Rabbi Price was known for his impressive collection of rabbinic materials. By 1950 The
Toronto Daily Star reported on his library: As Rabbi A. A. Price works in his study on
Palmerston Blvd., he is surrounded by what is probably the largest private library of
Hebrew books on this continent, a total of 2,200 volumes. Among them is one published in Italy 416 years ago and written by Benjamin Zev, a physician and scholar. There is only on other copy of Zev's book know to exist and it is in the
British Museum.... Rabbi Price's present library represents less than half of the original collection owned by the Polish-born, 51-year-old rabbi. He had them brought over after he decided to extend a visit to Toronto in 1935 into a permanent stay. The rest of his books were destroyed in Paris by the Germans a week before the French capital was liberated. His brother and sister were killed in France by the
Nazis, and recently an orphaned niece arrived in Toronto. After his death, more than 3,000 items from his collection of rabbinical works, some of them very old, were donated to the
University of Toronto Library. Many of his older books are now held at the Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library at the University of Toronto in the Price Collection of Rabbinics. == Writings ==