I haven't bout a new coin in over a year...

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by GobrechtReich85, Dec 13, 2014.

  1. GobrechtReich85

    GobrechtReich85 Active Member

    I've been trying to build up a numismatic reference library as well was as read and learn as much as I can. Here is a list of books I have so far (not including price guides):

    1) Warman's Coin Collecting by Alan Herbert

    2) The Whitman Guide to Coin, 2nd edition Collecting by Kenneth Bressett

    3) Collecting Rare Coins for Pleasure and Profit by Q. David Bowers

    4 The Expert's Guide to Collecting and Investing in Rare Coins by Q. David Bowers

    5) The Official A.N.A. Grading Standards of United States Coins, 6th edition by Kenneth Bressett and Q. David Bowers

    6) Making The Grade, 3rd edition by Beth Deisher

    7) Grading Coins by Photographs, 2nd edition by Q. David Bowers

    8) Photograde, 18th edition by James F. Ruddy

    9) Coins: Questions & Answers, 5th edition by Clifford Mishler

    10) Coin Clinic: 1,001 Frequently Asked Questions by Alan Herbert

    11) Coin Clinic 2: 1,001 More Frequently Asked Questions by Alan Herbert

    12) Cherrypickers' Guide to Rare Die Varieties of United States Coins, Volume I, 5th edition by Bill Fivaz and J.T. Stanton

    13) Cherrypickers' Guide to Rare Die Varieties of United States Coins, Volume II, 5th edition by Bill Fivaz, J.T. Stanton and Ken Potter

    14) U.S. Coins Close Up by Robert R. Van Ryzin

    15) Fascinating Facts, Mysteries and Myths about U.S. Coins by Robert R. Van Ryzin

    16) Coins & Collectors: Golden Anniversary Edition by Q. David Bowers

    17) Coin Chemistry, 3rd edition by Weimar W. White

    18) The Instant Coin Collector by Arlyn Sieber

    19) Coin Collecting For Dummies, 2nd edition by Neil S. Berman and Ron Guth

    20) History of the U.S. Mint and its Coinage by David W. Lange

    21) One Minute Coin Expert, 6th edition by Scott A. Travers

    22) The Coin Collector's Survival Manual, 7th edition by Scott A. Travers

    23) The Everything Coin Collecting Book by Richard Giedroyc

    24) One Coin Is Never Enough: Why and How We Collect by Michael S. Shutty, Jr. Ph.D

    25) The Secret History of the First U.S. Mint: How Frank H. Steward Destroyed, and Then Saved A National Treasure by Joel J. Orosz and Leonard D. Augsburger

    26) America's Money, America's Story, 2nd edition by Richard Doty

    27) Numismatic Forgery by Charles M. Larson

    28) Numismatic Photography, 2nd edition by Mark Goodman

    29) Handbook of Ancient Greek and Roman Coins by Zander H. Klawans

    30) Ancient Coin Collecting, Volume I, 2nd edition by Wayne G. Sayles

    31) Ancient Coin Collecting, Volume II: Numismatic Art of the Greek World, 2nd edition by Wayne G. Sayles

    32) Ancient Coin Collecting, Volume III: The Roman World - Politics and Propaganda, 2nd edition by Wayne G. Sayles

    33) Ancient Coin Collecting, Volume IV: Roman Provincial coins, 1st edition by Wayne G. Sayles



    In edition, I also have subscriptions to Coins magazine, Coinage magazine and the numismatist, all to be renewed for a third year sometime early 2015. I also, for a year had subscription to Coin World monthly magazine. So that's what I've been up to lately. I've purchased no new coins. I've instead been spending my money and time on books and magazines to hopefully increase my knowledge. They say to by and read the book before you buy and/or sell the coin. I just decided to take that advice a little further. What do you think? Is my approach overkill?
     
    Last edited: Dec 13, 2014
    sonlarson likes this.
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. Kirkuleez

    Kirkuleez 80 proof

    I like it, my library got ruined a few years ago and I haven't gotten around to replace it yet. But still, no coins in a year!
     
  4. GobrechtReich85

    GobrechtReich85 Active Member

    I can also think of at least a hundred other books I'd like to add to that list.
     
