
Christie's New York will auction off
The Kenyon Starling Library of Charles Dickens on April 2. The collection, which could bring in as much as $2 million includes remarkable manuscripts, presentation copies, playbills, and original drawings. The collection is part of the William E. Self Family Collection. Bill Self moved to Hollywood in 1944, and appeared in numerous films, including The Thing, I Was a Male War Bride, Story of G.I. Joe, Red River and Sands of Iwo Jima and later became a highly successful producer for both television and motion pictures and the President of Twentieth Century-Fox 's Television Division. He was an avid book collector and met Kenyon Starling while bidding on rare books. Both had a taste for Dickens and traveled the world visiting major bookshops. Dtarling left his Dickens collection to Bill's family because of their mutual background, shared collecting interest and friendship. The Kenyon Starling Library of Charles Dickens is among the finest in private hands. Among the most significant lots is a presentation copy of Oliver Twist (1838) in a special presentation binding to his friend and fellow-author, William Harrison Ainsworth, and a presentation copy of The Uncommercial Traveller (1861) to the novelist George Eliot. The collection includes important autograph and manuscript material including an extremely rare manuscript page from the original manuscript of the Pickwick Papers shown at right which is estimated to sell for $150,000 - 250,000.