If you could only have one pearl book, which would it be?

Sea Urchin

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 7, 2012
Messages
1,075
I saw "Pearls" listed here and a couple others but I'm wondering if they are ever updated? It seems there have been so many recent improvements with pearls that I'm wondering if the "classics" are really the ones I would enjoy reading the most. Any thoughts?
 
I think "Pearls" by Elisabeth Strack is still the gold standard:
http://store.gia.edu/Pearls_by_Elisabeth_Strack_p/0201056.htm

0201056-2.jpg
 
Easily Strack's Pearls- by far the most detailed and comprehensive tome out there. I refer to it all the time.
 
Strack has been working on an updated version, but the basics will be the same. There have been new developments in pearls that she didn't cover. At her Tucson lecture last year, she said she will never catch up because as soon as it is published, she learns more about the newest pearls. If there is no word sooner, we can ask her how long before it is published at her lecture in Tucson next year.

However, this forum is very up to date and can provide information on the newest trends and developments at the time they first appear, which is often before they get on the market. So between Strack and this forum, you can give yourself the best pearl education possible without paying for the GIA course-(which is good if you are a professional pearl person).
 
For me it would be Kunz & Stevenson's "The Book of the Pearl", I just love the "turn-o'-the-Century" (20th Century, that is) feel to it.
 
The Book of the pearl is my favorite pearl book, but it is only for natural pearls, thus, Strack. The book is now a Dover book, which means there are no copyrights. Dover reprints only books out of copyright and other noncopyrighted things like coloring book from Aztec DEsigns or many other designs. Anyone can print anything they like out of it. Photos, etc.
 
GIA is currently out of stock on Pearls, but I may have tracked down a copy elsewhere (waiting for my email to be answered). I'll save the others mentioned here for later. It is really hard to find! Thanks, all. :)
 
I agree that the Strack book is the one to get if you can. But I've also enjoyed reading the fascinating and beautifully illustrated:

Pearls: A Natural History
by Landman and Mikkelsen
Pearl Buying Guide by Renee Newman (current/5th edition)
People and Pearls: The Magic Endures by Hackney and Edkins

and one about conch pearls that is apparently very pricey these days:
Pink Pearl: A Natural Treasure of the Caribbean
 
Hi... I am just a common person who likes pearls, not like the pros here who are gemologists. From that perspective and for enjoyment reading about pearls, I like Pearls, A Natural History by Landmann and Mikkelsen. For lots of nice pictures, I like Girls in Pearls, by Lanfranconi. Tiffany Pearls by Loring is also good for a history of pearls and nice pictures, but of course they are biased with Tiffany pearl pictures. I also like People and Pearls. If you are a consumer like me, after reading these books, you really get to appreciate long strands of pearls!

Two more books that I like are:
The Book of the Pearl - This book was written in 1906, so it's a very old book. Very good history and techincal info of pearls, but the photos are very old and black and white (at least the version I have). This is a serious pearl book, more for education and not so much for enjoyment in my opinon. But very very educational.

Tears of Mermaids - This is fun book, not so much educational like The Book of the Pearl, or pearl eye-candy like the earlier books I mentioned, but a fun story about a man on a quest to track down the supply chain of a pearl before it gets to a buyer like me. I found it quite interesting, especially when he talks more about the trade in various regions like China and Australia.
 
Hi all... Speaking of the Elizabeth Strack book, can a regular person like me order it? I can't find it online, and I have been searching for a couple of months. I also emailed the ID, but I never got a response back. Is this book only limited to members of the trade? I would love to get a copy and read it since it is so highly recommended. Thank you for any help.
 
Hi.. thank you. I sent an email a while ago, but never heard back. I just sent another email and will call tomorrow, although I know they may have been impacted by Hurricane Sandy as they are in NYC. Thank you for the advice.
 
Tears of Mermaids - This is fun book, not so much educational like The Book of the Pearl, or pearl eye-candy like the earlier books I mentioned, but a fun story about a man on a quest to track down the supply chain of a pearl before it gets to a buyer like me. I found it quite interesting, especially when he talks more about the trade in various regions like China and Australia.

This book is the worst pearl book I have ever read. Not one photo, lots of gossip about the people he meets, all of them, he interjects his personal whines everywhere, though I think that is to prove he can do the new style journalism where the journalist is the real story, no matter what the subject of the story.

He does not know pearls even after he wasted his publish or perish money. This book was nothing but a journalism teacher hoping to upgrade his college level job, and it must be because he didn't get tenure at U of Iowa.

I personally dislike it that he has made in into our forum in any form.

