
Four childhood friends — bonded years ago by a strange, telepathic gift that grew from their friendship with a special boy named Duddits — reunite for their annual hunting trip in the snowbound Maine woods. When a disoriented, ailing stranger stumbles into their camp, the men find themselves at the center of something vast and terrifying descending on the wilderness, and the old connection that made them more than ordinary may be the only thing standing between them and what's coming.
Significance King's first novel written after the 1999 van accident that nearly killed him (drafted longhand during recovery); adapted into the 2003 Lawrence Kasdan film starring Morgan Freeman, Thomas Jane, and Timothy Olyphant.
Full wraparound art by Cliff Nielsen: dark, snowbound New England forest / wintry horror imagery wrapping front to back, title and author in large display type on the front, spine, and continuing across the rear. Front flap carries the $28.00 price; rear flap carries the King author photo and bio. Moody, photographic-illustrative style consistent with early-2000s Scribner King jackets.
Art / design: Wraparound jacket illustration by Cliff Nielsen (atmospheric snowy-woods/horror art). Jacket design per Scribner art department (designer not separately confirmed — UNVERIFIED). Rear-flap author photo of Stephen King.
Title verified as the correct book in hand: Stephen King, Dreamcatcher, Scribner (New York), 2001, hardcover, ISBN 0743211383, $28.00, 620pp, full-number-line "1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2" first edition/first printing.\n\nHEADLINE: No specific announced or reported first-printing quantity for the Scribner trade hardcover could be found. The dedicated Stephen King first-edition collector reference (stephenkingcollector.com) explicitly lists the first edition as \"A first edition of ??? copies\" — i.e., the print run is unknown/unpublished. Publishers Weekly's 2001 review notes only a marketing detail (\"One-day laydown, Mar. 20\"), not a print-run number. Wikipedia, the Stephen King Fandom wiki, and multiple rare-book dealers (Rare Book Cellar, John Atkinson Books, Biblio, AbeBooks listings) give publication points but NO copy count. No contemporary trade-press or news figure surfaced across multiple search formulations.\n\nCONTEXT (not a published Dreamcatcher figure — do not report as one): This was a mass-market Scribner release by King at the height of his commercial run, so the trade first printing was certainly very large (King major releases of that era are generally understood to have run in the high-hundreds-of-thousands to ~1M+ range), but Scribner did not publicly announce a Dreamcatcher first-printing number the way later King titles sometimes had laydown figures reported. Without a cited number, no figure is asserted.\n\nNO SMALL-PRESS LIMITED: Dreamcatcher is NOT a Donald M. Grant / small-press title and had no signed/numbered/lettered limited edition contemporaneous with the Scribner trade first — so there are no limited counts to break out. (The reference Carrie ~30,000 figure was deliberately not reused; it does not apply here.)\n\nNOTE: A separate signed first-edition variant exists in the trade run (some copies signed by King), but that reflects post-publication signings, not a distinct limited print run with a published count.
No widely-documented text errata / state change separates first-state from later first printings of Dreamcatcher (unlike, e.g., Scribner-era points on other titles). The decisive points are the dual "First Edition" + number-line combination on the copyright page plus the unclipped $28.00 jacket. UNVERIFIED as to any minor internal typo states — none is cataloged by the standard collector references consulted.
No signed/numbered slipcased or traycased limited edition was issued for the original 2001 first release (no Donald M. Grant / Cemetery Dance / Subterranean deluxe at publication). Signed trade first-edition copies exist (King in-person signatures) but are not a separate "limited." A later "New Cover Series" art-cover reissue (Glenn Chadbourne / Cemetery Dance, artist-signed) is a DIFFERENT later product, not the first edition.
$75–175 (true first, fine/fine, unclipped $28 jacket); signed copies $300–700
Assumes a genuine first edition / first printing in near-fine to fine condition (clean copy, unclipped jacket). Lesser condition is worth less.
Confirmed sales: Dealer-graded retail records (no public Heritage/PBA standalone lot found — this is a common book that rarely auctions on its own): Fine/Near-Fine in NF jacket offered ~$153 and ~$125 (rarebookcellar.com / abebooks dealer listings, 2024–2025); VG copies ~$130 (abebooks, 2025); eBay verified true-first HC/DJ completed sales typically settle ~$30–80 unsigned (eBay sold, 2024–2025). Signed: Bauman Rare Books twice-signed copy (title page dated 09/24/02) carried at the high-hundreds (baumanrarebooks.com). Treat the under-$80 eBay band as the realistic SOLD floor for unsigned; the $125–175 dealer figures are retail, not auction-hammer.
Book-club edition (the trap): $8–20. The Book-of-the-Month / book club hardcover is the trap and is near-worthless. Book club copies are markedly SMALLER trim (~1/3 the bulk of the "encyclopedia-sized" trade first), have a blind-stamp/dot on the lower rear board, NO $28.00 price on the jacket flap (or a clipped/blank flap), and lack the full number line. — a fraction of a true first; never pay first-edition money for one.
THE single biggest separator for THIS title: it is a Scribner book, so ignore any "Doubleday gutter code" talk — the true first is identified by the full number line "1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2" on the copyright page (presence of the "1") PLUS the $28.00 price intact on the front jacket flap and purple-spine/blue-board cloth. The most common mislisting is the BOOK CLUB edition passed off as a first: spot it by the smaller trim size and the blind-stamp dot on the rear board. Condition sensitivity is extreme because the book is common — a clipped jacket, ex-library markings, or remainder mark drops it to near-melt ($15–40); only a genuinely Fine/Fine, unclipped copy holds the $75–175 range. A verified Stephen King signature is the one thing that multiplies value (roughly 4–6x, into the $300–700+ band; King signs less now post-stroke, so authenticated autographs carry a real premium). Beware "signed" copies without provenance — King forgeries are common.
Verification notes: Cross-checked price ($28.00, front flap) and number line ("1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2") against at least two independent sources (rarebookcellar.com listing snippet + abebooks/ebay dealer descriptions surfaced in search). Binding colors (blue boards, purple spine, silver lettering) confirmed in two separate search snippets. ISBN 0-7432-1136-3 / 9780743211383 confirmed. BCE "~1/3 smaller" tell confirmed via Bookshop Apocalypse BCE listing. Jacket artist Cliff Nielsen from search synthesis only — flag as medium confidence pending a primary-source photo credit.