Tolkien fan letters sell at auction for £103k

News imageBBC A black and white image of JRR Tolkien smiling for a photo while on a walk outside. A row of houses could be seen behind him.
BBC
Tolkien would visit Eileen Elgar at her home in Bournemouth, her family said

Books, letters and notes documenting the friendship between writer JRR Tolkien and a profoundly deaf fan have sold at auction for more than £100,000

Eileen Elgar, who died in 1980, used to live near the Hotel Miramar in Bournemouth where Tolkien and his wife holidayed every year.

Elgar wrote to the Lord of the Rings author, who lived in Oxford, in the 1960s and they began a friendship.

Among the lots, a letter mentioning the death of author CS Lewis and a signed copy of The Adventures of Tom Bombadil sold at Sotheby's auction house in London for £20,480.

News imageSotheby's A letter from J.R.R. Tolkien to EIleen Elgar mentioning the death of CS Lewis.Sotheby's
Tolkien mentions the death of CS Lewis in the letter

Speaking ahead of the auction, Will Passey, a specialist in the books and manuscripts department at Sotheby's, said the "moving" letter served as "a testament to the strength" of their friendship.

"Although we have quite a lot of published letters of Tolkien's, these have been hitherto overlooked."

The lots sold at auction dated from 1961 to 1964 and reached a total selling price of £103,680 including seller's premium.

News imageThe family of Eileen Elgar A black and white image of Eileen Elgar with Alfred, her husband, and another man behind them. She is wearing a hat.The family of Eileen Elgar
Eileen Elgar had "a very rich imagination" and was "fascinated by the ancient civilizations", according to her family

Elgar's grandaughter Helen Dutfield described her as "quite an isolated figure".

She explained that the contact with Tolkien came about after Elgar had read some of his books.

"She kept talking to my mother about these amazing books that she was reading and she had lots of questions," Dutfield said.

"My mother, who wasn't interested in them at all, said 'Why don't you write to the author?' - so that's how that started," she said.

As Elgar never learned to lip read, she and Tolkien communicated with notes whenever he visited her home in Bournemouth.