Book Hauls!

If this were a comic, without being an expert but leaning heavily on Overstreet, I'd rate this a good solid fine or fine-. Shows it age but hasn't been beaten or battered around. I found it at Value Village for ninety-nine cents.:)

Ah, geez. That's a great deal for you - congrats!

But I feel ripped off. I got a pretty minty fresh copy myself a few months ago but it cost me fifteen bucks. :( I don't normally pay that much for a book, much less a used one no matter the condition, but it was cheaper than new and I wanted it. :)
 
Ah, geez. That's a great deal for you - congrats!

But I feel ripped off. I got a pretty minty fresh copy myself a few months ago but it cost me fifteen bucks. :( I don't normally pay that much for a book, much less a used one no matter the condition, but it was cheaper than new and I wanted it. :)
J-Sun, I think I made a big mistake. Your original quote was for the Lovecraft hardback, not the Civil War paperback. Sorry, sometimes I don't pay as close attention to details as I should. The Lovecraft was purchased new at Barnes and Noble and cost $20. Again, sorry for the mix-up.
 
Oh, I see. Well, I feel better. :) So now I understand your "break me" comment better - I was thinking you could probably manage a buck book even after January. So that is a big deal - I don't think either of us buy new books very often (or at least I basically only buy the occasional paperback) so that is quite a treat. And, yeah, even at the new price, it's a whomping big book that would ordinarily cost more - I think just your bog standard hardcover is usually 25 bucks or so - so that was a good deal.
 
Every once in a while, without trying, I come out big. A few years ago I picked up a paperback copy of THE MONSTER CLUB by R. Cheywynd-Hayes at a thrift shop for either 25 or fifty cents, can't remember which, in excellent condition. A member at another forum told me he found a copy online for $75! You don't have to direct THE TITANIC to feel on top of the world.:)
 
Oh, I see. Well, I feel better. :) So now I understand your "break me" comment better - I was thinking you could probably manage a buck book even after January. So that is a big deal - I don't think either of us buy new books very often (or at least I basically only buy the occasional paperback) so that is quite a treat. And, yeah, even at the new price, it's a whomping big book that would ordinarily cost more - I think just your bog standard hardcover is usually 25 bucks or so - so that was a good deal.
Come to think of it, I was a little surprised you'd pay $15 for a little Laurel Leaf paperback no matter how good condition it was in.:)
 
Come to think of it, I was a little surprised you'd pay $15 for a little Laurel Leaf paperback no matter how good condition it was in.:)

Yeah. I had that exact thought - that there must have been a disorienting instant when you thought I'd paid 15 bucks for the paperback - he spent what?. :D
 
After a long time of meaning to order it and getting waylaid by other books, I've ordered Neal Asher's "Prador Moon". I now have both that and Francis Knight's "Fade to Black" winging their way to me for some very Chroniclely Xmas reading.
 


Found it at the annual library winter book sale yesterday for fifty cents. Yes, that does make me cool,:p along with a collection of Virginia Woolf short stories called THE HAUNTED HOUSE and a book about Civil War Campaigns written in 1926, so the chances are pretty good it'll be worth reading.
 
Recently picked up...

The Black Spiders
- Jeremias Gotthelf *Gotthelf, the pen name of Albert Bitzius (1797–1854) holds a position in Swiss literature on a par with Dickens or Shakespeare in English literature and this particular novella is viewed as a classic of European horror fiction. NYRB edition. Blurb: It is a sunny summer Sunday in a remote Swiss village, and a christening is being celebrated at a lovely old farmhouse. One of the guests notes an anomaly in the fabric of the venerable edifice: a blackened post that has been carefully built into a trim new window frame. Thereby hangs a tale, one that, as the wise old grandfather who has lived all his life in the house proceeds to tell it, takes one chilling turn after another, while his audience listens in appalled silence. Featuring a cruelly overbearing lord of the manor and the oppressed villagers who must render him service, an irreverent young woman who will stop at nothing, a mysterious stranger with a red beard and a green hat, and, last but not least, the black spider, the tale is as riveting and appalling today as when Jeremias Gotthelf set it down more than a hundred years ago. The Black Spider can be seen as a parable of evil in the heart or of evil at large in society (Thomas Mann saw it as foretelling the advent of Nazism), or as a vision, anticipating H. P. Lovecraft, of cosmic horror. There’s no question, in any case, that it is unforgettably creepy.

