Home 5 News 5 Shakespeare First Folio fetches a record $10m at auction

Shakespeare First Folio fetches a record $10m at auction

by | Oct 18, 2020 | News

A rare book that brought together William Shakespeare’s plays for the first time sold for a record US$9.97 million at auction in New York.

The 1623 book, published seven years after the Shakespeare’s death, was the first collected edition of his plays, and it’s one of only six known complete copies in private hands, was bought by American private collector Stephan Loewentheil, founder of the 19th Century Rare Book and Photograph Shop on the U.S. east coast.

Auction’s price marked a new world record for any printed work of literature, and smashed the previous high of US$6.16 million for a Shakespeare First Folio that was set in 2001.

The First Folio brought together 36 plays, 18 of which would otherwise not have been recorded. Without its publication there would be no copy of such plays as Macbeth, Twelfth Night, Julius Caesar and The Tempest.

Most of the 235 copies known to exist are incomplete. One, owned by Oxford University, sold for US$4.5m in 2003. Five or six complete versions are believed to be in private hands.

Recent News

15May
Ishiguro Joins AI Copyright Appeal

Ishiguro Joins AI Copyright Appeal

  Authors including the Nobel Prize-winner Kasho Ishiguro and publishers including Joanna Prior, CEO of Pan Macmillan have signed an open letter urging UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer to enforce copyright law and not let the giant tech companies ‘steal’ authors’ work to train AI models.   The letter reads: “We will lose an immense […]

15May
Qatar National Library: Identity and Journey from a Female Perspective

Qatar National Library: Identity and Journey from a Female Perspective

Qatar National Library organised a symposium exploring the often-overlooked contributions of women to the genre of travel literature. Bringing together leading researchers and academics, the event examined how female travellers from the 19th and early 20th centuries used travel—and the literature it inspired—as a means of personal empowerment, self-discovery and the reimagining of prevailing social […]

15May
British Book Award Goes to Atwood

British Book Award Goes to Atwood

Canadian author Margaret Atwood has been awarded the 2025 British Book Award for Freedom to Publish, recognizing her unwavering commitment to free expression and outspoken stance against censorship. Atwood, best known for her seminal novel The Handmaid’s Tale, accepted the honor via a recorded video message.   In her speech, the 85-year-old author expressed deep […]

Related Posts

Qatar National Library: Identity and Journey from a Female Perspective

Qatar National Library: Identity and Journey from a Female Perspective

Qatar National Library organised a symposium exploring the often-overlooked contributions of women to the genre of travel literature. Bringing together leading researchers and academics, the event examined how female travellers from the 19th and early 20th centuries...

British Book Award Goes to Atwood

British Book Award Goes to Atwood

Canadian author Margaret Atwood has been awarded the 2025 British Book Award for Freedom to Publish, recognizing her unwavering commitment to free expression and outspoken stance against censorship. Atwood, best known for her seminal novel The Handmaid’s Tale,...

AI and IP Drive China’s Reading Market

AI and IP Drive China’s Reading Market

China's online literature industry continued its rapid growth in 2024, with the domestic reading market generating 43.06 billion yuan (around $5.96 billion) in revenue, a rise of 6.8 percent year-on-year, according to a report by the Chinese Academy of Social...

Previous Next
Close
Test Caption
Test Description goes like this

Pin It on Pinterest

Nasher News
Ishiguro Joins AI Copyright Appeal
Qatar National Library: Identity and Journey from a Female Perspective
British Book Award Goes to Atwood
Qatar National Library: Identity and Journey from a Female Perspective
British Book Award Goes to Atwood
AI and IP Drive China’s Reading Market