BTW All his reviewers were new style journalism academics, judging his quality of writing, not his fact finding. But, the book was full of typos and editing mistakes. See Doug Fiske s (retired GIA official,specialist in pearls), review of it in our news and articles section. His publisher didn't even give him a real editor!

And further more he believed that Zeide Esrkine's freshadama necklace was the actual Mikimoto necklace featured in an early 20th century trial in France over the right of cultured pearl people to use the word pearl, without the qualifier "cultured". That story is a fantasy and so are the pearls.

I better quit before I get mad. LOL! Thanks for the opportunity to cream steve bloom, again.
 
This book is the worst pearl book I have ever read. Not one photo, lots of gossip about the people he meets, all of them, he interjects his personal whines everywhere, though I think that is to prove he can do the new style journalism where the journalist is the real story, no matter what the subject of the story.

He does not know pearls even after he wasted his publish or perish money. This book was nothing but a journalism teacher hoping to upgrade his college level job, and it must be because he didn't get tenure at U of Iowa.

I personally dislike it that he has made in into our forum in any form.

BTW All his reviewers were new style journalism academics, judging his quality of writing, not his fact finding. But, the book was full of typos and editing mistakes. See Doug Fiske s (retired GIA official,specialist in pearls), review of it in our news and articles section. His publisher didn't even give him a real editor!

And further more he believed that Zeide Esrkine's freshadama necklace was the actual Mikimoto necklace featured in an early 20th century trial in France over the right of cultured pearl people to use the word pearl, without the qualifier "cultured". That story is a fantasy and so are the pearls.

I better quit before I get mad. LOL! Thanks for the opportunity to cream steve bloom, again.

Hi.. that was funny how you didn't like the book. I guess it is a blend of fact and fiction. But as I recall, he did speak highly of you in the book!
 
Willeyi, I just got an email from Charon that my book (Pearls) is on the way, if that helps.

And thanks again for all the help, everyone. :)
 
Last edited:
LOL! That's is why I read on, getting more and more perplexed at the more and more snarky things he said. And he gets snarkier at each pearl stop always thinking, that is not the person I know (except for Zeide to whom he was much too gallant!) As far as snark goes I got the least of it, of anyone until the last person. Too bad he didn't get to her first- she was the geographically nearest to his last teaching job. Contrary to the title, his book had no romance at all. He was like a disrespectful anthropologist poking into a foreign world and treading without respect, then reporting foolishness...

So the mermaid never cried for him. His book is without soul.

Ok, so what? so are Kitty Kelly's gossip tracts.

When dealing with such a profound subject as pearls, their history and mystery, there was room for passion and high contrast and humility, Storms and Shakespearean prose, not to mention true comedy, like laughing at himself comedy- the mysteries of the pearl allow that.

Oh. I forgot about his return to the theme of the cocaine trade over and over. What did he know about that? Beyond Johnny Depp's movie about Jorge Jung? Or even the book it was based upon? Why didn't he do the research for learning the cocaine trade before he used it as a metaphor, as though pearls pearls were an illegal highly refined super-sugar from which you must always crash?

Perhaps the trade in cocaine has borrowed from other trades in the underground, but that was rarely the pearl's position in trade. On the contrary, pearls were acquired, sometimes in far away lands, moved out of the shadows of the trader's gowns and into the hands of royals and those the royals bestowed upon others. Every king had a pearl procurer, sometimes the same pearlman moved between many kings- Tavernier already wrote that book, but his was an ancient path, followed since trade began. Not illegal trade. The heart of the natural pearl trade today is the same as it has always been, secret and discreet.

On the other hand, cultured pearls are a perfectly legitimate business carried out by farmers, corporations with factories and craftsman, and then sold to importers, then distributors then wholesale retailers and buyers. As far as business goes, he could have studied any legal market goods, say pajamas, made in foreign countries and our own land. But he did not intend to get scholarly or intend to say anything new or well put. Or even make a point about pearls. It was an utterly foolish book.

If only Douglas McClaren had written the book! He has a passion and knowledge of pearls comparable to none, is an excellent scholar and writer in two languages, but, alas, he labors at his tiny pearl farm producing a few kilos of incomparable pearls a year and sweating the bills and the hurricanes hoping only to feed his family with two other jobs and hang on another year. Why didn't he get the commission and the cash? And the fame and royalties? He would make royalties because everyone in the pearl world and in his own country has respect for him and would love to learn about pearls from him.

But no, some dude doing time at Iowa Aggie needs to get out bad and get a teaching appt where he can raise his kid in a city. He already wrote about the only interesting thing in Iowa, the Hasidic-run slaughter houses, so he cooked up this idea one night as he was almost asleep and he remembered the clickclick of his mothers pearls-and he was off an running. He unfortunately took his jaundiced view with him.
 
Back
Top