I would offer no more than £5000 for it, prices have gone up recently, it would not have been as high as this last year.
Demis wrote:
What would you consider ‘fair’ ? He is offering it to me at 7.250£ / My view was that fair is circa £6.000
I'd personally wait for a copy that isn't coloured in. That kills the value. I'm with Trotter on his estimate.
I have to say that the (I think rather attractive) watercoloring of the one plate doesn't "kill the value" at all for me. If it were a childish crayon coloring, it would be another matter. In fact, if the previous owner had similarly colored all the plates, I'd consider that a bonus: an added layer of skilled art. (It's not like we can't find and see Tolkien's uncolored versions any time we want.)
That being said, I do think £8,000 is high for a copy sans dust jacket and with a crack starting.
Ultimately, though, a book is worth precisely as much as you are willing to pay for it: no more, no less.
That being said, I do think £8,000 is high for a copy sans dust jacket and with a crack starting.
Ultimately, though, a book is worth precisely as much as you are willing to pay for it: no more, no less.
Whilst you may like the watercolored version, Aelfwine, the market is very clear that deviations from original condition significantly affect market value relative to an otherwise identical unmodified example. Unless, of course, the deviation is in some way notable (e.g. if it had been coloured in by Tolkien). That's not my personal opinion, it is well established. What is an attractive embellishment to one is an eyesore to another.
As I said, Stu, it doesn't "kill the value" for me. I'm not talking about "the market", I'm talking about myself. Personally, I would advise against buying anything Tolkien on the basis of "the market" — which is too mercurial to justify any purchase, really. Buy what you value, for what you personally value it at. Anything else is very likely to result in disappointment.
Aelfwine wrote:
As I said, Stu, it doesn't "kill the value" for me. I'm not talking about "the market", I'm talking about myself. Personally, I would advise against buying anything Tolkien on the basis of "the market" — which is too mercurial to justify any purchase, really. Buy what you value, for what you personally value it at. Anything else is very likely to result in disappointment.
Sure, I do get that, but the OPs question was about what the book was worth (essentially what is a fair price). And without the market as a barometer for that, the question itself becomes meaningless as does any answer.