But Marx never reached for the stars!
And Richard Lee avoided Algerian briar.
Americans of that era judged a pipe by the beauty of the grain, and final finish.
We still do today, plus there are artisans making new shapes.
I had a Thermos I got for Christmas about 1977 lose it’s vacuum seal thirty years later. It still worked but not worth a damn compared to before, and Stanley replaced it.
The briar grown in the worst and most inhospitable place around the rim of the Mediterranean in Algeria must have had more air, natural insulation, than briar grown in more civilized and habitable places.
But that same insulation quality made it terrible to work with and the grain wasn’t as pretty.
Lees and Kaywoodies are gorgeous to look at and excellent smokers.
A Marxman just blows them away for smoking quality. Not sweeter, certainly not cooler, like smoking a little thermos bottle. You just puff exactly enough to fire the ember and release the smoke. It’s gloriously strong and flavorful.
That’s my theory anyway.