A Letter From America #12
Booksellers' Descriptions and Copyright
From
the Antiquarian Book Review
From time to time someone raises with me the
interesting question of whether or not bookseller’s descriptions are subject
to copyright. As a strict point of law, it would seem, they are only partially;
you can hardly copyright author/title/pagination information of someone else’s
book, but what the bookseller has to say about the work is surely their own
(thought) and they can presumably sue anybody who reproduces in whole or in part
their deathless prose. As a practical matter this is not really the case,
partially because it is a very hard matter to police, and partly because many
bookseller’s descriptions are cribbed from other authorities anyway.
It has always been fun to look back at earlier
generations of bookseller’s catalogues and try to figure out where certain
assertions and phrases were lifted from. In my kind of stuff there is a book by
T.F. Dawson and J.F. Skiff called THE UTE WAR, published in Denver in 1879, and
describing an outbreak of violence against Indian agents in western Colorado in
1878. For decades booksellers have cited each other saying that the book is rare
because the unbound sheets were used as cartridge wadding in "another
Indian outbreak." I did this too until I realized that the so-called Ute
war was the last conflict of its kind in Colorado, and that the army by 1878 was
using brass cartridges and didn’t need any wadding. I finally ran the origin
of the fable to earth in a 1919 auction catalogue. The same wording used there
has survived almost intact to the present day. Whose copyright is that?
One clue to lifted descriptions are pet descriptive
phrases favored by the bookseller. A former employee of mine, a skilled
cataloger and bookseller, is very fond of the word "pleasing." He
would use it at every opportunity, and I would try to edit it out just as fast.
In my view a book can be many things – magnificent, awe-inspiring, wonderful,
thought-provoking, or just plain nice – but not "pleasing." Despite
my best efforts he got a number past me, and whenever I check something in old
cataloging and find that word, I know who wrote the description. Another, now
departed, bookseller of my acquaintance was fond of the cryptic term
"measurably rare". What exactly does that mean? I never found out.
Another formerly extant American bookseller employed the abbreviation "fxd"
as a catch-all in his physical description of the book to indicate that it had
– well, problems. Again, it was unclear what that meant; possibly
"foxed," or "fixed," but almost certainly
"f----d". "Fxd" was as clear a signature of authorship as
that bookseller’s name.
This leads us to the Bookselling Catechism of Cliché;
phrases so hackneyed that are beyond copyright or anything else. With apologies
to Flann O’Brien, here we go:
In what affectionate state do we often find the hinges
of a binding?
Tender.
And if not tender, in what prostrated condition might
they be?
Weak.
Yes, but they are seldom simply weak. In what
pudding-like way are they weak?
A trifle weak.
Very good. Now let us say the binding is cloth. In
what frightened state might we find those hinges?
Frayed.
Ouch. And what massage-like activity many have been
performed on the boards?
Rubbed.
And even if the boards have been gone over with a
trowel, to what conditional degree have they been rubbed?
Somewhat.
Yes, never more than somewhat. And library stamps. In
what close-mouthed form are they generally found?
They are discreet.
Phew. Enough of that for one day, but you get the
idea. There is a certain rhythm to many bookseller’s descriptions that makes
them closer to what musicians call a "traditional arrangement" than
unique prose.
Having said that, the last generation of bookselling
has seen a revolution in the quality of cataloging being offered to the
customers. Many of my colleagues are writing superb, scholarly descriptions
which are admirable summations of the books they offer for sale, often in
difficult technical fields. Indeed, this is one of the real pleasures of
specialized antiquarian bookselling in the modern era; mastering the history of
a discipline or area of historical research and trying to explain it in clear,
possibly jargon-free, prose. This has been further enhanced by the many
beautifully produced catalogues in which these descriptions appear, often with
lovely illustrations. As antiquarian bookselling has evolved, it is this formula
of mastery of knowledge and explanation which has allowed specialized dealers to
prosper.
As with so many things, the Internet has changed the
efficacy of the well-wrought book description. In the past, a specialist
bookseller could devote time and effort to researching and writing detailed
explanations of his books and offer it exclusively to his customers, or at least
to the people on his mailing list. This level of expertise was commonly held to
justify a somewhat higher price. Now one can go to ABE, read the superb
description of Vendor A, and buy the cheaper copy listed next to it from Vendor
B. The playing field of knowledge has been leveled, but the expert must start to
question how he or she is going to expend their knowledge. Even if you
unquestionably own the copyright to your description, posting it online is just
as surely giving it away. Many specialists must ask themselves if they can
afford to do that. And what firm substances does that put them between?
A rock and a hard place.
–
William S. Reese



