
Since everyone`s commenting on the brilliant sound (and im starting to see fossils of why), I guess it might be worth the $100,000 it will take to get it fixed up. When I found out that this guitar has sound comparable to it`s gorgeous exterior, I took it out of my closet, retuned it, got some new strings, took it out to dinner, and asked it to marry me. I decided that rotting in my closet until information surfaced wouldn`t be incredibly different from this guitar`s recent past, so I didn`t lose sleep over mistreating this guitar. I might as well not have done research, because as I saw, there was NOTHING on my V-13. Being a 9th grader, and very monetarily impared, i decided to do a little research before deciding whether to fix it up or refer to the alternative possibilities discussed previously. The sound would be brilliant, were it not for a bridge that had been yanked a good 1/2 inch up from where it should have been on a level plane with the rest of the guitar. We finally figured it would be easier to let me take it home, and practice with it. We promptly inferred consequently that it was a ghost guitar, and contemplated burning it, smashing it, defenistrating it, or simply blowing it up. My grandmother was equally surprised to see it, as it was the first time she had seen it either.

When i took it out, i saw one of the coolest looking V-13 (or any other, for that matter) guitars I had ever laid my eyes on. In 9th grade, I was rummaging through my grandmother`s closet when I stumbled upon a decrepit guitar case.

In the middle of 7th grade I began taking guitar lessons.
