MrCutts:
I knew it was published in 1967 after the Golden Fleece book but I didn't realise there was a reprint 3 years later.
As I just mentioned, nobody seems to have an exact history for these and the other books, so all information is welcome.
MrCutts:
I wonder if Methuen would have records of how many were printed of each of the Tintin film books
Methuen don't (as far as can be told) retain any files on the Tintin series; such information as they had was passed over to Egmont when the titles changed hands, and they have not been able to provide us with any details.
MrCutts:
Personally I think that some Tintin book collectors are pretty fussy about the dates of the books.
Indeed some are; however many are not. I'd consider myself a collector, but I'd be happy to have at least one copy of any book, and have only a very limited interest in which edition it is in. The Casterman
Rackham is interesting to me because it is a different approach to the series, not because it is a first edition.
The English collector's market (and to a large extent I think it is a
speculator's market, rather than a
devoted fan's market) is not as developed as, say, the French-language one, where there is a recognized classification system for editions, so many variants to look for, and a generally greater volume of books available, making completism an integral part of the process.
As I say, I think that speculative buying and selling has gone on over the last few years, artificially inflating prices on things like the Golden Press books, the
Making of books, and first editions in general.
The movie books have had this happen too, and actually the prices for them appear to have fallen over the last few years, which I would attribute to speculators having priced the books beyond the pockets and interest of Tintin fans. If you look through the forums you'll find a price of £100 being attached to
Blue Oranges in say 2005; I reckon you will have paid far closer to the £40 for yours.
Mr. Cutts:
I think a first edition would be more appealing to a collector than a reprint even it's only 3 years later.
I might agree with you were we in France or Belgium, and the book had been in many many printings (my French copy is from 1984, but doesn't actually seem to state the edition anywhere), from which a collector might wish to choose. As a completist, they might even want my copy as for all I know it might have been the first to have a bar-code displayed on the back.
I will be lucky to see one mint copy of the English
Blue Oranges in a lifetime, so it is unlikely I'd turn my nose up at it for being the 1970 reprint. ;-)