Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Is YOUR copy of Harry Potter worth £75,000?

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A rare Harry Potter first edition has sold for £75,000 at an auction - more than double the asking price.

The book, Harry Potter and the Philosophe­r’s Stone, was being sold by an English ex-pat who originally bought it to help his children learn English growing up in Luxembourg.

It had been sat on a bookshelf for 21 years when the owner decided to check and see if it was a rare copy.

The book was subject to a furious bidding war at Hansons Auctioneer­s and was finally sold to a private internatio­nal buyer for a hammer price of £60,000, rising to £75,000 with the buyer’s premium.

Auctioneer Charles Hanson declared during the sale: ‘This is the magic of Harry Potter.’

He described the book as a ‘Potter golden ticket’ and one of the most desirable first editions. ‘Wow, amazing result,’ he exclaimed at the final price. Original estimates set the price at £20,000 to £30,000, but it was in such good condition it was expected to sell for more. Some 500 first edition copies of the book were printed, 300 of which were sent to schools and libraries. This book is one of the remaining 200, and the fourth to be found by Hansons Auctioneer­s’ book expert Jim Spencer in a year.

There are various ways to identify a Philosophe­r’s Stone first issue, published by Bloomsbury in 1997.

There is a well-known duplicatio­n of ‘1 wand’ in a list of items Harry Potter must take to Hogwarts on page 53. There are a couple of misspellin­gs in the book, including ‘Philospher’s’ on the rear cover. But most importantl­y, the issue number on the copyright page must read ‘10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1’.

The book, which would pave the way for JK Rowling’s Harry Potter to become a global success, arrived at the auction house wrapped in a tea towel. Describing the lot’s condition, the auction house said: ‘Contents very good, clean, bright; usual very faint toning to page edges; tiny dent/nick to extreme edge of a few pages; one tiny mark on outer page edges.’

There are various ways to identify a Philosophe­r’s Stone first issue, published by Bloomsbury in 1997

The vendor, who asked to remain anonymous, said: ‘I was a big fan of the Potter books when I first read them. ‘There are a lot of ethical and human behaviour discussion points in the books and I had a lot of respect for JKR for producing such a polished and nuanced body of work.

‘I sent it to Hansons in a tea towel as a little nod to the Hogwarts house-elves, especially Winky and Dobby.’ The money from the sale will be used by the vendor to pay off his daughter’s student loan and help her apply for a mortgage.

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