The Wizard of Oz: The Official 50th Anniversary
Pictorial History, by John Fricke, Jay Scarfone, and William Stillman.
Introduction by Jack Haley, Jr.
“A commemorative volume offers the definitive pictorial
history of one of the most popular movies of all time.” - Amazon. A big book, full
of photos, art, toys, masks, commemorative items, in fact anything connected to
the 1939 MGM movie. The history of the book, the making of the movie, its
afterlife at matinees and on TV, and its cultural impact.
Ranking: Keeper.
File Code: Pictorial History. Film. Hardback.
Advanced D&D Monster Manuel (4th Edition), by
Gary Gygax.
“An Illustrated Compendium of Monsters: Aerial Servant to
Zombie.” Originally John’s and possibly still rightly so. I have it for the
bestiary of it all. Despite the best efforts of friends and family to get me (a
fantasy nut) to play D&D, I’ve never really gotten into it.
Ranking: Keeper.
File Code: Bestiary. Gaming. Hardback.
Ghost Story, by Peter Straub.
The scariest novel I have ever read. I remember the first
time I read it I was sleeping in the Green Room at Nanny’s, with its floating
curtains and wall-size windows into the atrium and the night. I tried following
Straub for a few years, but he never equaled this homage to the horror of Henry
James and “The Turn of the Screw” and the New England tradition. “Ghost Story is
a horror novel by American writer Peter Straub. It was published on January 1, 1979
by Coward, McCann and Geoghegan. The book was adapted into a film
by the same name in
1981, minus the novel's fifth protagonist character, Lewis Benedikt. The novel
was a watershed in Straub's career. Though his earlier books had achieved a
limited amount of critical and commercial success, Ghost Story became
a national bestseller and cemented the author's reputation.” – Wikipedia.
Ranking: Essential.
File Code: Horror. Novel. Hardback.
The Dracula Book of Great Vampire Stories, Edited with an
Introduction by Leslie Shepard.
An anthology of many great early vampire tales, by Stoker, Le
Fanu, Maupassant, Crawford, Benson, Blackwood, and others. We used to have a
paperback of this that John and I contended over with for a while, but when I
got this Hardback I conceded the other.
Ranking: Essential.
File Code: Anthology. Vampires. Hardback.
Escape from Hell, by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle.
A sequel to Niven’s “Inferno”. “The novel continues the story
of deceased science fiction writer Allen Carpenter in his quest to help other
damned souls in Hell. Like the first book, “Escape from
Hell” extensively references Dante's Inferno. Jerry Pournelle, one of the book's
co-authors, described the book as "Dante meets Vatican II." Following events in the first novel, in which Carpenter learned that it is possible to leave
Hell, Carpenter wants to help others in the way his benefactor helped him.
Carpenter meets and travels through all the circles of the Hell described by
Dante. He is accompanied in his travels by Sylvia Plath (whom he rescues from the Wood
of the Suicides by burning her tree, causing her physical body to reform
itself), attempting to understand the purpose of Hell and free many of the
damned. Carpenter discovers that, apparently because he returned to Hell of his
own free will to help others, he now possesses powers and abilities such as his
mentor, Benito, also displayed. In the end, and partly as the consequence of
some unusual changes to Hell itself, Carpenter not so much escapes as that he
is shown the door for being a troublemaker.” – Wikipedia.
Ranking: Keeper.
File Code: Bangsian Fantasy. Novel. Hardback.
The Book of Sorrows, by Walter Wangerin, Jr.
Sequel to “The Book of the Dun Cow”. I wanted to like it, but
I just couldn’t get into it. Maybe it was the weary setting back to square one,
after the apocalyptic ending of the first book. I don’t know. Maybe the time
wasn’t right: too late, or too soon. Maybe someday I’ll find my way in. There
is another in the series, “The Third Book of the Dun Cow: Peace at Last” which
I’ve never seen.
Ranking: Keeper.
File Code: Beast Fable. Fantasy. Novel. Softcover.
Urshurak, by The Brothers Hildebrandt and Jerry Nichols.
When this came out in 1979, I wanted to like it. I liked
fantasy. I liked the Hildebrandts. The pictures are great. The concept is
alright, but the execution … their story-telling talent is as illustrators, and
Nichols is not a good writer. I can’t look at this book without thinking of
carrying it in Mrs. Hardcastle’s class and trying to show it off, while
admitting that the writing was sub-par.
