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- **************************************************************
- * *
- * R E A D I N G F O R P L E A S U R E *
- * *
- * Issue #3 *
- * *
- * July 1989 *
- * *
- * *
- * Editor: Cindy Bartorillo *
- * *
- * *
- **************************************************************
-
-
- CONTACT US AT: Reading For Pleasure, c/o Cindy Bartorillo, 1819
- Millstream Drive, Frederick, MD 21701; or on CompuServe leave a
- message to 74766,1206; or on GEnie leave mail to C.BARTORILLO; or
- call our BBS, the BAUDLINE II at 301-694-7108, 1200/2400 8N1.
-
-
- NOTICE: Reading For Pleasure is not copyrighted, but excerpts
- from copyrighted material are contained within. When copying or
- otherwise reproducing any part herein, please give appropriate
- credit, whether it be to Shakespeare or Reading For Pleasure.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
- Editorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
- What's News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167
- Good Reading Periodically . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 313
- ------------------------
- Books About Books:
- ------------------------
- Two-Bit Culture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 357
- Christopher Morley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 425
- Fiction Into Film: 84 Charing Cross Road . . . . . . . . . 506
- Assorted References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 569
- Bibliomysteries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 672
- ------------------------
- Received: DEEP QUARRY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 810
- July Birthdays . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 876
- Featured Author: Harlan Ellison . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 960
- Number One Fan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1329
- Trivia Quiz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113
- Trivia Answers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1387
-
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-
-
-
-
- CONTRIBUTIONS: We're just ecstatic when we get contributions. Of
- course we can't pay, but if you'd like to send us a paragraph or
- two (or even an article), we'd be delighted. Any book-related
- ideas or opinions are suitable. See masthead for addresses.
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- Send books for review to Reading For Pleasure, c/o Cindy
- Bartorillo, 1819 Millstream Drive, Frederick, MD 21701
-
-
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-
-
- It is a writer's obligation to his craft to go to bed angry, and
- to rise up angrier the next day. To fight for the words because,
- at final moments, that's all a writer has to prove his right to
- exist as a spokesman for his times.
- --Harlan Ellison, "Somehow, I Don't Think We're In Kansas, Toto"
- (STALKING THE NIGHTMARE)
-
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-
-
-
-
- EDITORIAL
-
-
- It's one thing to like to read, but when you're obsessive
- enough to like to read Books About Books, you're beyond all help.
- Like me. Fortunately, we're not alone, and this month we take a
- look at a few of the nice people who are feeding our addiction.
- May you enjoy reading this issue as much as we enjoyed putting it
- together. Oh, yes, one other point...
-
-
- The big news this month is the print version of Reading For
- Pleasure. We've been playing around with some desktop publishing
- software and have managed to produce a rather nice printed copy
- of this issue, which is being given out at The Little Shop of
- Books here in Frederick, MD.
-
-
- If you'd like to get a copy of the print edition, just write
- (see masthead for addresses) and tell us your name and address.
- Copies will be distributed, free of charge, to the limits of our
- bank balance. We appreciate your appreciation.
-
-
- Hope you find a lot of good reading in this issue, and a lot
- of titles to add to your reading list. See you next month.
-
-
- *-Cindy
-
-
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-
-
- A beautifully designed book catalog, chock-full of good reading,
- can be had from Cahill & Company, 950 North Shore Drive, Lake
- Bluff, IL 60044. Fascinating selections for Readers, and also
- good for gift giving.
-
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-
-
-
-
- TRIVIA QUIZ
-
-
- 1. Christopher Morley founded a group dedicated to studying a
- some mysteries from England. What was (is) the name of the group?
- 2. Harlan Ellison filed suit (and won) to get credit (and money)
- for the original concept of what hit movie?
- 3. What was the first American novel to sell 1,000,000 copies?
- 4. Who said: "To be, or not to be"?
- 5. When Harlan Ellison feels his screenplay has been corrupted,
- what pseudonym does he use in the screen credits?
