A man who prefers to save money on work trips recently hired a standard sedan from a car rental company. Before setting off, he decided to check the glovebox to store his road maps and GPS. Inside, along with the owner’s manual and some forgotten serviettes, he discovered an old leather-bound book with no identifying marks of the owner. He nearly threw it out, thinking it was someone’s cheap throwaway read, but an unusual embossed pattern on the spine made him hang onto it.
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Back at his motel, he took a closer look at the book. It turned out to be a first edition of a collection of short stories by a famous 19th-century writer, featuring a rare binding variation not listed in standard bibliographic references. The man admitted he is no antique expert, but instinct told him to get a professional valuation. Specialists confirmed the book held significant cultural and commercial value, and its condition, despite its age, could be described as ‘good’. The most surprising part was that records showed the previous renter was an overseas tourist who had already left the country and couldn’t be contacted, while the rental company’s contract didn’t cover the contents of the cabin.
The man decided not to put the rare find up for public auction, but instead offered it to a local museum. “Of course, the temptation to sell it to a private collector was strong,” he commented, “but I knew a copy like this should be available for the public to see.” After a short round of talks, the museum agreed to buy the book. While the exact figure hasn’t been made public, sources close to the matter say it was a tidy sum — well over the weekly cost of hiring the car.
Museum representatives confirmed the authenticity of the acquisition and noted the book would take pride of place in their 19th-century literature display. “It’s a brilliant example of how valuable historical artefacts can spend years travelling through the most unexpected places, just waiting for their moment,” a curator said. The man himself admits that from now on, he’ll be thoroughly checking every nook and cranny of any rental car before driving off. “Most people hope to find some loose change or a pair of forgotten sunnies under the seat,” he added with a grin. “I ended up with a real literary treasure.”
This story serves as a reminder that sometimes the most valuable finds turn up where you least expect them. Unlike those container auctions where people deliberately buy a ‘pig in a poke’, this lucky break didn’t cost the man a cent upfront. The main lesson he took away? Always check the glovebox — even when you’re certain it’s empty.