Ranking: Keeper.
File Code: Fantasy. Novel. Softcover.
84, Charing Cross Road, by Helene Hanff.
“A 1970 book by Helene Hanff, later made into a stage play,
television play, and film, about
the twenty-year correspondence between the author and Frank Doel, chief buyer of Marks & Co antiquarian booksellers,
located at the eponymous address in London, England. Hanff was in search of
obscure classics and British literature titles that she had been unable to find
in New York
City when she
noticed an ad in the Saturday Review of Literature. She first contacted the shop in
1949 and it fell to Doel to fulfil her requests. In time, a long-distance
friendship developed between the two and between Hanff and other staff members,
as well, with an exchange of Christmas packages, birthday gifts and
food parcels to help with the post-World War II food shortages in Britain. Their letters included discussions about topics as
diverse as the sermons of John Donne, how to make Yorkshire Pudding, the Brooklyn Dodgers and the coronation of Elizabeth II. Hanff postponed visiting her English friends until
too late; Doel died in December 1968 from peritonitis from a burst appendix, and the bookshop eventually closed
in December 1970. Hanff did finally visit Charing
Cross Road and
the empty shop in the summer of 1971.” Loved the movie, so got the book, and it
is good as well. A Penguin.
Ranking: Keeper.
File Code: Epistolary Novel. Softcover.
The Dwarf, by Par Lagerkvist.
Bought this book years ago at Yesterday’s Warehouse. “The
dwarf is the narrator, obviously obsessed with writing down his experiences in
a form of diary. Everything in the novel is
described from his viewpoint, mostly in retrospect, ranging from a few hours or
minutes to several weeks or months after the actual events. The dwarf is a
profound misanthrope and generally embodies all
things evil. He hates almost every person at the court except for the prince
(who is the ruler of the city-state, rather king than prince), or rather
aspects of him. He loves war, brutality and fixed positions. While almost all
other characters of the novel develop during the chain of events, the dwarf
does not change. He is still exactly the same character from the first to the
last page. He is deeply religious, but his take on Christianity includes the
belief in a non-forgiving God. He is impressed with Bernardo's science but soon
repelled by its relentless search for truth. When the dwarf is ordered to
assassinate a number of enemies of the prince using poisoned wine, he takes
this opportunity to assassinate one of the prince's rivals, simply because the
dwarf dislikes the rival and the rival is having an affair with the prince's
wife. The novel ends with the dwarf being strapped in chains at the bottom of the
royal castle, never to be released again. He is seemingly convicted for flogging the prince's wife to death in
anger over her sins. However he takes this sentence lightly, since, as he says,
"soon the prince will need his dwarf again." – Wikipedia.
Ranking: Keeper.
File Code: Novel. Softcover.
Kingdoms of Elfin, by Sylvia Townsend Warner.
This book came out when I was in high school. It has one of
those papery covers that is prone to disintegration, and there are specks on
this forty-year-old volume that suggests the bugs might have been nibbling on
it. “Elfindom is an aristocratic society, jealous of its privileges. The ruling
classes engage in such pursuits as patronizing the arts or hunting with the
Royal Pack of Werewolves, while the lower orders take pleasure in conducting
brutal raiding parties into the world to torment mortals. The Kingdoms of Elfin
are more diverse and widely scattered than is often thought; from the Welsh
Elfins who, though constitutionally incapable of faith, remove mountains, and
the elegant and witty French Court of Brocéliande where castration almost
becomes a vogue, to the Kingdom of Zuy in the Low Countries, trafficking
suppositories and religious pictures. Sylvia Townsend Warner's richly exuberant
imagination combined with the calm precision of her language conjures up a
sublunary realm that is entirely convincing.” – Goodreads. Her last book; she
died the next year.
Ranking: Keeper.
File Code: Short Stories. Fantasy. Softcover.
Tales from Watership Down, by Richard Adams.
Short stories that return to the world of Watership Down.
Many old characters are revisited in new tales. I don’t know if it’s just my
weary old brain, but I can’t get into a lot of these long-delayed returns; just
can’t raise the enthusiasm. Yet, they are related to the old classics.
Ranking: Keeper.
