The Art and Science of Grading Coins
C**D
All Beginning coin collectors should read this book
I highly recommend this book for all beginner and most intermediate coin collectors. Jason Poe is a physicist and long time coin collector, who shares his knowledge and experience in this book. Basically, a collector has to be able to grade a coin in order to put a price on it. The grade depends on wear, luster, marks, eye appeal, and strike. Poe discusses how to evaluate these important aspects in an organized method, and near the end of the book pulls it all together into a systematic method. Along the way, the collector will learn about processes of die preparation and coin production, as well as things that are done to coins that affect their grade and value, such as cleaning and other alterations. This book is a fine companion to standard grading guides such as the ANA's or Photograde because it explains "why" coins look the way they do. Add a copy of Roger Burdette's "From Mine to Mint" to these and a beginning collector will have the start of a reference set that will serve them well for years. Some may be critical that the photo illustrations in the book are black and white, but they actually tie in well to the text and successfully illustrate the points that Poe is trying to make. There is a useful discussion of the Sheldon Grading scale and also of "market grading," and a glossary at the back of the book . At less than $20, this book is an excellent value.
K**N
Your first coin book
Or at least it should be the second right after the Red Book. This book does an excellent job of teaching what to look for and what the characteristics are of the metals used to create coins. I highly recommend it.
P**E
Excellent Overview of Grading Principles
I wish I had found this book a couple years ago, as it provides an easy to read and succinct explanation of how coins are graded. I am now more able to accurately grade my coins. The explanation about die states helped me understand how people know if a coin was struck late in the die's life; the chapters on strike and luster have helped me differentiate wear versus a weak strike. My only criticism of the book is that all the pictures, except those on the cover, are in black and white. At times I struggled to see what the teaching point in the picture was since there was no color. Other than that, I highly recommend this book.
L**3
A must for coin collectrs.
Purchased on Kindle. Great knowledge for coin collectors.
T**R
Kindle review of the Art and Sciience of Grading Coins
Great book for its technical but Kindle version leave a big void.. My hope Kindle would have done a much better job showing the photos allowing the reader to expand and zoom these pictures. The author has worked hard to show the reason and attributes of their conclusions only to not be seen the readers. If these would have been well done I would have rated this a 5. I would not recommend Kindle version for the novice.
H**S
Five Stars
Excellent and easy read!! Thanks for the research time put into this book.Bud
A**R
Five Stars
Excellent!
A**R
Finally
Yes, Finally a book on grading focused on something other than Morgan's. Lots of info relevant to Franklins half dollars.
J**R
Great guide for grading coins or any country
Wonderful book that deals with how to grade coins. The examples are USA coins but it really doesn't matter. I'm grading CDN coins and the information is exactly what you need to give you that little extra push to justify a hard grading session.
D**O
Excelent start
It is the first book I read on heading, but I can tell it was an excellent source of information for starters, covering all topics regarding to grading, including luster, marks, strike, eye appeal and a system to grade.Also it gives you a general view on net grading and third part graders' choice for value grading over technical grading.I feel I can start grading my first coins after reading this book.
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