Thomas Lecky (born 1972 in Plattsburgh, New York) is an American antiquarian bookseller, musician, and artist. He was the Head of Books and Manuscripts at ChristieâÂÂs auction house in New York, and is the owner of Riverrun Books & Manuscripts. He also records music under the name Hallock Hill and is an artist and writer who has published photo books and artist's books.
Tom Lecky was born in Plattsburgh, New York and lived in the Adirondack Mountains region of upstate New York through most of his youth. Lecky went to Choate Rosemary Hall and received his BA in English from Columbia University and MA in American Literature from Stanford University. At Stanford, Lecky studied with Gilbert Sorrentino who introduced Lecky to the writers and methods of the Oulipo group and fostered his interest William Carlos Williams, the so-called Language poets, and the writers and artists of Black Mountain College. Lecky began editing the letters of Irving Rosenthal (see Kaliflower Commune) to Allen Ginsberg and Ira Cohen relating the Rosenthal's novel "Sheeper" (edited by Sorrentino while working for Grove Press). After Stanford, Lecky returned to New York to begin his career in the auction world handling rare books, manuscripts, and archives. Lecky lives in Hastings-on-Hudson New York with his wife and two sons.
Tom Lecky began his career as the Head of Books and Prints at William Doyle Galleries in New York City. Lecky then served as a rare-book specialist for ChristieâÂÂs auction house in New York, where he served as Head of Books and Manuscripts. An auction he worked on early in his tenure in 2001, was the original manuscript for Jack KerouacâÂÂs On The Road. In 2012, the Robb Reportàreported that Lecky had noted a change in the trend of rare-book collectors, moving from focusing on a single author in the past to those looking to create a more expansive library. The BBC also noted his role in the pricing and auctioning of rare maps and atlases.
Lecky also served as an auctioneer for ChristieâÂÂs. Over the years he auctioned items including the Stratocaster guitar played by Bob Dylan during the 1965 Newport Folk Festival where he first played electric guitar live, a sale that set the world auction record for the price of a guitar. àHe was also the auctioneer for the original lyrics to Don McLeanâÂÂs song âÂÂAmerican PieâÂÂ, a copy of the US Constitution with hand written notes by its owner President George Washington, and for philanthropic auctions supporting organizations like the PEN American Center. Lecky was a witness in the case involving manuscript lyrics for The Eaglesâ âÂÂHotel Californiaâ that had appeared on the market in the 2010s.
In 2016 Lecky acquired the company Riverrun Books & Manuscripts, which was founded in 1978 in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York. The business sells rare books, in addition to providing estate, charitable donation, and insurance appraisals. Lecky is also frequently featured as an appraiser on the Antique Roadshow, where he appraises Books and Manuscripts including letters written by Mahatma Gandhi, and Franklin D. Roosevelt. In 2019 he appeared in the documentary The Booksellers, that featured New York area book sellers.
Lecky is also the founder of the publisher Understory Books.
Lecky performs as the musical artist Hallock Hill, playing and recording on the guitar and piano. In 2011 he released his first solo acoustic guitar album The Unionàon the label Hundred Acre Recordings. Ash Akhtar reviewed the work for The Quietus, stating that âÂÂThere is something wondrous about this implacable and partly untraceable album.â Marc Masters of Pitchforkàreviewed the work as filled with âÂÂwistful emotions and fond memories [that] can be as deep and complex as darker themes. ItâÂÂs my favorite solo acoustic album of the year so far.âÂÂ
After several self-released albums, such as There He Unforeseen, in 2014 he released his fourth album, Kosloff Mansion, again on Hundred Acre Recordings. Ben Graham of The Quietus reviewed the album, stating âÂÂLike all of [Hallock HillâÂÂs] releases, it insinuates itself into your life, and gradually takes it over. The first time you play this record, you barely notice that itâÂÂs there; but you keep returning to it, on grey rainy afternoons, on hungover Sunday mornings when itâÂÂs about all you can face, and slowly it begins to flower, revealing new aspects, fresh layers on each listen.â In The Wire Magazine, Nick Southgate wrote about The Union/A Hem of Evening, "In a world overpopulated with acoustic guitar players, LeckyâÂÂs increasingly refined and focused experiments with such shifting, half-repeating, subtly accreting textures makes his music stand out as having courage and vision where far too many only have technique and tradition.âÂÂ
Lecky is a visual artist and bookmaker. His 2012 artistâÂÂs book A Hem of Evening accompanied the album The Union/A Hem of Evening (MIE Records). His photobook The Archive of Bernard Taylor was profiled by The Nearest Truth: âÂÂThis quizzical tome considers a form of local history and the phantom-like presence of an author defined by his output more than his life. It is an interesting take on American biography, history, and the permeable ability for photography to be read with imagination and vigor despite its disregard to conform to absolutes.â Bomb Magazine described the book as âÂÂat times disorienting, playful, melancholy, and retrospective.âÂÂ