CBCnews
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share

First edition of Darwin's Origin of Species fetches $60K

Last Updated: Thursday, April 30, 2009 | 12:38 PM ET

A first-edition of Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species has sold at auction in London for nearly $60,000, according to British auction House Keys.

A local book dealer named Hamish Riley-Smith purchased the rare tome, still bound in its original embossed green binding, for £35,000 ($59,364 Cdn), according to Keys auctioneer Andrew Bullock.

The book is one of the original 1,250 copies from the famed book's first, sold-out printing in 1859.

The 150th anniversary of the book's publication will be marked on Nov. 24.

Darwin wrote his seminal book On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection to share his theory about evolution with a lay audience. His treatise would become the backbone of modern biology.

Also sold at Monday's Keys sale of rare books was an autographed photo of Darwin — dating from 1868 — that fetched £22,000 ($37,315 Cdn), soaring over its initial estimate of between £,3000 and £4,000 (between $5,088 and $6,785 Cdn).

This year marks the 200th anniversary of Darwin's birth, with celebrations that have included lectures, exhibits and a memorial at the scientist's tomb in Westminster Abbey.

Last year, a treasure trove of Darwin's papers — including his notes for and an original draft of On the Origin of Species — was published online by the Cambridge University Library, which houses his archive.

With files from The Associated Press
  •  
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share
 

Related

More Books Headlines

Residential school story wins $25K kids' book award
Shin-chi's Canoe, a picture book about a little boy leaving home for a residential school, has won the $25,000 TD Canadian Children's Literature Award.
National Gallery looks at bookstore spinoff
The National Gallery of Canada is looking for an outside company to operate its bookstore.
Roth, Banville up for bad sex writing award
Pulitzer Prize winner Philip Roth has earned a nomination for the Bad Sex in Fiction award for a scene in The Humbling involving the seduction of a lesbian by an aging stage actor.
'70s-set New York novel wins U.S. fiction crown
Colum McCann's novel Let the Great World Spin, a portait of interconnected relationships on one summer day in 1970s New York, has won the prestigious fiction prize at the 60th annual U.S. National Book Awards gala.
Bush aide Karl Rove publishing memoir in March
A memoir by Karl Rove, the White House aide who was architect of former president George W. Bush's war on terror, now has a title and a release date.

More Arts Headlines

Plaskett double winner at Canadian Folk Music Awards
Joel Plaskett's triple album Three earned the Halifax singer-songwriter a double win at the Canadian Folk Music Awards on Saturday.
Jackson’s glove fetches $350,000 US
Michael Jackson's iconic rhinestone-studded glove got the white-glove treatment on Saturday, bringing $350,000 US on the auction block in New York.
Simpsons' Sarkozy parody an internet hit
Almost a week after it appeared on television, thousands of French internet users started flooding video-sharing websites on Friday and Saturday to view a lampoon of their first couple on The Simpsons.
Pope builds friendships with artists Video
Pope Benedict XVI met in Rome with more than 250 artists from around the world to foster dialogue between the Roman Catholic Church and the arts.
Driver dies in Miley Cyrus tour bus accident
The driver of a bus on Miley Cyrus's concert tour died on Friday when the bus struck an embankment and overturned in Virginia.

People who read this also read …

Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

Headlines

Vancouver Island evacuation order lifted Video
An evacuation order has been lifted for hundreds of south Vancouver Island residents forced from their homes by flooding.
Indonesian ferry sinks in storm
Rescuers saved more than 240 people aboard an Indonesian passenger ferry that sank Sunday in rough waters off Sumatra island, but at least 25 people have died, officials said.
Iranian forces practise defending nuke sites
Iran on Sunday began large-scale air defence war games aimed at protecting the country's nuclear facilities against any possible attack, state television reported.
Plaskett double winner at Canadian Folk Music Awards
Joel Plaskett's triple album Three earned the Halifax singer-songwriter a double win at the Canadian Folk Music Awards on Saturday.
Canadian speedskater Groves wins gold
Kristina Groves of Ottawa won her first World Cup gold of the season on Sunday, prevailing in the 1,500-metre race in Hamar, Norway.