Archive for the ‘Science Fiction’ Category

Library Addition: William Golding’s The Inheritors

Wednesday, June 8th, 2022

Among my many collecting vectors is obtaining first editions of all the books on David Pringle’s Science Fiction: The 100 Best Novels. This used to be fairly pricey, but I found a nice copy that was quite affordable.

Golding, William. The Inheritors. Faber and Faber, 1955. First edition hardback, a Fine- copy with a bump at head in a Near Fine dust jacket with a few faint, tiny spots to top rear outer corner, slight spotting at very top and bottom of flaps, slight bump at head, and numerous small blind side spots. All in all a very nice copy. Novel of Homo Sapiens driving the last Neanderthals to extinction. Pringle, Science Fiction: The 100 Best Novels 19. Magill, Survey of Science Fiction Literature, pages 1036-1039. Bought from a fellow Biblio dealer for £179.80 (including shipping).

Library Addition: Michael Swanwick’s The Once and Future Rye

Sunday, June 5th, 2022

Another signed Dragonstairs chapbook:

Swanwick, Michael. The Proceedings of the American Martini Institute: A Report of the American Martini Laboratory: The Once And Future Rye: The Whisky that Was America. Dragonstairs Press, 2022. First edition chapbook original, #20 of 80 signed copies, a Fine copy. A history of rye whisky in America, in the same vein as Swanwick’s The Evolution of the Martini. Ten more of these and he’ll have enough for a book! Bought from the publisher at the usual discount.

Copies of this will be available in the next Lame Excuse Books catalog, currently in progress.

Library Additions: Two Samuel R. Delany Gregg Press Firsts

Wednesday, June 1st, 2022

Here’s two different Delany Gregg Press firsts bought from two different sources:

  • Delany, Samuel R. Dhalgren. Gregg Press, 1977. First hardback edition (and first edition thus, containing textual differences), a Near Fine- copy with spine just starting to crease, a few of spots of light rubbing to the spine, light dust spotting to top and side page block edges, six small, neat red page numbers from the introduction written inside the front cover, and a few small annotations in the same red in the introduction itself, sans dust jacket, as issued. It’s hard to overstate just how massively wide this book is, over 1,000 pages with the lengthy introduction, easily the widest book Gregg Press ever published, and one of the hardest Gregg Press titles to find period (reportedly only 350 copies were published), probably only behind Dick’s Dr. Bloodmoney and possibly the two Locus volumes. L. W. Currey was already asking $300 for a copy in 1989, and they don’t tend to come on the market much. Though far from my own favorite of Delany’s work, it is probably the very hardest of his books to find. K. Leslie Steiner, “Some remarks on Reading Dhalgren,” pages 57-92 in Delany’s The Straits of Messina. Weedman, Samuel R. Delany, pages 61-69. McEvoy, Samuel R. Delany, pages 97-120. Barron, Anatomy of Wonder 4, 4-127. Magill, Survey of Science Fiction Literature, pages 533-538. (“Dhalgren marks the nadir of pessimism in science fiction’s tradition of social criticism.”) Currey, page 139. Bought for $300 from someone selling off their book collection.

    (Note: Ignore the blotches on the middle right part of the image, which is just the edge of another book I used to prop Dhalgren up on the scanner so I could scan the spine. And ignore the left side taper at the bottom.)

  • Delany, Samuel R. The Fall of the Towers. Gregg Press, 1977. First hardback edition, a Fine- copy with a tiny bit of bumping to top outer edge, sans dust jacket, as issued. Omnibus volume that includes Captives of the Flame (AKA Out of the Dead City), The Towers of Toron, and City of a Thousand Suns. McEvoy, Samuel R. Delany, pages 28-44. K. Leslie Steiner, “Ruins/Foundations, or The Fall of the Towers Twenty Years After,” pages 99-154 in Delany’s The Straits of Messina. Currey, page 140. Bought from a UK dealer for £67.50.
  • Library Addition: Signed PBO First of Theodore Sturgeon’s Voyage To The Bottom Of The Sea

    Wednesday, May 25th, 2022

    Another signed Sturgeon first:

    Sturgeon, Theodore. Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea. Pyramid, 1961. First edition paperback original (“First printing, June 1961” on copyright page, as per Currey), a Near Fine copy with slight wear at points, slight edgewear, and usual slight foxing to inside covers and slight age darkening to pages, otherwise a nice, square copy, signed by Sturgeon. Novelization of the Irwin Allen film. Diskin, Theodore Sturgeon: a primary and secondary bibliography, A148. Currey, page 473. Replaces an unsigned copy. Bought off eBay for $25.