- 6. Who was the boy who didn't want to grow up?
- 7. King Arthur was notable for, among other things, having a
- sword that actually had a name. What was the sword's name?
- 8. Who wrote MEIN KAMPF?
- 9. Harlan Ellison has publicly admitted to one, and only one,
- phobia. What is he afraid of?
- 10. The real-life adventures of Alexander Selkirk became what
- classic novel?
-
-
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-
-
-
- If you don't know about QPBC (Quality Paperback Book Club), you
- certainly should. This is one fantastic club for Readers. Their
- selections strike a wonderful middle ground between the Judith
- Krantz-types of the Doubleday Bargain Book Club and the
- pretentious Book-of-the-Month Club. QPBC simply has great taste
- in books, and the blurbs in their monthly mailing are mouth-
- watering. They manage to find the unusual; the book that is worth
- your attention but that you've probably never heard of before.
- One of my first purchases was AFTER THE FACT: The Art of
- Historical Detection by James West Davidson and Mark Hamilton
- Lytle. I'd never heard of this book, but the description just
- sounded good, and it turned out to be one of the best books I'd
- read all year. Since then QPBC has introduced me to many books I
- would otherwise have missed. There are no negatives with this
- company: the books are good-quality editions, the service is the
- absolute best, and the prices are great. You'll find their ads in
- a lot of the better magazines, and if you're in the market for a
- book club, you can't do better than QPBC.
-
-
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-
-
- Let us know if you have a copy of THE QUEST FOR THE WHITE DUCK by
- Lionel Fenn that you'd be willing to sell.
-
-
- Have a particular book that you're looking to buy? Let us list it
- here, along with your name and address.
-
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-
-
-
-
- WHAT'S NEWS
-
-
- * The latest word I've gotten is that the elusive unexpurgated
- version of Stephen King's THE STAND is due "sometime next year"
- from Doubleday. You see, this book was published back when SK
- still had to listen to editors, and they "edited" a significant
- portion of his book right out. Now he's got the clout to have the
- thing published in the original author-intended form, so that's
- what we're gonna get.
-
-
- * I just heard about The 1989 Australian SF Achievement Awards.
- Best International Fiction: SEVENTH SON by Orson Scott Card;
- Australian Long Fiction: STRIPED HOLES by Damien Broderick;
- Australian Short Fiction: "My Lady Tongue" by Lucy Sussex;
- Fanzine: GET STUFFED edited by Jacob Blake; Fan Writer: Bruce
- Gillespie; Fan Artist: Ian Gunn; William Atheling Award: Russell
- Blackford (for articles in Australian SF Review).
-
-
- * The latest SATANIC VERSES story: A French magazine, L'Idiot
- International, wanted to distribute a copy of the book with their
- next issue, so they printed up 50,000 copies. This was very
- disturbing to Christian Bourgois, the publisher who holds the
- French rights to the novel, who complained and got the 50,000
- volumes confiscated.
-
-
- * Bob Hope, along with coauthor Melville Shavelson (who wrote for
- Hope on radio), has signed a seven-figure deal for the hard/soft
- rights with Putnam/Berkley for BOB HOPE'S COMEDY HISTORY OF THE
- UNITED STATES.
-
-
- * Reviews have been just great for THE LODESTAR by Pamela Belle.
- This is a novel about Richard III, set against the backdrop of
- the Wars of the Roses (whose reputation for dullness is totally
- undeserved). This book should appeal to Historical fans, Richard
- III fanatics (Ms. Belle is pro-Richard), as well as bringing in
- readers from outside the genre who simply like good fiction. Due
- out this month ($19.95) from St. Martin's.
-
-
- * In case you've forgotten, Martin Cruz Smith's sequel to GORKY
- PARK comes out this month from Random House. It's $19.95 and it's
- called POLAR STAR. Publisher's Weekly says it's "mesmerizing, the
- work of a hugely gifted writer". It'll be out in paperback
- eventually, of course, and $19.95 is a lot of money, but this one
- is going to be tough to pass up this month.
