Rowling Chair Used To Write Two Harry Potter Books Goes Up For Auction With Letter From Author
J.K. Rowling’s chair that she sat on while writing the first two Harry Potter books is going up for auction. The item also comes with a long letter in which the author said she was sad to let it go, but has no use for it.
It was used by Rowling while she wrote Harry Potter And The Philosopher’s Stone and Harry Potter And The Chamber Of Secrets, according to USA Today.
James Gannon, director of rare books at Heritage Auctions, said: “This is a chair that JK Rowling wrote the first two Harry Potter books on. And it was in her government flat. It was given to her with a group of chairs. And this was the most comfortable so she used it to write the first two - she says in her letter that she parked it in front of her typewriter and it stayed there.”
Gannon admits the chair itself isn’t that valuable, but when you tie in Harry Potter it instantly becomes historic. “She said at the time that it’s something you would pick up at a junk shop. But it’s really just the fact that she took the time to decorate it and the fact that she actually wrote the books in it is important. But the fact that she took the time to decorate it and sign it say ‘I wrote Harry Potter in this chair,’ I think is very important.”
J.K. Rowling’s chair and the letter were first auction off by Rowling in 2002 at the Chair-ish a Child auction, which benefited the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children sold for over $23,000. It was sold again in 2009 fetching $29,000. Heritage Auctions started biding at $45,000 and it currently stands at $65,000.
“There’s not that many things in the Harry Potter world that are especially valuable because her books became so popular so fast. And then they were published in huge editions. So they’re not that uncommon,” Gannon admitted.
While J.K. Rowling’s chair will be on display, the auction also includes a lot of seven British first editions of the Harry Potter series all signed by the author, with a starting bid of $10,000-10,500.
The Dallas, Texas based auction house will also sell a 1776 broadside printing of the Declaration of Independence which is expected to bring in over $160,000. The Colony’s copy belonged to an Ipswich pastor. The live auction will be held at New York City’s Waldorf Astoria hotel and online at www.hr.com on 6 April.