Book Hauls!

THE CLOCK STRIKES TWELVE, stories by H.R. Wakefield. When I found this 1946 Arkham hardback at Goodwill this morning I knew I couldn't leave the store without it no matter how long the Black Friday checkout line was. Knew there must have been a sale going on but didn't know exactly what it was, but with a $3 hardback and $1 paperback in my hand it rang up at $2.17 with tax. Walked out extra happy. I'd post the cover but my year old printer decided not to work anymore.
 
I'd post the cover but my year old printer decided not to work anymore.

No sweat, Dask... at least, if it's the original Ronald Clyne cover art:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Clock_strikes_twelve.jpg

And for those interested in the contents:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Clock_Strikes_Twelve

Meanwhile, I've ordered a copy of Wilum's newest, some of which I had the pleasure of reading while the book was in progress: The Strange Dark One:

http://miskatonicriverpress.com/products/sdo.shtml
 
Who Fears Death (World Fantasy award 2011)Okorafor, Nnedi
Gods of Mars (John Carter #2) by Edgar Rice Burroughs
Those books say everything about who i am as a reader. Classic Science fantasy fav and trying to read new fantasy,SF set in another world than American/European setting.
I cant wait to read Who Fears Death
I thought it was very good. It will be interesting you read your reaction given you will have a greater intuitive cultural perspective on the novel and its setting than myself...:)

I have the first three of the Barsoom books, certainly a classic series.
 
Here's my part in supporting small business Saturday:

THE DREAM-DETECTIVE by Sax Rohmer, Dover paperback, fifty cents.
FANCIES AND GOODNIGHTS by John Collier, Time Life Books paperback with strange cover art by Seymour Chwast, fifty cents.
THE FOUR JUST MEN by Edgar Wallace, Oxford paperback also containing its sequel THE COUNCIL OF JUSTICE with attractive comic art cover by Mark Thomas, a new name to me but with strong DC style. Would do a super Batman. $1.99 at Goodwill. (No sale today.)
THE STORY OF MANKIND by Hendrik Willem van Loon, revised 1980s hardback with added material by John Merriman $7.50 with 25% discount at a local independent bookseller.
THE MARQUIS DE LAFAYETTE: BRIGHT SWORD FOR FREEDOM by Hodding Carter, Random House hardback, 1958 first printing of what appears to be a Book-Of-The-Month-Club edition. Fifty cents. A "Young Readers Of America Selection" but Carter is a respected journalist and I've been wanting something of his for some time. Don't expect to be disappointed.
SHOWDOWN by Errol Flynn, first edition Cardinal paperback from 1960 in really good shape. Got it mostly as a curiosity, only cost a quarter.
 
images


This is actually the same book, an Ace double... remember those?
 
Remember? I still have at least a couple or so on my shelves (used to have more, but they disappeared over the years). One of these is the Ellison double, A Touch of Infinity/The Man with Nine Lives.

Dask: I am not familiar with the others, but if you've not read Collier's Fancies and Goodnights before... you're in for a treat from one of the true masters of the short story.

I meant to post this here last night, but ended up posting information about it elsewhere (in the Wordsworth thread). Received my copy of Voodoo Tales: The Ghost Stories of Henry S. Whitehead; a massive selection of stories from this far-too-little-known writer. (I do carp, however, about that subtitle. Very few of Whitehead's stories deal with ghosts as such, even by the broadest definition; and a number of tales here can't even fit the very broadest. They are, however, almost entirely weird, strange, and eerie -- with one or two exceptions -- and I think "the
weird tales of" would have fit better....)

For those interested in the table of contents:

http://www.sffchronicles.co.uk/foru...f-mystery-and-supernatural-9.html#post1659275
 
I like the sound of that collection...About time I invested in another from the Wordsworth TM&S series...
 
I thought it was very good. It will be interesting you read your reaction given you will have a greater intuitive cultural perspective on the novel and its setting than myself...:)

I have the first three of the Barsoom books, certainly a classic series.

Okorafor is very interesting to me, though she is US-born she writes about African,Nigerian settings. I can understand growing up in western country and having connection to an African country too.

Im starving for any fantastic book writing from that cultural perspective. I like reading political,social realism books written in African settings but i want the fantastic stories too.
 
