Books : Beckett Baseball Card Price Guide (No 19)
from: House of Collectibles
Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 796
EAN: 9781887432269
ISBN: 1887432264
Label: House of Collectibles
Manufacturer: House of Collectibles
Publication Date: 1997-04
Publisher: House of Collectibles
Sales Rank: 3796158
Studio: House of Collectibles
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Editorial Review:
Product Description: [ ] EXPANSIVE. More than 290,000 prices listed!
[ ] COMPREHENSIVE. Complete listings from 1948 to 1997, featuring current market values for the following complete sets and individual cardsĀ *plus many, many more:
BOWMANSCORE
COLLECTORS CHOICE SELECT
DONRUSSSP
EXTRA BASESSTADIUM CLUB
FINEST STUDIP
FLAIRTOPPS
FLEERTRIPLE PLAY
LEAF ULTRA
PINNACLEUPPER DECK
[ ] WRITTEN BY THE EXPERT DEALERS RELY ON! Dr. James Beckett is the leading authority on baseball card prices.
[ ] CLEAR IDENTIFICATION. Every baseball card is identified by year, manufacturer, size, format, and player.
[ ] VALUABLE TIPS. Professional advice on buying, selling, caring for, and storing your cards.
[ ] CARD COLLECTING HISTORY. All the facts you need to know, from the early days of baseball until today.
[ ] CONDITION GRADE PRICING. Beckett's state-of-the-art system for accurately identifying values based on grade and condition.
[ ] INVENTORY CHECKLIST. A great feature for quick and easy cataloging.
HOUSE OF COLLECTIBLES
Serving collectors for more than thirty-five years
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
My son and the neighbors boys have not stopped looking up the
value of their precious collectibles. It is easy to use. Some of their cards are worth 7 cents and some several hundred dollars. They are having a blast with it. My husband is enjoying it too. He is now lamenting losing one of his old Mickey Mantle cards.
I highly recommend it for your baseball card collectors, young or old.
Rating: -
I collected baseball cards in the late 1960s and early 1970s as a kid, mostly Topps. I re-opened my card collection in March 2008 after 35 years in the attic. The book doesn't doesn't have any logic or organization to it, and makes no sense. For example, if you're looking to price your Topps cards (as I suspect most people are), 1973, for example, you have to look under "1951 Topps Blue Backs" in the table of contents - bizarre. And good luck finding the table of contents sandwiched between more than 10 pages of advertisements. in the "How to Use this Book" section it starts "isn't this great" then continues, "every year this book gets better." Almost nothing on how to use the book.
Rating: -
This is a good product for the collector or dealer that that is interested in mainstream issues and the more widely known limited distribution sets.However if your interests are more ecclectic and you like the more obscure and less traded or sold products....forget it. For those people I suggest Sports Collectors Digest Standard Catalog of Baseball Cards.This is equally true of Becketts Price Guides for Football and Basketball.In short if you stick with Topps and the other nationally distributed sets Beckett is OK.If you are looking for regional or otherwise limited production products your wasting your time; SCD is MY choice.
Rating: -
I have bought Becket Guides before and this has information that you get for free. There is no pricing for Classic, Collectors or another words 1/2 the companies out there. Then in the companies that they show 1/2 the subset are missing A GREAT BIG RIP OFF!!!!!!!!!!!
Rating: -
This book essentially is a Beckett PLUS (which comes out every 2 months) with more details (such as every card in each set is listed). There aren't really any oddball sets priced, which I guess is what the Beckett Baseball Almanac is for. Overall the book is very useful since it gives complete checklists and some extra details about each set. I just wish more oddball sets were listed so I wouldn't have to buy the Almanac book as well.
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