    Library Addition: Signed First Of Ray Bradbury Interview Book Listen To The Echoes

    Friday, May 20th, 2022

    Another addition to the signed Ray Bradbury reference works collection:

    (Bradbury, Ray) Sam Weller. Listen to the Echoes: The Ray Bradbury Interviews. Stopsmling Books, 2010. First edition trade paperback original (simultaneous with a small hardback run), a Fine copy, signed by Bradbury. Collection of interviews Weller did with Bradbury, plus a previously unpublished Paris Review interview. Bought for $40 from an online bookseller.

    Library Addition: Signed First of Jack Williamson’s The Silicon Dagger

    Wednesday, May 18th, 2022

    Another signed first edition from a Grandmaster. I knew Jack a little, and he was a long-time subscriber to Nova Express.

    Williamson, Jack. The Silicon Dagger. Tor, 1999. First edition hardback, a Fine copy in a Fine dust jacket, inscribed by Williamson: “For/Vicky/Foreman/Jack Williamson/3-2-2000.” Jack’s second-to-last novel. Hauptmann, The Work of Jack Williamson, A78 (still forthcoming at the time). Won off eBay for $5.

    Library Addition: Cornel Lengyel’s The Atomic Clock

    Friday, May 13th, 2022

    Fantasy Publishing Company, Inc. (FPCI) is not a press that I actively collect, unlike contemporaries Gnome Press, Arkham House or Shasta: Publishers. For every notable writer FPCI published (say, Hubbard or de Camp), they published two by writers that nobody reads or collects any more, but I pick up titles when I find them cheap. This I had wanted to pick up for a while, since I had never actually seen a copy.

    Lengyel, Cornel. The Atom Clock. Fantasy Publishing Company, Inc. (FPCI), 1951. First edition chapbook original, one of 750 copies (simultaneous with a 250 copy hardback run), a Near Fine copy with sticker pull at top right of title page, over which is a small inked price of $125, in a Very Good+ dust jacket with a shallow chip and associated small crease at top right of the front cover, a closed 1/16th triangular tear at top rear, slight rubbing to front cover, and slight dust soiling to white rear cover. Anti-atomic play. Won awards, but I’m sure the sentiment of the thing would strike me as naive and dated. Chalker & Owings (1991), page 179, where they note that the hardback is “almost never seen.” Kemp, The Anthem Series, pages 89-90. Bought off eBay for a $30 offer.

    Library Additions: Five Unsigned First Editions

    Wednesday, May 11th, 2022

    Various books I’ve bought in various places:

  • Bester, Alfred. Virtual Unrealities: The Short Fiction of Alfred Bester. Vintage/Random House, 1997. First edition proof, trade paperback format, a Fine- copy with a tiny chip to tip of bottom front corner, gold “A Vintage Original” sticker on front cover and accompanying review page. Supplements a copy of the trade paperback original. Bought off eBay for $10.97.

  • Davidson, Avram. Beer! Beer! Beer! Or All The Seas With Oysters Publishing (OATSWOP), 2021. First edition print-on-demand trade paperback (the only print edition offered), a Fine copy. An original prohibition tale unearthed by the Davidson estate and offered through Amazon, which is the only place it’s available.
  • Howard, Robert E. The Iron Man. Donald M. Grant, 1976. First edition hardback, a Near Fine copy with a 1/2″ high area of abrasion across bottom of front and back boards near spine (but not at the spine itself), in a Fine- dust jacket with slight touches of wear at points and elsewhere. Howard’s boxing stories. Obtained as a throw-in freebie on another order.
  • Tiptree, Jr. James. Up the Walls of the World. Berkley Putnam, 1978. First edition hardback (no statement of printing on copyright page, as per ISFDB), a Fine- copy with slight bending at head and a small ding to top front board, in a Near Fine- dust jacket with a long crease along bottom front cover and associated 1/4″ closed tear. Tiptree’s only novel. Bought as part of a four book lot for $15.
  • Wellman, Manly Wade. The Haunts of Drowning Creek. Holiday House, 1951. First edition hardback, a Good only copy with cracked front and rear inner hinges, a 1/4″ triangular board loss at heel, pocket removal, former owner’s name on inside front cover, bumped corners, and general spotting and wear. Reading copy only, but this is possibly the hardest Wellman Young Adult novel to find. Bought off eBay for $15 as part of a two book Wellman lot.
  • Library Addition: Suntup Editions’ Island of Dr. Moreau

    Monday, May 2nd, 2022

    I’ve watched the rise of Suntup Editions with bemusement. They’re a prestige reprint publisher, doing attractive editions of books (most, but not all, connected to the SF/F/H genre), usually doing three (or even four) states of a book: The Artist Edition, a Numbered Edition (since many books are by authors long dead, usually signed by the introduction or foreward author), a Lettered Edition, and occasionally a Roman Numeral Edition, all with different exterior designs, so each state of the book looks different from the others. I think each title includes appendices or material not in other editions of the book.