  5. GobrechtReich85

    GobrechtReich85 Active Member

    No, no new coins. I'm trying to decide if I should save up for a while to get a really nice coin (i.e. a key date or early federal gold or silver issue. [Pre - John Reich era] or get something that's less expensive but that I'd be able to afford it sooner. I really like Draped Bust half eagles ($5 gold pieces), but at $5,000 to $7,000 + on average, for a VF to XF example, I'd be shooting for the moon financially speaking.
     
  6. Kirkuleez

    Kirkuleez 80 proof

    Encyclopedia of US silver dollars is also a must and one of my favorite reads greatest 100 US coins.
     
    Mainebill likes this.
  7. GobrechtReich85

    GobrechtReich85 Active Member

    Is that Silver Dollar encyclopedia the 2 volume set released in '93 by Q. David Bowers?
     
  8. GobrechtReich85

    GobrechtReich85 Active Member

    Correction: Bought, not Bout, In thread title.
     
  9. spirityoda

    spirityoda Coin Junky

    no coins for a year ??? I would die. If I can not buying a coin... I sure am looking at my Krause catalogs very closely. I am a coin junky and I need my coin fixes. no cure. lol :)
     
  10. GobrechtReich85

    GobrechtReich85 Active Member

    I still save old or interesting coins I find in change. I just haven't bought a coin in a year.
     
    kaosleeroy108 likes this.
  11. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank


    So, how is the rehab going?
     
    Jwt708, spirityoda and 712 like this.
  12. Mainebill

    Mainebill Bethany Danielle

    I've only bought one in the last 2 months. And not much for the last 4. My finances are up and down due to self employment and other projects. So I can only buy coins at certain times. Your doing good with the books interesting that many you have are not the same as me. I have a lot of books on early stuff seated liberty and before as that's my main interest. I do the same if I can't afford coins I look at em in books. The auction catalogs are great references too. As to the early gold I'd love some too but can't afford it yet either
     
  13. Mainebill

    Mainebill Bethany Danielle

    Agreed great book highly recommended image.jpg
     
  14. ksparrow

    ksparrow Coin Hoarder Supporter

    Nice selection of books you have! I just have the first volume of the Bowers encyclopedia (since I'm not interested in Morgans and Peace dollars to any great extent); Breen's Encyclopedia is good to have; any of Roger Burdette's books are excellent (available at Wizard coin supply)
     
  15. Seattlite86

    Seattlite86 Outspoken Member

    It is only an overkill if you haven't had time to read/reference them. I'd buy more books for my collection but I just don't have the time to read them. When I retire, I'll come back and check this list to see what I'm missing. :)
     
  16. kaosleeroy108

    kaosleeroy108 The Mahayana Tea Shop & hobby center

    tha
    t is very smart i think we should all have a look at our change ..
     
  17. kaosleeroy108

    kaosleeroy108 The Mahayana Tea Shop & hobby center

    ive got walter breens encyclopedia its awesome ref. tool but lacks a bit in the pictorial department..
     
  18. ldhair

    ldhair Clean Supporter

    It's been over a year for me. Before that it was one or two per year. I hope to find something special at the Fun Show in January.
     
  19. physics-fan3.14

    physics-fan3.14 You got any more of them.... prooflikes?

    Your list looks like a good "general" set - there are a lot of basic books there, with a lot of good introductory information. Many of those books cover a lot of the same ground (some better than others). I don't think that I would call that a "reference" library - there are very few actual references there. So, good start on a numismatic library.

    Hopefully, you are reading all those books that you are buying ;)

    And now that you've read them, you should have a really good foundation. You should also have a pretty good idea where you want to go as a collector. Now you can start building a reference library in your chosen series. Let us know which direction you want to go as a collector, and we can suggest some actual references for you.
     
  20. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    While I applaud a library, having a decent one myself, it depends on what you want to collect. For instance, the Sayles books are fun little reads but are not the books you want if you are going to collect ancients. So, just like coins, I would suggest a little more specialization and focus. Ask opinions here, there are some coin book junkies like myself on this board. :)
     
  21. GobrechtReich85

    GobrechtReich85 Active Member

    Yeah, ancients are a little trickier than american coins, aren't they. What do you think of David R. Sears' books? Would they be worth reading after I finish reading Sayles' books?
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page