dask
dark and stormy knight
Stopped by Value Village yesterday. Glad I did:
I have ordered and i waiting for The Long Tomorrow by Brackett in an omnibus with first two Stark books, script of Star Wars film she wrote.
Its funny im also 30 years old soon in may and i have thought you and me had such similar taste in classic,modern genre,mainstream lit, we are almost the same age too
Afraid not. Except for a couple of short stories, this is the first thing I've read by him.
The packaging promises a sort of Ray Bradbury / Edward Gorey experience, and I think the book is evolving towards that. I wasn't sure, with the first chapter whether I was going to like it, the second chapter began to win me over and I'm currently enjoying the third chapter. Tem doesn't write with the exuberance of Bradbury and doesn't exude the charm of Gaiman (a writer who sometimes makes me think of him as a Bradbury [with hints of John Collier] for the 21st century), but rather more plainly (and sometimes more precisely than Bradbury), yet with some spot-on observation of character and locale and enough imaginative kick to pull me in.
So far, the farther I read the more I like it.
Randy M.
Found some really nice stuff this past weekend. Only have enough time to post part of them but will try to get to the rest later in the week.
Twenty-five cents at the Salvation army:
Interesting pickup.Got three books from the old Forbidden Planet today:
- On Stranger Tides by Tim Powers
- The Bible Repairman by Tim Powers: rare, so it says, collection of Powers's short fiction
- The Desert of Souls by Howard Andrew Jones: old school sword and sorcery tale by the premier expert on the writings of Harold Lamb. I probably wouldn't have picked this up if I didn't know a bit about Jones's fiction or his contribution to the field, as the cover is, ahem, not the most inviting thing. Very cool reading thus far, recommended to Howard and, of course, Lamb, fans.
Interesting pickup.
I have the first 2 having collected all of Powers' fiction to date but was not aware Bible Repairman was that hard to come by? Perhaps it's the edition you have or that collection is now out of print.
I have never heard of Howard Andrew Jones. I stil have to pick up some of Lamb's writings based on previous posts made by you. It would be intersting to know how this author's writing compares to Lamb, Robert E Howard, Leiber etc.., similar, completely different?
Generally I've found forbidden Planet publish some quite good, 'less common' stuff, albeit their production values can be a little light on...
I wasn't aware that the collection was particularly rare either. But according to the back cover it is!
Jones is more well known as an editor than I writer I believe. He's current managing editor of Black Gate and former editor of Flashing Swords magazine in the mid 2000s. His Dabir and Asim stories, of which The Desert of Souls is a part, are a series of S&S tales set in an alternate version of the medieval Middle East in which magic and the beasts of mythology exist. His works seems to have a more historical flavor than most S&S. The writing is colorful though lean, tending more toward the serious side without totally foregoing humor. The characterization, particularly between the two protagonists, strikes me as knotty and realistic, though I'm only a short way into this particular novel.
Regarding Harold Lamb, I'll admit it, I'm a fanboy. I think he gets far too little attention for the quality of work he produced and on his seminal influences on fantasy and historical fiction as a whole (not to mention his contributions to film and academia...) Reading his works is like unearthing a treasure trove; there's just so much good stuff here, and hardly anyone alive today has ever read it!
I really do recommend you pick up anything you can find by him.
Have you read Lion of Cairo ? A historical S&S inspired by Howard, north african,middle east history. Desert of Souls have been hyped by S&S,REH fans crowd because of S&S modern writer who writes a Thousand and one night setting so to speak. As a fan of Howard,Leiber and co i adore modern S&S with historical feel.
Lamb i have a big short story collection called Swords from the West i got out of respect to Howard and my affection of quality historical adventures. He is not as vivid as Howard but he is very interesting the little i have read. I havent had time to read the collection whole yet.
Harold Lamb is mainstream classic for historical biographies he wrote that is easy to find even here in sweden and his historical fiction is highly acclaimed when i hear about classic historical writers. Not only Howard fans,forums who give him attention. His historical collections are mostly in print with Bison books, other publishers.
"Cugel's Saga" by Jack Vance
"Rhialto the Marvellous" by Jack Vance