    In some ways, Suntup is more like a cult than a publisher, with a dedicated base of followers that cause most of their books to almost immediately go out of print despite the hefty prices. Wait, did I say “hefty?” I meant “insane.” They basically redefined “aggressive” pricing for prestige reprints. When you’re talking books that go for more than a signed Fine/Fine true first edition, you’re in very rarefied air indeed.

    Take, for example, the Roman numeral edition of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, which could have been yours for a mere $14,500.

    All of those have already sold out.

    Moreover, to obtain the numbered and lettered edition, it’s not enough to merely offer up your money. No, in order to get one of those, you have to have the matching number from the previous publication, or else apply to be awarded the right to buy one in a lottery. So if you really wanted their lettered or numbered copy of Wells’ The Time Machine, you needed to own the matching letter or number of Robert James Waller’s The Bridges of Madison County (which is, granted, a very atypical title for this press).

    It doesn’t help that the selling prices seem to have been going up pretty steadily. The numbered state of The Time Machine (2020) listed for $295; the numbered state of their forthcoming edition of Thomas Harris’ Hannibal (which, to be fair, has the advantage of being signed by Harris, a fairly desirable and not-super-common signature among modern writers) lists for $545.

    Oh yeah: It’s already out of print as well.

    There’s more than a whiff of Tulipmania about the whole thing.

    I doubt there’s much overlap between the SF/F/H collecting circles I travel in and whoever it is that is buying Suntup Press books, though I know that a few SF small press publishers, like Subterranean and Dark Regions, have added some Suntup titles to their offerings. Suntup seems to be selling to a “printed book as art object” crowd serviced by The Folio Society (but at much higher price points), as well as people who try to collect every edition of certain classic books.

    As for myself, once you get up in the price range of their limited and lettered editions, there are simply too many true first editions I’m looking for to want to spend what Suntup wants for those.

    I’ve noticed some price erosion in the secondary market for some Suntup titles, with one of their “Artist Editions” dipping below $100 on eBay, at which point I thought I would pick one up just to see if I could discern what all the fuss is about:

    Wells, H. G. The Island of Dr. Moreau. Suntup Editions, 2021. First edition hardback thus, one of 1,000 copies signed by artists Benz & Chang, a Fine copy in a Fine dust jacket and a Fine slipcase, with bookmark for the title laid in. (For a list of the additional material included, see here.) Originally offered at $130 and sold out. Bought off eBay for $90.

    Physically, it is quite a nice production, bound in full cloth with nice quality paper and thick dust jacket stock and a marbled slipcase. But while the quality for Suntup titles may be a bit better than those of, say, Subterranean, they come at significantly higher price points and fairly large print runs, for reprint editions that are (generally) not signed by the author.

    Perhaps the limited and lettered editions of various title are so attractive as to be worth the higher prices, but I rather doubt it. When I can buy nice copies of older and more desirable true firsts like Skull-Face And Others in the price range of their numbered editions (indeed, I bought my one signed H. G. Wells title for less than half what Suntup asked for their numbered edition of The Island of Dr. Moreau), Suntup doesn’t really offer me a compelling value for my book-collecting buck. Even among prestige reprints of SF/F/H titles, I tend to find Centipede Press editions more attractive and a better value, with lower prices and smaller print runs.

    I am skeptical that many Suntup offerings are going to maintain their value in the long run.

    Library Addition: Signed, Limited Edition of Jack Vance’s The Last Castle

    Tuesday, April 26th, 2022

    Another signed Vance acquisition:

    Vance, Jack. The Last Castle. Underwood/Miller, 1980. First hardback edition, number 121 of 200 numbered copies signed by Vance and illustrator Alicia Austin, a Fine copy in a Near Fine+ just jacket with one tiny 1/32″ chip to top of inner rear flap and a trace of wear at points, with additional signature card by Austin laid in. Oversized, lavishly illustrated version of this fine Vance novella. Hewett, A31d. Cunningham, 45bBought off eBay for $51.