Star Wars: The Ultimate Action Figure Collection: 35 years of Characters by Steve Sansweet. A really nice book. I was very surprised at the variation between the figures. I wonder if he plans to release a similar tome detailing the vehicles?

Star Wars: The Old Republic: Annihilation by Drew Karpyshin.

Dr Who: The Coming Of The Terraphiles by Michaels Moorcock. (99p from pound land.)
 
[...]Dask: I am not familiar with the others, but if you've not read Collier's Fancies and Goodnights before... you're in for a treat from one of the true masters of the short story.[...]

Seconded.

I've been on something of a binge since the last time I posted in this thread:

Act of Passion by Georges Simenon
The Best Horror of the Year, v. 4 ed. Ellen Datlow
The Mammoth Book of Best New Horror ed. Stephen Jones
The Year's Best Dark Fantasy and Horror: 2011 ed. Paula Guran
The Werewolf of Paris by Guy Endore
The Machine's Child by Kage Baker
The Book of Spirits by James Reese
Fritz R. Leiber and H. P. Lovecraft: Writers of the Dark ed. Szumskyj and Joshi
Ghosts: Recent Hauntings ed. Paula Guran
Beyond Here Lies Nothing: The Concrete Grove Trilogy by Gary McMahon
Somewhere Beneath These Waves by Sarah Monette
Midnight Call and Other Stories by Jonathan Thomas
The Enterprise of Death by Jesse Bullington
Bodies in a Bookshop by R. T. Campbell
A Book of Horrors ed Stephen Jones
At the Edge of Waking by Holly Phillips
The Big Book of Ghost Stories ed Otto Penzler
The Steel Tsar by Michael Moorcock
Dust by Elizabeth Bear
Magic ed. by Jonathan Oliver
Season of Wonder ed. Paula Guran
Remember Why You Fear Me by Robert Shearman
Stay Awake by Dan Chaon
The Year's Best Dark Fantasy and Horror: 2012 ed. Paula Guran
The Cypress House by Michael Koryta


I already (re)read the Endore and A Book of Horrors but I've no idea when I'll get to most of these.

Randy M.
 
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I read a library copy of this novel about a year ago. Certainly something I would want to read again, so....

"towering new novel of a town rocked by a sadistic killing and a woman who must accept that her son is quietly guilty of murder" (cover blurb)
 
1083119963.jpg


I read a library copy of this novel about a year ago. Certainly something I would want to read again, so....

"towering new novel of a town rocked by a sadistic killing and a woman who must accept that her son is quietly guilty of murder" (cover blurb)

Any of Jones's books made into movies?
 
I don't intend to become a collector of Madison Jones's first editions, but it seems one can pick up some of them inexpensively. I got a first of An Exile this week for $7 including postage costs. Some of his books had attractive cover designs.
madburied.jpg


A 1970 movie called I Walk the Line is apparently based in some degree on An Exile.
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Star Wars: the Clone Wars: Incredible Cross Sections
Star Wars: The Essential Readers Guide
 
Vintage Book of Latin American Stories Ed. Fuentes & Ortega *This appears to be a superb anthology of the Latin American short form (leading up to the beginning of the 21st Century) and superior to my Faber anthology in terms of sheer breadth that admittedly focused more on contemporary authors leading up to the early 90s.A nice complement to this antholgoy is the excellent Library of America Latin American Women Writers. Blurb: In The Vintage Book of Latin American Stories, Julio Ortega and Carlos Fuentes present the most compelling short fiction from Mexico to Chile. Surreal, poetic, naturalistic, urbane, peasant-born: All styles intersect and play, often within a single piece. There is "The Handsomest Drown Man in the World," the García Márquez fable of a village overcome by the power of human beauty; "The Aleph," Borges' classic tale of a man who discovers, in a colleague's cellar, the Universe. Here is the haunting shades of Juan Rulfo, the astonishing anxiety puzzles of Julio Cortázar, the disquieted domesticity of Clarice Lispector. Provocative, powerful, immensely engaging, The Vintage Book of Latin American Stories showcases the ingenuity, diversity, and continuing excellence of a vast and vivid literary tradition.

Also two of the most recent books in the ongoing unnumbered Sf Masterworks series from two more recent contributors to the field...

