The auction includes over 800 lots, but only about a third are Oz-related. The items from Fred's estate include:
- proofs of the art for L. Frank Baum's Mother Goose in Prose signed by Maxfield Parrish.
- a pen and ink drawing of the Scarecrow and Tin Woodman as rodeo riders by W. W. Denslow.
- printer's proofs with Ruth Plumly Thompson's corrections for Handy Mandy in Oz.
- manuscript material from John R. Neill's Wonder City of Oz, Scalawagons in Oz, and Lucky Bucky in Oz.
- Dirk Gringhuis's sample sketches for Reilly & Lee when he was under consideration to illustrate The Hidden Valley of Oz; they show scenes and characters from the previous Oz book, The Shaggy Man of Oz.
I hope he will acquire more brains than the Scarecrow, more heart than the Tin Woodman, and more courage than the Cowardly Lion. Still, if he but equals their attainments I feel sure he will win the love and admiration of his fellows. For, if you stop to think of it, there was much wisdom in the Scarecrow, much tenderness in the Tin Woodman, and much real courage in the Lion. And perhaps that was the reason they all wanted more of those admirable qualities.But here's what I want: Neill's drawing of young Number Nine from The Wonder City of Oz sitting in the Wizard's laboratory. Click on the thumbnail for a closer view. Estimated price: $4-6,000.
After the Oz material, the catalogue's remaining pages offer a look at Avi's real name, a signed first edition of Dr. Seuss's And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street, Sherwood Anderson's copy of John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men, and a "Group of 7 different cartes-de-visite of cartoons depicting Jefferson Davis dressed as a woman." (I once pitched an article on that historical episode to Cobblestone; never heard back.)
The Neill drawing I liked ended up selling for $8,500.
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