The remainder of the winch houses for the WW2 slipways are
being demolished at the moment. These were once petrol engined winches,
replaced I think in 70s with electric motors. My understanding is that the
winch gearboxes date from WW2, I would doubt the winch houses do as if the
winches were housed it would have probably been corrugated iron and not
asbestos.
The winches are being retained, I understand, one for back up
on the main slipway and the other for one of the WW2 slipways, which will be
usable after the demolition and rebuilding.
I am very much behind The Hornby Hobby Visitor Centre being
built on this site, it is just the sort of tourist attraction that Ramsgate
needs.
I do however have some reservations, one being that there
seems to be no clear understanding about whether workshops and office buildings
are going to be built so the slipways can operate again, the other being the
recent financial problems that Hornby have had.
I am not sure of the planning status of the bar complex that
was going to be built there, only that the plans for it seemed too low from a
storm and tide point of view, something that was addressed in the visitor
centre plans.
On to our very own Banksey and our Wall and Peace, Mike
Sampson who runs York Street Gallery and is doing one of his famous Ramsgate
cartoon letterbox paintings, actually as it’s around fifty feet long and eight
feet high, letterbox format may be an understatement.
Rather him than me, good on you Mike.
On the bookselling front, it may surprise non book
collectors to know that book collectors and booksellers are quite fussy about
the condition of collectable books, first editions and the like. Booksellers of
the secondhand and antiquarian type also become rather fussy.
A fine condition first edition is worth about £200 the only
difference in the book between the first edition and the second impression is
the line, Second Impression June 1966.
The dustwrapper of the second impression has reviews printed
on the inner flap which weren’t available for the first edition as the critics
hadn’t been able to read it because it hadn’t been published.
So this £200 is for a fine copy, write your name in it, or
anything else for that matter and the value would be reduce to around £100,
clip the price off the dustwrapper and that would reduce the value by about
half, as would tearing the dust wrapper.
Slap a horrible sticky label on it and a paper
conservationist may be able to get it off, something which would cost about
£100 and you would probably still get some sort of mark.
Waterstones the chain booksellers have been trying to enter
the secondhand, antiquarian and collectable book world, this is one of the
results.
Large publishers can do some pretty bonkers things too,
imagine studying Bertolt Brecht and being told to get a copy of Methuen Plays
Three, one has completely different plays in it to the other.
Back to Ramsgate where the Pleasurama cliff façade paint is
still falling off, what can you say? Obviously water is getting behind the façade,
not something I would like to live under.
The increased activity is mostly down to the main online
bookselling sites having shot themselves in their feet. So that while on the
one had most books appear to be for sale online for less than or around the
cost of posting them, meaning it is very difficult to sell books online. While
on the other hand when you actually go to buy a secondhand book online most of
the cheap copies seem to be for sale from seller that have less than 98% good
feedback, making difficult to buy online.
This situation means that I am buying and selling
quite a lot more books at the moment, so don’t have a lot of time to blog.
Or even "Mike Samson" LOL :) Thanks for your words of support and encouragement Michael.
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