File Code: Short Stories. Beast Fable. Hardback.
Animal Farm, by George Orwell.
“Animal Farm is an allegorical novella by George Orwell, first published in England on 17
August 1945. The book tells the story of a group of farm animals who rebel
against their human farmer, hoping to create a society where the animals can be
equal, free, and happy. Ultimately, however, the rebellion is betrayed, and the
farm ends up in a state as bad as it was before, under the dictatorship of a
pig named Napoleon. According to Orwell, the fable reflects events leading up to the Russian Revolution of 1917 and then on into the Stalinist era of the Soviet Union.” – Wikipedia. There has been an
animated movie, and a live action TV version, and I was even in a stage version
in high school. [Not my cover, but of the vintage of this copy, which has a plain green cover with reddish letters.]
Ranking: Essential.
File Code: Allegory/Satire. Novel. Hardback.
1975 Yearbook of Jehovah’s Witnesses, by The Watch Tower
Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania.
They can try to re-write their history as much as they like,
but I got the evidence! The year of (one of) their grand failures of the
prophesied end. Actually has Mike’s and my “Speech Counsel” forms from the
Theocratic Ministry School.
Ranking: Grim Reminder.
File Code: The Bulliest of Bull Bleep.
Notre Dame de Paris, by Victor Marie Hugo.
Number 12 in The Harvard Classics Shelf of Fiction. The
longer version. I bought this at one of the last book sales of the old Seguin
Public Library. It reminds me of the shorter, older, much battered version
we’ve had for years, from which I read a passage in David Fleming’s class for a
recitation (trying to be a smarty). We read that old book until the cloth cover
was loose. I always identified both with Quasimodo and the alchemical,
love-torn Claude Frollo.
Ranking: Essential.
File Code: Historical Novel. Hardback.
The Devil’s Dictionary by Ambrose Bierce.
Bought at Yesterday’s Warehouse. “The Devil's Dictionary is
a satirical dictionary written by American
Civil War soldier,
journalist, and writer Ambrose Bierce consisting of common words
followed by humorous and satirical definitions. The lexicon was written over
three decades as a series of installments for magazines and newspapers.
Bierce's witty definitions were imitated and plagiarized for years before he
gathered them into books, first as The Cynic's Word Book in 1906 and
then in a more complete version as The Devil's Dictionary in
1911.” – Wikipedia. Cover shows slight damage.
Ranking: Essential.
File Code: Humor. Satire. Hardback.
Fifty-One Tales by Lord Dunsany.
“Fifty-One Tales is a collection of fantasy short stories by Irish
writer Lord
Dunsany, considered
a major influence on the work of J. R. R. Tolkien, H. P. Lovecraft, Ursula K. Le Guin and others.” -Wikipedia. It was
published in 1915; my copy is from 1917.
Ranking: Essential.
File Code: Fantasy. Short Stories. Hardback.
Poems Bewitched and Haunted, Selected and Edited by John
Hollander.
Everyman’s Library Pocket Poets. Poems of witches, ghosts,
haunted houses, and magic, perfect for Halloween and appropriately decorated
with jack o’ lanterns on the cover. A nice little browser.
Ranking: Essential.
File Code: Poetry. Anthology. Supernatural. Hardback.
A Severe Mercy, and Under the Mercy, by Sheldon Vanauken.
The first volume tells about Vanauken’s marriage with his
wife Davy, how they set up their deep romantic love as a ‘shining barrier’
against the world. Then they found their developing Christian faith an invasion
into what was becoming a selfish, enclosed world of their own, beautiful as it
was. They had begun a correspondence with C. S. Lewis as they became
Christians; the book contains ‘18 previously unpublished letters’ from him. The
‘severe mercy’ is the illness and death of Davy, removed before their love can
become an idol between them and God. Their love then remains constant and true
within the love of God, until they be reunited again. The second volume is
about Vanauken working out his faith in a post-Davy, post-Lewis world, and “how
he lost sight of his faith, became involved in the peace and civil rights
movements, and gradually rediscovered his Christian beliefs” (- Amazon),
eventually becoming a Catholic. The book also discusses his opinions on several
social matters, including feminism as it was developing from a social justice into
an angry and illogical political tool.
Ranking: Keepers.
File Code: Religion. Autobiography. Hardbacks.
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