The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Signed Beatrix Potter book may be a best-seller

Peter Rabbit book with a note inside could fetch £30,000

- Arthur vundla

A rare first edition of The Tale of Peter Rabbit – including a handwritte­n note by Beatrix Potter saying “please buy it somebody”– is to go up for sale.

The book from the second printing is just one of 250 copies and could fetch as much as £30,000 when it goes up for auction.

Dated February 1902, the first edition also includes a rare note from the author herself.

Potter wrote: “Whilst strenuousl­y denying that my name is in anyway ‘distinguis­hed’ I believe it is familiar amongst the children of many lands.

“Mayi hope that some good american will give a good price for this little book?

“It is a genuine curiosity, one of 500 privately printed copies off Peter Rabbit; which had failed to find a publisher – The first imprint – I think 250 was printed in Dec 1901 and a further 200 (250?) in Feb 1902.

“Please buy it somebody, in aid of a noble cause.

“Beatrix Potter.

“With further handwritte­n note on inside front cover From Beatrix Potter, Oct 11. 1918, In aid of the Scottish Women’s Hospitals.”

The book will be sold by Great Western Auctions in Glasgow on March 23.

Potter (1866-1943) spent long family summer holidays as a child in Birnam, Perthshire.

Playing on the banks of the River Tay, her interest in the natural world around her developed and evolved into a lifelong passion.

Peter Rabbit is Beatrix Potter’s most famous character and first appeared in a picture letter she wrote in 1893.

The letter was illustrate­d with the drawings that years later would feature in her first published book, The Tale of Peter Rabbit.

Initially unable to find a publisher, Potter had her book printed privately herself.

The first impression, printed in December 1901, was an edition of 250.

Potter gifted them to family and friends but also sold some copies.

Within two weeks the book had proved so popular that Potter commission­ed a second impression to be printed, ready in February 1902.

It was later that year, in October that a regular trade edition was released by the publisher Frederick Warne and proved to be a best-seller.

Other highlights of the sale will include three works by Phoebe Anna Traquair, who achieved internatio­nal recognitio­n for her role in the Arts and Crafts movement in Scotland, as an illustrato­r, painter and embroidere­r.

 ?? Picture: SWNS. ?? Auctioneer Claire Godwyn at Great Western Auctions inspects the rare Beatrix Potter first edition of The Tale of Peter Rabbit.
Picture: SWNS. Auctioneer Claire Godwyn at Great Western Auctions inspects the rare Beatrix Potter first edition of The Tale of Peter Rabbit.

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