<p>A copy of the first collection of plays by William Shakespeare was sold Wednesday for $9.97 million at auction in New York, setting a new record for a work of literature.</p>.<p>The price paid for the work, widely known as the First Folio exceeded by far the estimated range of $4-6 million set by Christie's, which held the auction.</p>.<p>The collection, printed in 1623 and containing 36 plays by the English master, is frequently described as the greatest literary work in the English language.</p>.<p>It was published after the death of the Bard, who lived from 1564 until 1616, and was compiled by two of his friends, John Heminge and Henry Condell.</p>.<p>It contains major works which would probably have been lost were it not the collection, including <em>Macbeth</em> and <em>Twelfth Night</em>.</p>.<p>Several books have brought in higher prices, such as the Codex Leicester of Leonardo De Vinci, which Bill Gates bought for $30.8 million in 1994.</p>.<p>But none is a literary work of fiction.</p>
<p>A copy of the first collection of plays by William Shakespeare was sold Wednesday for $9.97 million at auction in New York, setting a new record for a work of literature.</p>.<p>The price paid for the work, widely known as the First Folio exceeded by far the estimated range of $4-6 million set by Christie's, which held the auction.</p>.<p>The collection, printed in 1623 and containing 36 plays by the English master, is frequently described as the greatest literary work in the English language.</p>.<p>It was published after the death of the Bard, who lived from 1564 until 1616, and was compiled by two of his friends, John Heminge and Henry Condell.</p>.<p>It contains major works which would probably have been lost were it not the collection, including <em>Macbeth</em> and <em>Twelfth Night</em>.</p>.<p>Several books have brought in higher prices, such as the Codex Leicester of Leonardo De Vinci, which Bill Gates bought for $30.8 million in 1994.</p>.<p>But none is a literary work of fiction.</p>