Aller au contenu

Actualités Antiquarian Booksellers' Association

Revolutionary Highlights at Firsts London

From 14–17 May 2026, Firsts London returns to the Saatchi Gallery in Chelsea, bringing together around 100 international booksellers for one of the world’s leading rare book fairs. This year’s theme, Revolution, sets the tone for another bold edition of the fair.
Screenshot 2026 04 07 at 15 11 20

Rather than focusing on a single historical moment, the theme explores revolution in its broadest sense, political, cultural, social, and scientific, reflected in books, manuscripts, maps, and ephemera that have shaped, challenged, and redefined the world we live in.

From the American and French Revolutions to radical movements of the 20th century and groundbreaking scientific ideas, Firsts London 2026 promises to showcase material that not only documents change, but actively contributed to it. As Dame Mary Beard, an Honorary Graduate and supporter of Senate House Library, Charity Partner of the 2026 fair, says: "Revolutionary works on paper don’t just recount history – they create it. They show the courage of writers who reshaped ideas and overturned conventions, while imagining better futures. Firsts London celebrates these extraordinary treasures. It gives everyone – not only scholars – a chance to thrill to the dangerous power of words that changed the world."puts it, such works “don’t just recount history – they create it.”

Below is a selection of highlights from this year’s fair.

American Revolution

A letter by one of the Founding Fathers of the United States, Thomas Paine (1737-1809), whose publication of Common Sense and other pamphlets in the 1770s proved crucial in building support for independence, will be offered by Shapero Rare Books for a six figure sum. Paine was a French Revolutionary, inventor, political philosopher, and statesman, and this letter is from January 1797, written in Paris to Colonel John Fellows (1735-1808), who participated in several major battles during the American Revolutionary War. In this letter he discusses his publications and shares his view that George Washington should retire as president. A first American edition of Adam Smith's Theory of Moral Sentiments with an asking price of £15,000 will also be available.

Daniel Crouch will be bringing several Revolutionary War maps including a Plan of Boston and its Environs, which "reflects the true situation of His Majesty's Army and also those of the Rebels". It was drawn by an engineer in Boston in October 1775 and carries a price tag of £45,000. Quaritch is offering the first edition in book form of The Federalist Papers, the single most important work of American political philosophy, making the case for ratifying the US Constitution in the wake of the Revolution. This copy is preserved in its original boards, as issued, uncut and largely unopened.

A copper engraving by Edinburgh-born engraver and reform-leaning Whig Malcolm Rymer (1775-1835), printed on a vivid yellow silk "handkerchief" from 1812 maps the Age of Revolutions during the Reign of George III, including the American Revolution. This visually arresting and minutely detailed chronology presents two concentric spirals radiating from a central portrait of George III, offering a spectacular timeline of a half-century of conflict and "various administrations formed during his reign" embellished with portraits of the King, Pitt, Fox, Nelson, and Wellington. It is available at Peter Harrington Rare Books for £2,500.

French Revolution

Harrison-Hiett Rare Books will be selling a first edition of the scarce album Patrioty, Album politique et allégorique de 1850. It bears the arms of Guillaume Gabriel Pavée de Vendeuvre (1779–1870). Pavée de Vendeuvre was a deputy representing Aube, an industrialist, and noted bibliophile. He owned a Faience and a glass factory. The caricatures here would have appealed to him. Having served as an auditeur under Napoléon, he sat in constitutional opposition and notably signed the “Adresse des 221” that challenged Charles X (£1,150).

Fold the Corner Books offers a handwritten letter from a British spy during the French Revolution, recounting the events on the streets of Paris in January 1791. The first edition of Mary Wollstonecraft’s history of the French Revolution, will be available at Quaritch. The book is based in-part on her own observations in Paris in the 1790s – she was at first sympathetic to the cause but later appalled by the excesses of the Terror. This copy is annotated by William Michael Rossetti, and includes advertisements for Wollstonecraft’s own revolutionary work, A Vindication of the Rights of Woman.

Thomas Heneage Art Books is bringing a fascinating record of the systematic looting - or "extraction" as the French called it – of Italy during the Napoleonic conquest, printed prior to the looting of Florence and Naples in Venice in 1799. Page twelve alone lists the removal of the Apollo Belvedere and Laocoön from the Vatican and the four horses from St. Marks, Venice. The removal of art and antiquities began from the spring of 1796 until the Congress of Vienna ordered the restitution of the works in 1815. Over 110 artworks were brought to France from Italy in 1796 alone.

