Library Additions: Three Clive Barker Lettered Editions

March 11th, 2021

Three more books from the Subterranean Press PC sale. All these were long sold out from the publisher. As with Blood’s A Rover, Subterranean has provided plastic bags for both the traycase and the book inside the traycase for all of these.

  • Barker, Clive. Chiliad: A Meditation. Subterranean Press, 2014. First edition hardback, a PC copy of 26 lettered copies, a Fine copy in a Fine dust jacket and a Fine slipcase. Collects two novelettes. Bought for $250 (the original offering price).

  • Barker, Clive. Infernal Parade. Subterranean Press, 2017. First edition hardback, a PC copy of 52 signed, lettered copies, a Fine copy in a Fine dust jacket and a Fine traycase. Bought for $250 (the original offering price). Supplements a signed limited edition bought during one of their 50% off sales.

  • Barker, Clive. Tonight, Again. Subterranean Press, 2015. First edition hardback, a PC copy of 26 lettered copies, a Fine copy in a Fine dust jacket and a Fine slipcase. Bought for $250 (the original offering price). Supplements a trade edition.

  • All in all, these are a little plain compared to all the other items I’ve cataloged from the sale…

    Library Addition: Lettered Edition of Harlan Ellison’s Blood’s A Rover

    March 9th, 2021

    Another purchase from the Subterranean Press PC sale:

    Ellison, Harlan (edited by Jason Davis). Blood’s A Rover. Subterranean Press/Edgeworks Abbey, 2015. First edition hardback, a PC copy of 26 signed, numbered copies (the only signed edition), a Fine copy in patterned boards and a Fine traycase, sans dust jacket (though the art used for the trade edition dust jacket forms the fold-out frontispiece) as issued. (Most Subterranean books ship with a plastic bag around the book, while lettered editions have the bag around the traycase; this is the first case I’ve seen where they did both.) Collects all Ellison’s Vic and Blood stories. Dedicated to Michael Moorcock and A Boy and His Dog director L. Q. Jones. Long out of print. Bought for $500 (the original offering price).

    Library Addition: Signed, Limited Edition of Neil Gaiman’s Smoke and Mirrors

    March 8th, 2021

    Another book from the Subterranean Press PC sale:

    Gaiman, Neil. Smoke & Mirrors. Subterranean Press, 2014. First edition hardback thus, a PC copy of 500 numbered copies signed by Gaiman and illustrator Dave McKean. Preceded by both the Dreamhaven Angels and Visitations in 1993 and the Avon Smoke and Mirrors from 1998 (both of which I have). Includes new art by McKean. Sold out quickly the year of publication. Bought for $250 (the offering price).

    He’s Not Dead…

    March 5th, 2021

    …it’s only that his metabolism has gotten more selective.

    Tony Hendra, Spinal Tap manager Iain Faith in This Is Spinal Tap, dead at age 79.

    (Hat tip: Dwight.)

    Library Addition: Lettered Edition of George R. R. Martin’s A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms

    March 4th, 2021

    Subterranean Press had one of their PC sales, where Publisher Copies of limited and lettered editions of their books (most long out of print) are offered up for sale during a brief window of time. I ended up buying a ridiculous amount of limited and lettered editions. I’ll be listing them here over the next week or so. Here’s the first:

    Martin, George R. R. A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms. Subterranean Press, 2016. First signed limited edition hardback, a Fine PC copy of 52 leatherbound lettered copies signed by Martin and illustrator Gary Gianni, in a Fine traycase, sans dust jacket, as issued. An elaborate production, with full color fold-out frontispiece artwork and inserted card-stock separator, and a high quality embossed leather binding. Long out of print from the publisher. (In fact, I’m not even sure they ever offered the lettered edition in their email newsletter.) Bought for $600, a substantial discount from the original $750 offering price.