-
-
- * The World Fantasy Convention, held every year during the last
- weekend of October, will be at the Sheraton Hotel & Towers in
- Seattle this year. Guests will be Ursula K. LeGuin, S.P. Somtow,
- Robert R. McCammon, and Avram Davidson. Toastmaster will be
- Ginjer Buchanan. The convention address is Box 31815, Seattle, WA
- 98103.
-
-
- * Who got to the North Pole first: Robert Peary or Frederick
- Cook? Did either of them EVER get to the North Pole? If you've
- been following the controversy in the last few years you might
- want to read Wally Herbert's THE NOOSE OF LAURELS: Robert E.
- Peary and the Race to the North Pole (this month, $24.95 from
- Atheneum).
-
-
- * The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction has got a big 40th
- anniversary issue coming us with over 200 pages, and new stories
- by Disch, Ballard, Silverberg, Wolfe, Aldiss, Shepard, Malzberg,
- Kim Stanley Robinson, Benford, Budrys, Pohl, and others.
- Publication date is August 29.
-
-
- * Novelist Robert B. Parker and his wife, Joan Parker, paid $1 to
- Stephen King for nonexclusive dramatic rights to RAGE, his short
- novel published under the pseudonym Richard Bachman. They turned
- it into a play which was to have its premiere in Gloucester, MA,
- in early March.
-
-
- * A book you might want to check out is JOURNEY INTO SPACE: The
- First Three Decades of Space Exploration by Bruce Murray, the
- former head of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. I've heard that the
- book tells a dramatic story of the exhilaration of the early
- days, followed by the frustrating descent that ended with the
- Challenger disaster. It seems that Murray blames NASA for a great
- deal, and he has very definite ideas about where to go from here.
- Sounds like good reading for space exploration enthusiasts. Out
- this month for $19.95 from Norton.
-
-
- * You may recall the news item in RFP about a horror anthology
- being put together by Thomas F. Monteleone (called BORDERLANDS).
- I wrote to him asking when he expected publication (including an
- SASE, of course), and received a form letter reply that said:
- "Please do me and yourself a favor and re-read my market listing/
- announcement in Scavengers, Locus, SF Chronicle, or the upcoming
- HWA Newsletter. I think it's quite clear that BORDERLANDS is an
- anthology (that is, a book), and therefore not a magazine. Hence,
- there are no 'sample issues,' okay." Mr. Monteleone must be
- working too hard.
-
-
- Therefore, in a fit of pique I won't mention that his new book
- FANTASMA has been published by Tor for $3.95, and I certainly
- won't mention that he's a wonderful writer that deserves a wider
- audience.
-
-
- * Remember those four new books Stephen King sold the U.S.
- hardcover and paperback backs rights to (to Viking/NAL) for
- around $36 million? Well, I bet you forgot about book club
- rights, but luckily SK didn't -- they went to Book-of-the-Month
- Club for around $5 million.
-
-
- * The SF Poetry Association has given out the 1988 Rhysling
- Awards, as follows: Long Poem: "White Trains" by Lucius Shepard;
- Short Poem: "Rocky Road to Hoe" by Suzette Haden Elgin tied with
- "The Nightmare Collector" by Bruce Boston. Membership in the SF
- Poetry Association is $8 a year from 2012 Pyle Road, Schenectady,
- NY 12303.
-
-
- * Edward Abbey, author of THE MONKEY WRENCH GANG and THE BRAVE
- COWBOY (the book from which the movie LONELY ARE THE BRAVE was
- made), died March 14 at his home in Oracle, Arizona at the age of
- 62.
-
-
- * In case you missed it, Donald Westlake had a story in the May
- issue of Playboy Magazine called "Starship Hopeful: Here's
- Looking at You". I haven't had time to read it yet, but thought
- you might want to know. By the way, Westlake wrote the screenplay
- to a terrific non-supernatural horror movie called THE
- STEPFATHER. You really should see it; literate horror is rare.