Camden Lock Books specialises in miniature books and among them is a beautifully bound work of a profoundly influential 19th-century Italian revolutionary called Silvio Pellico, a writer, poet, dramatist, and patriot active in the Italian unification. His activism led him to be arrested on the charge of being a member of a secret revolutionary society or carbonari, and was imprisoned for 15 years in Austrian dungeons for conspiring against Habsburg rule. 'Mes Prisons' is his memoir of that experience. As a seminal piece of prison literature, it connected the 'inside' of confinement to the 'outside' world, highlighting the power of writing as resistance. It is priced at £255.

Communist Revolutions

Quaritch will bring a copy of Zritel’, the literary and artistic journal printed, and indeed suppressed during the 1905 Revolution in Russia. It has striking illustrations printed in three colours, with its cover illustration depicting the alliance between workers, soldiers, and sailors and was confiscated by the authorities and shut down soon after this issue.

A very large Cultural Revolution parade banner is available at Peter Harrington Rare Books for £750. It is an imposing visual display of loyalty to Chairman Mao with him being shown in military uniform with red bars on his collar, in keeping with his belief that the Red Guards were revolutionary foot soldiers who should "bombard the headquarters".

A fantastic association copy of Cuban revolutionary Fidel Castro's conversations on religion with Dominican friar Frei Betto from 1985, warmly inscribed by Castro to the female revolutionary Asela de los Santos, is available at Fold the Corner Books for £2,000.

Other Revolutionary Items

In 1901, Mark Twain published a satirical essay in the North American Review titled “To the Person Sitting in Darkness”, which attacked American violence and imperialism in the Philippines. He concluded it by suggesting a new American flag, “with the white stripes painted black and the stars replaced by the skull and crossbones”. A Ramparts article by Twain critic Maxwell Geismar suggested that, had Twain been listened to, “the new century might have been spared 50 years... of what is essentially a race war under the guise of such ambiguous and shifting concepts of nationalism and capitalism” (p. 65). Peter Harrington Rare Books is offering an original flag produced in late 1960s San Francisco to protest American state-sanctioned violence, especially the war in Vietnam. It was probably created by staff of the left-wing magazine Ramparts, who used it as the cover image for their May 1968 issue (£2,750).

Lucius Books will bring the original album cover artwork for the U.S. issue of Jimi Hendrix's 1968 masterpiece, Electric Ladyland. This album fundamentally changed the landscape of rock music and studio production and pushed the boundaries of psychedelic rock, blues, and experimental soundscapes to new, futuristic heights. It was a groundbreaking album introducing audiences to a style of psychedelic rock rooted in the blues. There will be several dealers bringing items relating to the revolutionary movements during the 1960s and 1970s.

Among the scientific revolution items will be a first edition of Richard Dawkins's debut book The Selfish Gene which was published in 1976 and introduced the idea that evolution is best understood from the perspective of genes trying to replicate, rather than organisms struggling to survive. It debunked the then-popular idea that animals behave "for the good of the species," providing a clear, logical alternative centered on individual gene survival. On its 50th anniversary a copy will be available at Ashton Rare Books for £2,250.

And last but not least Butler Rare Books will show the earliest 'Book of the Dead' currently in private hands. All other pieces from the same manuscript as this one are all in museums. It is a large piece of Egyptian papyrus scroll dated c. 1,500 BC and has hieroglyphics and paintings of Anubis and Horus supervising the weighing of the heart against the figure of Maat.

The fair's Charity partner for 2026 is the Senate House Library and some of the library's huge archive of materials relating to the theme of revolution in all its forms – from Civil War to the Suffragettes will be on view during Firsts.

Fold the Corner Books offers a handwritten letter from a British spy during the French Revolution, recounting the events on the streets of Paris in January 1791. The first edition of Mary Wollstonecraft’s history of the French Revolution, will be available at Quaritch. The book is based in-part on her own observations in Paris in the 1790s – she was at first sympathetic to the cause but later appalled by the excesses of the Terror. This copy is annotated by William Michael Rossetti, and includes advertisements for Wollstonecraft’s own revolutionary work, A Vindication of the Rights of Woman.

Thomas Heneage Art Books is bringing a fascinating record of the systematic looting - or "extraction" as the French called it – of Italy during the Napoleonic conquest, printed prior to the looting of Florence and Naples in Venice in 1799. Page twelve alone lists the removal of the Apollo Belvedere and Laocoön from the Vatican and the four horses from St. Marks, Venice. The removal of art and antiquities began from the spring of 1796 until the Congress of Vienna ordered the restitution of the works in 1815. Over 110 artworks were brought to France from Italy in 1796 alone.

