Please Help Me Assess the Condition of this Hobbit
30 Apr, 2018
(edited)
2018-4-30 4:22:39 PM UTC
2018-4-30 4:22:39 PM UTC
Greetings!
It has always been a dream to own the 1st Edition 1st Impression the Hobbit in a near-fine dust jacket. Although the pricing is still out of range, I am currently eyeing several of the books that seem to fit my "condition requirements" and I figured it would be best to seek expert opinions from true Tolkien bibliophiles here.
With complete disregard to the listed pricing, the seller of the book, and its provenance, I would be most grateful if you guys could give me an honest assessment of the condition of this book.
The condition of the book is described as follows:
"Jacket has minor conservation re-enforcement to spine head, jacket corners and to two small closed tears and corners to stop further tattering, though we do not conisder this restoration, but to provide support to avoid further tearing. Hardly detectable except under bright light"
Further description is given on the other site:
"Fine book and fine original dust jacket with minor restoration to spine head and corners. Book is very clean, has small owners signature to inside cover, slight reading curve to spine, no other flaws. Jacket has minor conservation repairs mostly to spine head, jacket corners."
Would you guys consider the condition of the dust-jacket of this Hobbit as "near-fine?" Several of the conservation work has been performed as stated on the description and "minor restoration" to spine head and corners. Would you guys consider such conservation/restoration work done, too extensively done and could adversely affect the value of the book or is the conservation work so minor that other bibliophiles will be indifferent to it (and does not adversely affect the value)?
I consorted one of the most esteemed members from Grolier Club and upon brief examination, he seems to be OK with such minor restoration/conservation work done on the dust-jacket and believes such work would not decrease the value of this copy; "The small repairs to reenforce tears in the dust-jacket is not a serious problem to me, as there is theoretically no missing paper that has been supplied in actually restoring any missing printed area."
Also having examined several of the most recent sales made in Sotheby's and Freeman Auction, it seems like books with similar restoration/conservation work have been sold successfully, meeting the high-end estimates or even surpassing the original estimates.
If I were to purchase the Hobbit with DJ, most likely this will be the last purchase of the Hobbit in my lifetime, as I will be moving onto collecting other titles. The fact that I do not own the copy keeps me sleepless at nights! Would this qualify as a "near-fine" dust jacket, worthy of being labelled as the "grail piece" to any Tolkien collectors?
Please help!
It has always been a dream to own the 1st Edition 1st Impression the Hobbit in a near-fine dust jacket. Although the pricing is still out of range, I am currently eyeing several of the books that seem to fit my "condition requirements" and I figured it would be best to seek expert opinions from true Tolkien bibliophiles here.
With complete disregard to the listed pricing, the seller of the book, and its provenance, I would be most grateful if you guys could give me an honest assessment of the condition of this book.
The condition of the book is described as follows:
"Jacket has minor conservation re-enforcement to spine head, jacket corners and to two small closed tears and corners to stop further tattering, though we do not conisder this restoration, but to provide support to avoid further tearing. Hardly detectable except under bright light"
Further description is given on the other site:
"Fine book and fine original dust jacket with minor restoration to spine head and corners. Book is very clean, has small owners signature to inside cover, slight reading curve to spine, no other flaws. Jacket has minor conservation repairs mostly to spine head, jacket corners."
Would you guys consider the condition of the dust-jacket of this Hobbit as "near-fine?" Several of the conservation work has been performed as stated on the description and "minor restoration" to spine head and corners. Would you guys consider such conservation/restoration work done, too extensively done and could adversely affect the value of the book or is the conservation work so minor that other bibliophiles will be indifferent to it (and does not adversely affect the value)?
I consorted one of the most esteemed members from Grolier Club and upon brief examination, he seems to be OK with such minor restoration/conservation work done on the dust-jacket and believes such work would not decrease the value of this copy; "The small repairs to reenforce tears in the dust-jacket is not a serious problem to me, as there is theoretically no missing paper that has been supplied in actually restoring any missing printed area."
Also having examined several of the most recent sales made in Sotheby's and Freeman Auction, it seems like books with similar restoration/conservation work have been sold successfully, meeting the high-end estimates or even surpassing the original estimates.
If I were to purchase the Hobbit with DJ, most likely this will be the last purchase of the Hobbit in my lifetime, as I will be moving onto collecting other titles. The fact that I do not own the copy keeps me sleepless at nights! Would this qualify as a "near-fine" dust jacket, worthy of being labelled as the "grail piece" to any Tolkien collectors?
Please help!