Victoria Silverwolf
Vegetarian Werewolf
Hear, hear.
Another lover of short stories here. When I haunt used book stores looking for cheap paperbacks, I am always drawn to the large number of SF anthologies published in the 1960's and 1970's. (I'll admit that Roger Elwood nearly killed the form by publishing such a gigantic number that the quality deteriorated, but that's another story.)
I also miss the SF novels that were less than 200 pages. (I can recall Doubleday hardcovers, obtained from the local library with the rocket-ship-flying-through-an-atom sticker on the spine that meant "science fiction." which were always 181 pages.) I realize that the disappearance of these is a result of economic factors in the publishing world, but I miss them.
Another lover of short stories here. When I haunt used book stores looking for cheap paperbacks, I am always drawn to the large number of SF anthologies published in the 1960's and 1970's. (I'll admit that Roger Elwood nearly killed the form by publishing such a gigantic number that the quality deteriorated, but that's another story.)
I also miss the SF novels that were less than 200 pages. (I can recall Doubleday hardcovers, obtained from the local library with the rocket-ship-flying-through-an-atom sticker on the spine that meant "science fiction." which were always 181 pages.) I realize that the disappearance of these is a result of economic factors in the publishing world, but I miss them.