Photo: Gustavo Caballero/Getty

Money can’t buy you love, but itcanbuy you one ofPaul McCartney’s old school books — that is, as long as you’ve got a spare $62,000.
“The bidding went on for 15 minutes, the longest we’ve ever had,” Karen Fairweather ofOmega Auctionsin Newton-le-Willows, Merseyside,told the BBC. “They were two people who really wanted it so drove up the price in £200 ($265) bids. There was a round of applause at the end.”
McCartney’s notebook contains 22 pages of essays on subjects such as John Milton’s epic poem “Paradise Lost” and Thomas Hardy’s novel “The Return of the Native.” It also reveals that music legend was an above average student, scoring grades ranging from B+ to B-.
The sale is the latest piece of McCartney memorabilia to sell at auction. Earlier this month anultra-rare Beatles demofetched £9,300 ($12,400) after it was discovered in a U.K. charity store.
Bearing the words “Demonstration Record” and “Not For Sale’,” the seven-inch vinyl carries a subtle misspelling of McCartney’s name so that the songwriting credits read “Lennon–McArtney.”
Other Beatles items auctioned on Tuesday include a pair of gold-rimmed John Lennon glasses, given to designer friend Barry Finch in 1967 (selling for $12,700), a Lennon ‘Big Top Circus’ drawing ($10,300), and one of Lennon’s made-to-measure 1960s suits ($6,300).
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Not all of the fab four’s items were quite so popular, however: a cassette of unheard 1978 George Harrison songs — bearing the tongue in cheek title of “The Hitler Tapes” and songs “Spoken Intro George Legs Harry” and “Brazil 1, 2 & 3” — went unsold.
An original brick from the legendary Cavern Club, where the Beatles first developed their fanbase in Liverpool, sold for $550.
source: people.com