Thomas Heanage

Camden Lock Books specialises in miniature books and among them is a beautifully bound work of a profoundly influential 19th-century Italian revolutionary called Silvio Pellico, a writer, poet, dramatist, and patriot active in the Italian unification. His activism led him to be arrested on the charge of being a member of a secret revolutionary society or carbonari, and was imprisoned for 15 years in Austrian dungeons for conspiring against Habsburg rule. 'Mes Prisons' is his memoir of that experience. As a seminal piece of prison literature, it connected the 'inside' of confinement to the 'outside' world, highlighting the power of writing as resistance. It is priced at £255.

PC185665 81552162 dfff 4016 9e60 8c52e0e416a2

Communist Revolutions

Quaritch will bring a copy of Zritel’, the literary and artistic journal printed, and indeed suppressed during the 1905 Revolution in Russia. It has striking illustrations printed in three colours, with its cover illustration depicting the alliance between workers, soldiers, and sailors and was confiscated by the authorities and shut down soon after this issue.

A very large Cultural Revolution parade banner is available at Peter Harrington Rare Books for £750. It is an imposing visual display of loyalty to Chairman Mao with him being shown in military uniform with red bars on his collar, in keeping with his belief that the Red Guards were revolutionary foot soldiers who should "bombard the headquarters".

A fantastic association copy of Cuban revolutionary Fidel Castro's conversations on religion with Dominican friar Frei Betto from 1985, warmly inscribed by Castro to the female revolutionary Asela de los Santos, is available at Fold the Corner Books for £2,000.

Other Revolutionary Items

In 1901, Mark Twain published a satirical essay in the North American Review titled “To the Person Sitting in Darkness”, which attacked American violence and imperialism in the Philippines. He concluded it by suggesting a new American flag, “with the white stripes painted black and the stars replaced by the skull and crossbones”. A Ramparts article by Twain critic Maxwell Geismar suggested that, had Twain been listened to, “the new century might have been spared 50 years... of what is essentially a race war under the guise of such ambiguous and shifting concepts of nationalism and capitalism” (p. 65). Peter Harrington Rare Books is offering an original flag produced in late 1960s San Francisco to protest American state-sanctioned violence, especially the war in Vietnam. It was probably created by staff of the left-wing magazine Ramparts, who used it as the cover image for their May 1968 issue (£2,750).

Screenshot 2026 03 09 10 33 25

Lucius Books will bring the original album cover artwork for the U.S. issue of Jimi Hendrix's 1968 masterpiece, Electric Ladyland. This album fundamentally changed the landscape of rock music and studio production and pushed the boundaries of psychedelic rock, blues, and experimental soundscapes to new, futuristic heights. It was a groundbreaking album introducing audiences to a style of psychedelic rock rooted in the blues. There will be several dealers bringing items relating to the revolutionary movements during the 1960s and 1970s.

13012

Among the scientific revolution items will be a first edition of Richard Dawkins's debut book The Selfish Gene which was published in 1976 and introduced the idea that evolution is best understood from the perspective of genes trying to replicate, rather than organisms struggling to survive. It debunked the then-popular idea that animals behave "for the good of the species," providing a clear, logical alternative centered on individual gene survival. On its 50th anniversary a copy will be available at Ashton Rare Books for £2,250.

And last but not least Butler Rare Books will show the earliest 'Book of the Dead' currently in private hands. All other pieces from the same manuscript as this one are all in museums. It is a large piece of Egyptian papyrus scroll dated c. 1,500 BC and has hieroglyphics and paintings of Anubis and Horus supervising the weighing of the heart against the figure of Maat.

The fair's Charity partner for 2026 is the Senate House Library and some of the library's huge archive of materials relating to the theme of revolution in all its forms – from Civil War to the Suffragettes will be on view during Firsts.

Firsts London 2026 at Saatchi Gallery from 14 - 17 May

Firsts London is one of the world's most popular and high-profile rare book events. Whether you're a collector looking for the next masterpiece to add to your library, or a bibliophile who loves browsing second-hand classics, Firsts London is the event for you.
Discover titles by distinguished authors, ephemera from celebrity readers and manuscripts from history's great moments, all in the heart of Chelsea.

Opening hours are Thursday (14 May) 5pm to 9pm (Private View), Friday (15th May) 11am to 8pm, Saturday (16th May) 11am to 6pm and Sunday (17 May) 11am to 5pm.

Saatchi Gallery: Duke of York's Square, King's Road, London SW3 4RY

Senate House Library is the central library for the University of London and the School of Advanced Study. It is one of the UK's largest academic libraries for arts, humanities & social sciences. Members have access to beautiful study spaces in Central London, outstanding Arts, Humanities and Social Science, Special Collections, Archives, and digital resources.
https://www.london.ac.uk/about...