-
-
- * Little, Brown will soon be publishing a book called THE
- PESSIMIST'S JOURNAL OF VERY, VERY BAD DAYS by Jess Brallier &
- Richard McDonough. In keeping with the tone of the book, the
- authors expect THE PESSIMIST'S JOURNAL to bomb. Further, they
- expect "printing problems, binding problems, shipping problems,
- returns higher than sales, lawsuits and a general loss of
- standing in the community." Little, Brown is "planning Pessimist
- Dozen pre-packs of 11 copies, a large first printing, promotion
- to the trade and a 'Have a Bad Day' point-of-sale display."
-
-
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-
- What I'm telling you is that the bookseller is a public servant.
- He ought to be pensioned by the state.
- --Christopher Morley, THE HAUNTED BOOKSHOP
-
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- See a mistake? Please let us know.
-
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-
-
-
-
- GOOD READING PERIODICALLY
-
-
- INSIDE BOOKS is rather like PEOPLE magazine for readers. The
- pages are slick and so is the writing. There are lots of pictures
- and the paragraphs are short. The up side is that there is a lot
- of good information presented in a easily consumable style and
- format. Let's face it, we don't want to read THE AMERICAN SCHOLAR
- all the time. Sometimes superficial is just right.
-
-
- Take, for instance, the author interviews. They're short,
- shallow, and usually manage to bring out a few intriguing facts
- about the author or the author's recent book. That's their job,
- you know -- selling books (that's why the publishers and author
- play ball with them). But if the material is interesting, why
- should we care? And, in fact, the writing in INSIDE BOOKS
- occasionally sparkles. The May issue called Douglas Adams
- (HITCHHIKER'S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY, etc.) "hideously rich", which
- I think is a lovely way to express the idea.
-
-
- INSIDE BOOKS is $2.50 per monthly issue, or $19.95 for one year's
- subscription, $35.95 for two years. Call 305-759-5500 or write
- INSIDE BOOKS, P.O. Box 370773, Miami, FL 33137. Or just get an
- issue at the newsstand and use one of the 36 subscription blow-in
- cards that almost all magazines use nowadays.
-
-
- If you send $9.95 to PAPERBACK PREVIEWS, P.O. Box 8368,
- Albuquerque, NM 87198, they'll send you one year of their monthly
- newspaper. Each issue contains a list of, I believe, ALL of the
- paperback releases for that month. Each listing (except for the
- numbered romances) has a good-sized blurb about the plot to help
- you make informed decisions. You can order any book listed, but
- they don't twist your arm. It's perfectly OK to simply pay your
- $9.95 each year for PAPERBACK PREVIEWS and never order a thing,
- as we do. This is a great source of information for paperback
- people.
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-
-
- Amateur Writers: We are soliciting short fiction and poetry for a
- first Reading For Pleasure Anthology. No pay, but your words will
- travel coast to coast.
-
-
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-
-
- TWO-BIT CULTURE: The Paperbacking of America
- by Kenneth C. Davis
- (Houghton Mifflin, 1984)
-
-
- This is a wonderful 400-page read, full of drama, pathos,
- and not a little humor. As I mentioned somewhere in the last
- issue, the paperback has significantly changed reading. Now we
- can have literature, of any sort we like, right in our pocket,
- carrying our happiness around with us. Now here's TWO-BIT CULTURE
- to explain just how this revolution happened.
-
-
- Contained within are the stories of the major publishing
- houses as well as those of the people behind them. What reader
- could resist this trip down memory lane? Remember Dr. Spock?
- Remember Grace Metalious? Mr. Davis also gives attention to "The
- Great Contradiction" -- meaning his title. You see, the unwashed
- masses don't want, wouldn't know what to do with, culture. What's
- the point of putting good literature into an affordable format
- when all the public wants is garbage? Isn't, therefore, anything
- published in paperback by definition garbage? If you're over 30,
- you know this song by heart. Since you're still a reader, you've
- obviously matured enough to know that good literature DOES sell
- (or should I say CAN sell) and that good is good no matter what
- package it comes in. Cover art is also discussed, with numerous
- full-page black and white reproductions of old paperback covers.