    Library Addition: Ward Moore’s Breathe the Air Again

    March 3rd, 2021

    If these seems like a rerun to you it’s because I bought another copy two years ago. However, this copy has a dust jacket:

    Moore, Ward. Breathe the Air Again. Harper & Brothers, 1942. First edition hardback (stated), a Near Fine copy with dust staining at top and bottom page blocks and slight bend at head and heel in a Near Fine, price-clipped dust jacket with price stamp of “2.95” next to clip, slight grubbiness (most noticeable to back rear cover), plus shallow closed tears at head and heel; despite that, it’s a bright, vibrant example of a dust jacket for which I can find no other scan on the Internet. Interestingly, this copy has a different binding, and even appears to be a different trim size, than my other copy. I now believe my earlier copy is not only a library rebind, but one for which the page blocks were trimmed as part of the rebinding process. Reportedly a Picaresque mainstream novel of labor organizing. Bought off an Internet dealer for $265.50.

    Current copy on the left, older copy on the right

    Library Addition: Signed, Limited Edition of Larry Niven’s The Magic Goes Away

    March 2nd, 2021

    Larry Niven falls into a sort of weird valley in my collecting history. I read a great deal of Niven in my youth and liked his work, but thought for novels he was better when he collaborated with Jerry Pournelle. By the time I started collecting first editions in the mid-1980s, his print runs had gotten pretty big, and I was more focused on collecting cyberpunk authors. Later, I started going back collecting writers from the Golden Age through the New Wave, Heinlein, Kuttner, Moore, Vance, Zelazny, Dick, etc. While I collected some of the Niven highpoints (such as the Gollancz Ringworld) and other works as targets of opportunity, I never made a particular effort to collect hardback firsts of his early works. (I’ll need to add that to my revised Books Wanted list, currently in progress.) When I picked up Burning City and Burning Tower, I saw that it was set in The Magic Goes Away universe, which I haven’t read and didn’t own. (I did pick up a TPO first of related book More Magic! for something like $2 way back when.) I’d had the impression it was a TPO only, but in fact there was a 1/1000 signed, numbered hardback published by Ace (which was not typically known for doing such editions), so I picked up a copy of that.

    Niven, Larry. The Magic Goes Away. Ace, 1978. First edition hardback, #243 of 1000 signed, numbered copies, a Fine copy in a Fine dust jacket. Signed and hand numbered (it looks like by Niven himself) on the front free endpaper. Bought off the Internet for $38.25

    Library Addition: Lettered Edition of Ray Bradbury’s The Dragon Who Ate His Tail

    March 1st, 2021

    Another signed Ray Bradbury first, this one a lettered edition:

    Bradbury, Ray. The Dragon Who Ate His Tail. Gauntlet Publications (they’re generally known as Gauntlet Press, but it says Gauntlet Publications on the copyright page), 2007. First edition hardback, a PC copy of 26 signed, numbered copies, a Fine copy with pasted frontispiece in a Fine slipcase, sans dust jacket, as issued. Miscellany of short stories, a radio play, a fascimile typescript, Bradbury doodle art, etc. Bought from an Austin book dealer for $120.

    This lettered edition seems absent from most reference sources, including the ISFDB.

    Shoegazer Sunday: Kuuhaku Marinus Covers Slowdive’s “Machine Gun”

    February 28th, 2021

    I have no idea who Kuuhaku Marinus is, though he seems to reside in Mexico and his ideogram (空白磨理成) seems to translate as “Blank Grid.”

    Here’s a pleasant cover of Slowdive’s “Machine Gun”:

    Library Addition: Signed First of J. G. Ballard’s Millennium People

    February 26th, 2021

    Picked up another signed Ballard first:

  • Ballard, J. G. Millennium People. Flamingo, 2003. First edition hardback, a Fine copy in a Fine- dust jacket with slight wrinkling at head and heel, signed by Ballard on a Waterston’s bookstore bookplate on the title page. Bought off eBay for $45.