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  • RICK HARRISON: Hey, how's it going?

  • Good. How are you?

  • I'm doing great.

  • I guess this is "The Atlantic Monthly."

  • JERRY: Yes.

  • We have a first edition of a true story by Mark Twain.

  • RICK HARRISON: That is really neat.

  • He always had those great lines, I've quit smoking 1,000 times--

  • you know, in between each cigar.

  • [laughs]

  • [coughing]

  • JERRY: I think this "Atlantic Monthly"

  • is a great piece of Americana.

  • It's the first story in "Te Atlantic Monthly"

  • published by Mark Twain.

  • The reason I'm selling it is because I think it's very rare,

  • and I think it's worth some nice money.

  • RICK HARRISON: Well, it's "The Atlantic Monthly."

  • It was a very popular magazine.

  • There was short stories, maybe a little bit of news.

  • But it was something a little more than you

  • got in your local newspaper.

  • People had subscriptions to it.

  • Samuel Clemens actually took the pen name of Mark Twain when he

  • was working in Virginia City, Nevada, during the giant silver

  • rush we had here.

  • So this was one of his first published

  • articles in a magazine, or--

  • JERRY: This was the first story published

  • in "The Atlantic Monthly" but also one of the first published

  • works by him.

  • It's actually a monologue from the real slave

  • that he overheard.

  • It's his rendition of the travesties that

  • occurred during the Civil War.

  • RICK HARRISON: All right, that's interesting.

  • Mark Twain is one of America's greatest authors,

  • and I've seen his works go for obscene money.

  • But it's a magazine, so I don't know if that's a first edition

  • or if there's only one edition.

  • I'm just not sure on this.

  • May I open it? JERRY: Sure.

  • Certainly.

  • RICK HARRISON: So we're on page 591.

  • JERRY: Mhm.

  • There it is, Mark Twain.

  • That's really cool.

  • OK, how much were you looking to get out of it?

  • JERRY: This is in the original wraps, the original covers,

  • nearly impossible to find.

  • I was thinking around $2,500.

  • [sighs]

  • RICK HARRISON: You know, I just don't

  • know how collectible this is.

  • You know, it's a magazine.

  • It's not a book.

  • In general, magazines aren't worth a lot of money.

  • Mhm.

  • But it is really cool that it's got Mark Twain in it.

  • So if you don't mind.

  • I'd really like to call someone and have

  • them take a look at it.

  • Sure, that'd be fine.

  • I will be right back.

  • I will get her down here.

  • And maybe we can figure something-- maybe

  • you're right on the price. I don't know.

  • But it just seems a little stiff.

  • Thank you.

  • It's exciting that an expert's coming in.

  • I'd really like to hear what they have to say.

  • There's a big market for just about anything Mark Twain.

  • But since this is a magazine, I'm just not sure on this.

  • And that's why I'm bringing Rebecca

  • down help me figure it out. This is it.

  • It's not a book, though.

  • It's a magazine.

  • It's got Mark Twain in it.

  • REBECCA ROMNEY: Very cool.

  • In 1874, Twain was already very successful, very popular.

  • He published a book about traveling

  • as a sort of bumpkin American through Europe,

  • and it was phenomenally successful.

  • He became just the most hilarious American

  • that anyone had ever heard of.

  • And "The Atlantic Monthly" kind of came right

  • after he'd achieved fame but before he had achieved

  • more serious reputation.

  • "The Atlantic Monthly" started in the 1850s,

  • and it was meant to be sort of the height

  • of literary criticism.

  • It published all of the major American writers.

  • And in the 1870s, "The Atlantic" was starting

  • to lose subscriptions, so it was a mutually

  • beneficial relationship.

  • Twain was able to get the sort of mark of approval

  • from the literary establishment, and "The Atlantic Monthly"

  • was able to publish stories by one

  • of the most sought-after authors in the nation.

  • RICK HARRISON: So what is it worth?

  • REBECCA ROMNEY: Well, there are some magazines

  • that can have some value.

  • "The Atlantic" is particularly interesting,

  • though, because this was the beginning

  • of his serious reputation.

  • But in the collectible world, to put it simply,

  • magazines are just not as sexy as books.

  • [laughs]

  • REBECCA ROMNEY: [laughs]

  • RICK HARRISON: I get it. - It's true, through.

  • There's a certain like cachet that a book has.

  • Certainly, that applies to Mark Twain.

  • What he's known for today, his literary reputation,

  • are based on books.

  • Individual volume like this I'll place under $100.

  • RICK HARRISON: Thanks.

  • REBECCA ROMNEY: Yup.

  • JERRY: Well, I don't know if I agree on that,

  • but I respect your opinion.

  • REBECCA ROMNEY: Thank you.

  • That was very nice.

  • I wish I could give this a higher value.

  • I really do.

  • But the fact of the matter is that the current market is just

  • not interested in these types of materials, at least

  • not to the point they are in books.

  • RICK HARRISON: So you were asking $2,500,

  • and Rebecca said it's less than $100.

  • So obviously, we're not going to do any business.

  • JERRY: OK.

  • RICK HARRISON: Thanks for bringing it in, man.

  • That's pretty cool. - Thank you.

  • It's kind of disappointing that the value placed on it

  • was so low.

RICK HARRISON: Hey, how's it going?

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ポーン・スターズ。マーク・トウェインの衝撃的な低評価 第1版|歴史 (Pawn Stars: Shockingly Low Appraisal of Mark Twain 1st Edition | History)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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