price tag on it. I got it for nowhere near that much!
Scholar of Mahem is one of those first-person accounts that I like so much, so that was a no-brainer to pick up.
Bloodlands is a book I already had, and accidentally bought again. Turns out I had a beat-up paperback, and this one is hardback. So, everything worked out. And it looks to be a great book on a topic that is extremely interesting.
I was at an estate sale on Thursday; there were some magazines I needed to come closer to completing my “America in World War II” set, published 2005-2019. Thirty cents apiece! While this magazine maintains a web site, they don’t appear to still be in print, which is too bad. Many magazines like this are going quarterly, thinner, or just disappearing.

I just noticed that the books in the set on the right are inserted backwards in the case. I had to wait a week for these to become half-off, they were both a great deal! Good for me, but a shame that most people don’t give a hoot about these subjects.