Posted on 07/09/2008 7:27:11 AM PDT by martin_fierro
Builder discovers "priceless" Tolkien postcard
By Mike Collett-White Tue Jul 8, 10:29 AM ET
LONDON (Reuters) - A demolition man stripping a fireplace from the former home of "The Lord of the Rings" author J.R.R. Tolkien stumbled across a postcard to the writer dated 1968, and hopes to sell it for a small fortune.
Stephen Malton, who runs Prodem Demolition in Bournemouth on the south English coast, was working in the house in the nearby town of Poole before it was bulldozed to make way for a new construction project.
"Before we demolish a house we do an internal strip out," Malton said Tuesday.
"One of the main features was a fireplace, and upon removing that we came across three postcards. The third one was a postcard dated 1968 and addressed to J.R.R. Tolkien."
Malton said research on the Internet suggested that the carved wooden fireplace with marble inlay, a feature of the house when Tolkien lived there from 1968 to 1972, was already worth up to $250,000.
"To tie in both the fireplace and the postcard, we are talking about a price of around $500,000 for the combined pair," the 42-year-old told Reuters by telephone.
He contacted the Tolkien Estate, which manages the author's copyrights, and said that they had given him the all clear to sell the fireplace and postcard. The estate could not immediately be reached for comment.
Malton said he would probably sell the items at auction, although according to local newspaper the Dorset Echo, he has already had an offer from a Tolkien enthusiast in Belgium.
The postcard was addressed to Tolkien at the Miramar Hotel in Bournemouth, where he and his wife Edith often stayed.
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"To tie in both the fireplace and the postcard, we are talking about a price of around $500,000 for the combined pair..."
You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.
Particularly if parts of a house come from a famous author. Some people take pride in owning something that belonged to a famous personage.
$250,000 for a postcard, not even written by the famous man in question? Puh-lease. The man is (hopefully) deluding himself.
Thanks for the ping! I love these threads.
Thank you.
Hmm...for something he thinks is “priceless” the feller sure seems to have had no hesitation in putting a hefty price on it. But I can go him one better - I have in my possession a postcard written to William Shakespeare by an adoring fan named Drill or somebody that I’d be happy to let go for a mere quarter-million buckadingdongs...just as soon as the ink dries...
Oh, I wasn’t talking about the postcard bringing much in the way of money. I was talking about preserving some of those architectural features in the house!
For a second, I thought that was the “P” word in the headline.
Must have been the same era when I was seeing “Frodo lives!” scrawled in subways and buses. My college had a whole “Middle Earth” complex of dorms.
No, you are FRodo. :)
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