The Lost Estate
- Alain-Fournier *Penguin black classic edition of a European classic. Blurb: When Meaulnes first arrives at the local school in Sologne, everyone is captivated by his good looks, daring and charisma. But when Meaulnes disappears for several days, and returns with tales of a strange party at a mysterious house - and his love for the beautiful girl hidden within it, Yvonne de Galais - his life has been changed forever. In his restless search for his Lost Estate and the happiness he found there, Meaulnes, observed by his loyal friend Francois, may risk losing everything he ever had. Poised between youthful admiration and adult resignation, Alain-Fournier's compelling narrator carries the reader through this evocative and unbearably poignant portrayal of desperate friendship and vanished adolescence.Robin Buss's translation of Le Grand Meaulnes sensitively and accurately renders Alain-Fournier's poetically charged, expressive and deceptively simple style. In his introduction, New Yorker writer Adam Gopnik discusses the life of Alain-Fournier, who was killed in the First World War after writing this, his only novel.

and last but not least....

The Land Across - Gene Wolfe *Gene's latest offering. Blurb: An American writer of travel guides in need of a new location chooses to travel to a small and obscure Eastern European country. The moment Grafton crosses the border he is in trouble, much more than he could have imagined. His passport is taken by guards, and then he is detained for not having it. He is released into the custody of a family, but is again detained. It becomes evident that there are supernatural agencies at work, but they are not in some ways as threatening as the brute forces of bureaucracy and corruption in that country. Is our hero in fact a spy for the CIA? Or is he an innocent citizen caught in a Kafkaesque trap?
 
I'm going to cheat and use a picture:
http://i170.photobucket.com/albums/u275/overmind_2000/IMG_2795_zpsc88a1d12.jpg

If anyone is after botanical, ecological, wildlife or similar themed subjects check out Mikeparkbooks.com He's a big library of titles and often gets some rarer sets in stock. Sign up for the catalogue to get a bit of advanced warning on new listings (stuff only gets uploaded to the website about a month after the catalogue goes out).
 
Last minute finds at the library sale this morning:




Death Cruise, by the way, appears to be signed by the editor.
Always check the table of contents of these little Hitchcock paperback anthologies when you come across them as they frequently contain stories of mystery and suspense and terror by established sf authors. This one has a story by Christopher Anvil, "The Hand From The Past."

Also picked up EYEWITNESS TO HISTORY edited by John Carey, 706 pages from the Harvard University Press; STORIES OF THREE DECADES by Thomas Mann, translated by H.T. Lowe-Porter, Alfred A. Knopf/Borzoi, 1951; THE WORKS OF ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON IN ONE VOLUME, Black's Readers Service Company, no date. Obviously not complete but does contain four novels, four New Arabian Nights; and something called UNDERWOODS which appears to be a collection of poems. No introduction, just literature.
Each book cost twenty-five cents each. It's almost criminal.
 
My Philadelphia library-discard haunter and correspondent sent a box that included Eric Newby's Around Ireland in Low Gear (Newby was one of my best author "discoveries" for this year, a delightful travel writer; I have nearly completed a reading of his travelogue of the Trans-Siberian railroad), a one-volume paperback of a couple of Max Beerbohm books (I glanced therein at what looks to be a spot-on parody of Joseph Conrad), ghost story great L. T. C. Rolt's biography of Isambard Kingdom Brunel (Victorian civil and mechanical engineer), and more, plus a clutch of books to give to students, including some Tolkien hardcovers and a couple of Dickens novels in clothbound editions. I expect smiles to blossom in this coming week.
 
I'm also keeping Sybille Bedford's Visit to Don Otavio, about travels in Mexico. I'll probably start reading it soon.
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Ariel (poems)- Sylvia Plath
The Bell Jar - Sylvia Plath

Those are the 3rd and 4th Plath books i have bought in the last month along with The Coloussus, Johnny Panic and Bible of Dreams. I have suddenly fallen hard for her sheer poetic genuis that im going through her few books,collections and still hungry for more.
 
Big haul of the week for me is my copy of the Complete Uncle by JP Martin which a few weeks ago would have cost hundreds of quid to buy as some of the later books in series had never been reprinted and commanded stupidly high prices second hand but now, thanks to Marcus Gipps and a very successful Kickstarter campaign it cost 37 quid.

The Complete Uncle

Go get a copy. Of course your copy won't have your name in it in the 'Thanks' like mine does - but you can't have everything. It's a beautiful book.
 

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