Should you write a gift inscription in a first edition or collectible book? • Empty Mirror (2024)

Books make thoughtful, personal gifts. Often, the giver would like to write a short note to the recipient inside the book; this is called a gift inscription.

Should you write a gift inscription in a first edition or collectible book? • Empty Mirror (1)
It’s worth noting that gift inscriptions most often will lower any collectible value of the book. (There are exceptions; gift inscriptions by the author or someone else connected to the book will enhance its value.)

If you’re giving a first edition or other book which is valuable or may increase in value, it is best not to inscribe it. Collectors want a book to be in its original condition, as close to perfect as possible. A gift inscription or any other writing or marking – no matter where on the book, or how neatly it’s done – detracts from the value.

As an alternative to signing a collectible book, I’d recommend just giving the book with a card enclosed. Or, you could tuck a note between the cover and front endpaper (on acid-free paper, so it won’t damage the book over time).

Cutting the price off the dustjacket (price clipping) will also reduce value. Don’t worry about this. Everyone knows how much a new book costs these days, and for older books, the recipient will know you didn’t pay the price on the dustjacket any way. They will want to receive the book and dustjacket in their original, intact states.

When not to worry

If the book you’re giving is going to be very well-read (thereby reducing any potential collectible value), or has little chance of ever becoming a collectible, you can likely inscribe it without worry about its future value. In this case, the front free endpaper (the first page facing the front cover) is the most common place to do so.

Do you have a connection to the book?

Exceptions to this rule would be if you are the book’s author or in intimately connected to it in some way.

If you’re the author of the book, your inscribing it will enhance its value, so go ahead and sign it!

If you’re closely connected to the author or in some other way to the book (e.g., editor, publisher, or even its subject), your signature will likely enhance the book’s value as well. Such a book is called an association copy.

If you’re an author wondering where to sign a book, please see our article On Signing Books.

There’s more on the author signatures, inscriptions, association copies, and how they affect value on our Author Signatures (Illustrated) page.

Denise Enck

Denise is Empty Mirror's founder and editor. She's edited several other literary magazines and small-press publications since the 1990s. When not at Empty Mirror, you can probably find her reading or writing -- or out exploring the back roads and beaches of Washington State.

Should you write a gift inscription in a first edition or collectible book? • Empty Mirror (2024)

FAQs

Should you write a gift inscription in a first edition or collectible book? • Empty Mirror? ›

If you're giving a first edition or other book which is valuable or may increase in value, it is best not to inscribe it. Collectors want a book to be in its original condition, as close to perfect as possible.

Should I write an inscription in a book gift? ›

For those who buy secondhand books, past lives evoked by inherited personal inscriptions may be part of the appeal. And for those who give new books, writing in the inner leaves may be the final flourish that transforms them into presents, like an artist's signature.

What is the best way to inscribe a book? ›

Where to inscribe? There are a couple of options. If it's a hardback book writing on the endpapers – the often-patterned papers that cover the inside of the hardcover and the pages beyond – is a popular choice, although it's important to make sure that your text won't get lost against a particularly busy or dark paper.

Is it okay to write a note in a book for a gift? ›

A card can be lost, but if it's written in the cover, the memory persists as long as the book does. The author or editor or illustrator of a book is by tradition permitted, or even encouraged, to write and sign a short message in the book, addressed to the owner or to the recipient of the book.

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