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Tolkien Letter to be auctioned on the 12th April

13 Mar, 2024 (edited)
2024-3-13 6:59:24 AM UTC

Lot 85 - J.R.R Tolken Letter Dated December 28th 1961 to Chris in reply to letter sent when 8 years old

Letter from J.R.R. Tolkien to Christopher Howard • 28 December 1961 (#2026)



A touching letter sent by one of the greatest authors of all time to a little boy 63 years ago is expected to spark an auction bidding battle.

During Christmas in 1961 J.R.R. Tolkien, the ‘father of fantasy literature’ and author of The Hobbit and The Lord Of The Rings, took time out to write to a young fan.

The letter was sent to Christopher Howard when he was eight years old, above. It was a late and unexpected festive surprise for the amazed and delighted youngster, who took great pleasure showing it to his family, friends and teachers.

After a while the treasured letter was placed in his keepsakes’ box where it has remained for six decades, only coming out about 20 years ago to be digitally scanned. Christopher, 71, a renewable energy consultant from Wye, near Canterbury, Kent, has now decided the time has come to let his incredible letter go.

It will be offered at Hertfordshire Auction House Hanson Ross on April 12 with a guide price of £8,000-£10,000. However, it could exceed expectations. In 2023 a lengthy autograph Tolkien letter, sent to his publisher, achieved a premium inclusive total of $32,500 (£25,671) at auction.

Christopher said: “Back in 1961 we were living in the North West of England at the curious address you can see on the envelope, ‘Asmall Lodge, Asmall Lane, Ormskirk, Lancashire’. My mother was an English teacher who would read bedtime stories to my younger brother and I, and when we were aged six and eight she started reading The Hobbit to us.

“I quickly realised I wanted to read it myself, which I did. The magical effect of reading words that created pictures in my mind amazed me. I could see the dragon, Smaug, in his lair, the Dwarves in their mountain halls, Wizards, Orcs and of course, Hobbits.

“I needed to know if the author had written any more books full of such thrilling adventures, and therefore wrote a letter to him which mum sent to his publisher, George Allen & Unwin. They passed it on to Professor Tolkien, who replied in a letter dated December 28, 1961.

“You can imagine how thrilled I was to receive this letter. Immediately, on seeing the envelope, in my mind Professor Tolkien’s beautiful handwriting transported our home straight to Middle Earth. It became, ‘A small Lodge, A small Lane, Ormskirk, Lancashire’.

“In his reply, he took time to carefully address every point in my letter, referred to my younger brother Nicky, mentioned characters in The Hobbit, and informed me in detail about the other book – or books – he had written, The Lord Of The Rings.”

The lengthy private letter, beautifully hand-written by fountain pen on headed paper, displays Tolkien’s Oxford address – 76 Sandfield Road, Headington – and his phone number.

Amanda Butler, head of operations at Hanson Ross, said: “It’s a wonderful find, a very touching, kind and personal letter. It reminds us of the art of letter-writing in a fast-paced world now dominated by emails and short and snappy text or WhatsApp messages.

“Professor Tolkien was a busy man and yet he found time at Christmas to write this delightful letter to a young fan. It’s hard to imagine any celebrity today composing something so special. The fact that our vendor has treasured the letter for life underlines its importance. It offers us a glimpse of Tolkien’s kindness and integrity and is a welcome reminder of old-fashioned values and courtesy. We very much hope to deliver the auction result it deserves.”

John Ronald Reuel Tolkien CBE (1892-1973) was an English academic, philologist and author of high fantasy works The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. From 1925-1945, he was the Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of Anglo-Saxon and a Fellow of Pembroke College at the University of Oxford. From 1945 to retirement in 1959 he was the Merton Professor of English Language and Literature and Fellow of Merton College, also at the University of Oxford. Tolkien was a close friend of fellow author C. S. Lewis and co-member of informal literary discussion group The Inklings

Though other authors had published works of fantasy before Tolkien, the great success of The Hobbit followed by the huge impact of The Lord Of The Rings led to a resurgence of the genre. As a result, he is regarded as the ‘father’ of modern fantasy literature and one of the most influential authors of all time.

Auction: The J.R.R. Tolkien letter will by auctioned on April 12 at Hanson Ross, Royston, Hertfordshire.

https://hansonsauctioneers.co.uk/hobbi ... -to-spark-auction-battle/

https://hansonslive.hansonsauctioneers ... log%2Fid%2F497%3Fpage%3D2

Estimate GBP 8,000 - 10,000
Sold for GBP 10,884 including premium
Gallery

10_65f14fd11d19a.jpg 437X547 px
13 Mar, 2024
2024-3-13 7:34:25 AM UTC
This was before the Ace Books affair, and before fans became so numerous and prevalent (and pestering) that Tolkien had to be more picky with his replies. It certainly is a lovely and careful letter.

An interesting project would be to note down, where at all possible, the ages (or estimated ages) of the recipients of letters over time among fans (so, leaving out people like Stanley Unwin, or Christopher etc). Or at the very least, a child/teenager-YA/adult/older-adult breakdown. And see what sort of results one gets over the years that Tolkien was responding (of course, the selection is somewhat biased due to the selectivity of what letters we know about, who is likely to keep them, and so on).
15 Mar, 2024
2024-3-15 4:49:28 PM UTC
deciding it was time to let this letter go troubles me. perhaps because I am deeply selfish. I could never imagine letting a letter written by Tolkien to me to be sold off. I hope at least the money will be for something good.
15 Mar, 2024
2024-3-15 4:59:40 PM UTC

toothsayer wrote:

deciding it was time to let this letter go troubles me. perhaps because I am deeply selfish. I could never imagine letting a letter written by Tolkien to me to be sold off. I hope at least the money will be for something good.

Obviously we welcome these sorts of items being sold as it means we can detail them. Of course each person will feel different but I think after a certain time, and he has had this letter for 63 years, I would consider that a letter was more worthwhile if it were known, and I could enjoy some proceeds from said letter. Lots of people decide to sell off items of interest as they get older because they don't wish to leave such decisions to family, and perhaps he will enjoy treating his family with the proceeds from the sale.

We had a lovely gentleman allow us to detail his letter on the Guide, including transcribing it and for the first time he was able to read a complete transcript of that letter, one he had owned for many decades. Letting these things into the wider world can be a very good thing, not just for the financial return.

But I totally get your point and I imagine that many people did not contact Humphrey Carpenter for the same reasons. People feel protective over the contents. I hope we see many more in the coming years though so that we can detail them.
6 Apr, 2024
2024-4-6 12:53:04 PM UTC
12 Apr, 2024
2024-4-12 8:59:05 AM UTC
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