Ammonite
- Nicola Griffith Blurb: Change or die. These are the only options available on the planet Jeep. Centuries earlier, a deadly virus shattered the original colony, killing the men and forever altering the few surviving women. Now, generations after the colony has lost touch with the rest of humanity, a company arrives to exploit Jeep - and its forces find themselves fighting for their lives. Terrified of spreading the virus, the company abandons its employees, leaving them afraid and isolated from the natives. In the face of this crisis, anthropologist Marghe Taishan arrives to test a new vaccine. As she risks death to uncover the women's biological secret, she finds that she, too, is changing - and realizes that not only has she found a home on Jeep, but that she alone carries the seeds of its destruction.

Sarah Canary - Karen Joy Fowler Blurb: When black cloaked Sarah Canary wanders into a railway camp in the Washington territories in 1873, Chin Ah Kin is ordered by his uncle to escort "the ugliest woman he could imagine" away. Far away. But Chin soon becomes the follower. In the first of many such instances, they are separated, both resurfacing some days later at an insane asylum. Chin has run afoul of the law and Sarah has been committed for observation. Their escape from the asylum in the company of another inmate sets into motion a series of adventures and misadventures that are at once hilarious, deeply moving, and downright terrifying.
 
Just received my copy of Wilum Pugmire's latest, The Strange Dark One: Tales of Nyarlathotep. For me, an new book by Wilum is always a reason for celebration.....
 
Interestingly enough just picked up another of the recent Wordsworth Tales of The Supernatural series...

Night Terrors: Ghost Stories of E.F. Benson.*I've read a few of Benson's stories but not many and this edition collects what I assume to be the majority of his ghostly short stories coming in at a similar brick size to the Whitehead collection at 720 pages. Blurb: 'His body was pressed against the wall at the head of the bed, and the face was a mask of agonised horror and fruitless entreaty. But the eyes were already glazed in death, and before Francis could reach the bed the body had toppled over and lay inert and lifeless. Even as he looked, he heard a limping step go down the passage outside.' E. F. Benson was a master of the ghost story and now all his rich, imaginative, spine-tingling and beautifully written tales are presented together in this bumper collection. The range and variety of these spooky narratives is far broader and more adventurous than those of any other writer of supernatural fiction. Within the covers of this volume you will encounter revengeful spectres, vampires, homicidal spirits, monstrous spectral worms and slugs and other entities of nameless dread. This is a classic collection that cannot fail to charm and chill.
 
THE PATHFINDER by James Fenimore Cooper
THE MAMMOTH BOOK OF HISTORICAL DETECTIVES edited by Mike Ashley
Fifty cents each at the library book sale. New printer not hooked up yet so can't post any covers. Maybe tomorrow with a little luck and a lot of miracle.
 
Two more classic fictional characters of crime from the excellent (and affordable) Wordsworth series.

An Arsene Lupin Omnibus
- Maurice Leblanc. *Blurb: Enter Arsène Lupin, Gentleman – Cambrioleur, the ‘Prince of Thieves’, one of the most daring and dashing individuals who ever lifted a diamond necklace from under the noses of the authorities. Young and handsome, laughing his way through difficulties and danger, Lupin is also the master of disguise and languages. His sense of humour and conceit make life difficult for the police who attribute most of the major crimes in France to Lupin and his gang of ruffians and urchins.Maurice Leblanc’s stories are lively and witty, occasionally taking on the air of burlesque, especially when Lupin pits his wits against the English detective named variously ‘Holmlock Shears’ and ‘Herlock Sholmes’These are significant tales in the history of crime fiction but, more importantly, they are great fun.

A Charlie Chan Omnibus - Earl Derr Buggers *Blurb: A family secret leads to murder in a house without locks... Someone is prepared to kill to procure a valuable set of pearls, and a parrot fluent in Chinese knows too much... A Scotland Yard Inspector is about to close his final case, but someone is prepared to kill to keep the mystery unsolved... Three very different crimes, with one thing in common... He's Honolulu's greatest detective - prepare to savour the wisdom of Charlie Chan. From Hawaii to San Francisco, no crime is too baffling, no clue too insignificant for Charlie.Long out of print, Charlie Chan's first three cases, The House Without a Key, The Chinese Parrot, and Behind That Curtain, have been collected in one volume for your entertainment and bafflement.
 

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