Christie’s New York is pleased to announce its upcoming auction, The Herman Melville Collection of William S. Reese, taking place online from 1-14 September.
- by Announcement, Rare Book Hub staff
A few highlights from The Herman Melville Collection of William Reese
Christie's New York is pleased to announce its upcoming auction, The Herman Melville Collection of William S. Reese, taking place online from 1-14 September.
William S. Reese was the pre-eminent dealer-scholar of printed Americana of his generation, renowned for his scholarship, generosity and the legacy he left on his profession. His private collections of literature were less well-known in his lifetime, although still celebrated. He collected many authors—from James Thurber to Saki—but the two he collected in by far the greatest depth were Robert Graves and Herman Melville. Reese gifted the majority of his collection of Graves to the Beinecke in 2002 and 2015; the Melville he kept.
Of all the great writers of America’s first century, none but Melville so thoroughly represented the eternal wanderlust of the human race—a wanderlust that was arguably more trenchant in mid-19 th century America that it has ever been at any other time or place. And not only is Melville the chronicler of that distinctly American form of wanderlust, but his language is singularly timeless—for example employing Quaker diction and pronouns within a prophetic modernism more akin to Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman. A century after it was written, Robert Penn Warren would compare Melville’s epic poetry to T.S. Eliot’s The Wasteland.
Herman Melville presents a singularly ambitious challenge to the collector. For starters, the Melville family was notorious for burning their own papers. All of Melville’s letters to his mother were burned and nearly all of his letters to his siblings (see lot 676 for a notable exception). One of Melville’s nieces threw his correspondence with her father into a bonfire at Arrowhead, and Melville’s daughter Elizabeth is suspected of destroying all the correspondence between her parents. (See Lepore, “Melville At Home.” The New Yorker, 29 July 2019). “Billy Budd” was very nearly lost to the sands of time and a large portion of the original manuscript for Typee was discovered in a barn as recently as 1983. The physical longevity of Melville’s printed works is not much better. The meager sales of every single work subsequent to Typee meant ever smaller print runs, intermittent pulping, and inexpensively produced books (except for The Whale) which rarely survived and were certainly not “collected” until at least about 30 years after Melville’s death.
The most important Melville collection in private hands, The Herman Melville Collection of William S. Reese includes rarities like John Marr (lot 659), Timoleon (lot 660), the triple-decker first edition of Mardi (lot 616), and three different copies of the English edition of The Whale (lots 630, 631, & 632); Melville’s own copies of Obed Macy's History of Nantucket (lot 672) and Dante’s Divine Comedy (lot 677); Nathaniel Hawthorne’s very own copy of Redburn (lot 621); important presentation copies including Typee inscribed to Henry Smythe, the man who enabled Melville to turn his back on writing (lot 654); and, last but certainly not least, letters and family papers, among them a wonderful sign for Allan Melville's New York shop (lot 664) and a letter from Herman arranging his first meeting with publisher Richard Bentley (lot 619).
The sale will be on preview at Rockefeller Center from 9-14 September.
Doyle The Collection of Mary Tyler Moore June 4, 2025
Doyle The Collection of Mary Tyler Moore June 4, 2025
DOYLE: Peter Max, Portrait of Mary Tyler Moore (Versions 1,2, 5, 6), 2001. Estimate $10,000-15,000
DOYLE: The iconic screen-used wall-mounted "M" from The Mary Tyler Moore Show. Estimate $5,000-8,000
DOYLE: The Mary Tyler Moore Show by Al Hirschfeld. Estimate $4,000-6,000
Doyle The Collection of Mary Tyler Moore June 4, 2025
DOYLE: Annie Leibovitz presents Mary Tyler Moore and Dick Van Dyke for Vanity Fair. Estimate $4,000-6,000
DOYLE: Al Hirschfeld presents Mary Tyler Moore and Dick Van Dyke in the CBS Wednesday Night Lineup. Estimate $4,000-6,000
DOYLE: Richard McKenzie, Portrait of Mary Tyler Moore. Estimate $1,000-2,000
Doyle The Collection of Mary Tyler Moore June 4, 2025
DOYLE: Three Original Bill Hargate Costume Designs for The Mary Tyler Moore Hour. Estimate $600-800
DOYLE: The famous Bonnie and Clyde "Wanted" broadside. Estimate $500-800
DOYLE: Ticket to the Final Episode of the Mary Tyler Moore Show Estimate $400-600
Sotheby's Bibliothèque Jacques Dauchez - Autour de Dubuffet
5-19 June
Sotheby's Bibliothèque Jacques Dauchez - Autour de Dubuffet
5-19 June
Sotheby’s, June 5-19: Bissière, Roger. Cantique à notre frère soleil de saint François. 1954. 1,000 - 1,500 EUR
Sotheby’s, June 5-19: Céline, Louis-Ferdinand. La vie & l’œuvre de Philippe Ignace Semmelweis. 1924. Rare édition originale, avec envoi. Joint : La Quinine en thérapeutique, 1925. 4,000 - 6,000 EUR
Sotheby’s, June 5-19: Céline, Louis-Ferdinand. Mort à crédit. 1936. Édition originale. Bel exemplaire sur Hollande. 2,500 - 3,500 EUR
Sotheby's Bibliothèque Jacques Dauchez - Autour de Dubuffet
5-19 June
Sotheby’s, June 5-19: Chillida, Eduardo ─ Emil Cioran. Face aux instants. 1985. Un des 100 exemplaires sur Arches. Eau-forte signée. 600 - 800 EUR
Sotheby’s, June 5-19: Dubuffet, Jean. Ler dla canpane. L’Art Brut, 1948. Édition originale. 3,000 - 5,000 EUR
Sotheby’s, June 5-19: Dubuffet, Jean. L'Herne Jean Dubuffet. 1973. Un des 100 exemplaires du tirage de luxe avec une sérigraphie originale en couleurs. 1,000 - 1,500 EUR
Gros & Delettrez Livres & Manuscrits Arméniens Jeudi 12 juin 2025 Paris, Francis
Gros & Delettrez Livres & Manuscrits Arméniens Jeudi 12 juin 2025 Paris, Francis
Gros & Delettrez, June 12: BIBLE, Venise 1733, reliure arménienne
Gros & Delettrez, June 12: CHARAKNOTS, manuscrit XVIIe-XVIIIe siècle