-
-
- One more thing. In the back of the book is a list that Mr.
- Davis calls "Fifty Paperbacks that Changed America". Actually
- there are 50 in the main list with 35 Honorable Mentions.
- Together, these books would make an excellent education in Modern
- Western Civilization, a superb reading list for anyone who wants
- to know how we got where we are today. I can heartily recommend
- TWO-BIT CULTURE, a good tale well-told.
-
-
-
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-
- Send conventional mail to: Reading For Pleasure, c/o Cindy
- Bartorillo, 1819 Millstream Drive, Frederick, MD 21701
-
-
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-
-
- JAMES THURBER: Even when old and blind he stuck to his habits.
-
-
- He had an affair with a NEW YORKER secretary, but his blindness
- made for tactical problems. He had to rely on one of the
- magazine's office boys to lead him about; as his run of bad
- luck would have it, the office boy assigned to him was
- eighteen-year-old Truman Capote. "I worked as a boy in the Art
- Department then," Capote recalled, "and one of my jobs was to
- take Thurber to his girlfriend's apartment. She was as ugly as
- sin, so it served him right. I would have to wait for him at
- the apartment till he was finished, and then I'd dress him. He
- could undress by himself but he couldn't dress by himself,
- couldn't even cross the street by himself. Now since Helen
- Thurber would dress him in the morning, she knew how he looked.
- Well, one time I put his socks on the wrong side out, and when
- he got home, I gather Helen asked him a lot of questions. The
- next day, Thurber was furious at me--he said I did it on
- purpose..."
- --Burton Bernstein, THURBER, 1975
-
-
- (This is an excerpt from THE OXFORD BOOK OF AMERICAN LITERARY
- ANECDOTES edited by Donald Hall, Oxford University Press, 1981)
-
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-
-
- PARNASSUS ON WHEELS and THE HAUNTED BOOKSHOP
-
-
- by Christopher Morley
-
-
-
-
- Real bibliophiles are rare, which makes Christopher Morley a
- name you should know. In his PARNASSUS ON WHEELS and THE HAUNTED
- BOOKSHOP you can spend some time with Roger Mifflin, probably a
- not-very-well-disguised version of Christopher Morley himself, a
- man who knows all about the love of literature. In the first
- book, published in 1917, Roger Mifflin meets Helen McGill when he
- sells her his used-book-store-on-wheels that he calls Parnassus.
- You needn't head for the dictionary: a Parnassus is a center of
- poetic or artistic activity. At the end of the story they marry.
-
-
- In THE HAUNTED BOOKSHOP Roger and Helen have retired
- Parnassus and are the proprietors of a more conventional
- bookstore in Brooklyn, haunted, as the title says, by the ghosts
- of great literature. The story takes place in 1918, shortly after
- the end of World War I, which figures prominently in the plot.
- The best parts of this volume are, once again, the pages where
- Roger Miflin holds forth on his relationship with books and
- bookselling.
-
-
- Both books are gentle stories, reminders of a day long gone.
- The Mifflin's traveling Parnassus is, after all, drawn by a
- horse, not horsepower; and at one point in THE HAUNTED BOOKSHOP,
- Roger places a long distance call from Philadelphia to Brooklyn
- and must wait 25 minutes to get a connection. Yes, 1918 was a
- very long time ago, when life was lived at a slower pace and
- there was time for the enjoyment of literature. Nowadays reading
- time can be difficult to come by.
-
-
- Christopher Morley was an obvious candidate for discoursing
- on, as he calls it, "the delights of bookishness". He was born in
- Pennsylvania and studied at Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar. He was
- one of the founders of The Saturday Review of Literature and an
- expert on Sherlock Holmes. And, even though he wrote over fifty
- books, he is best remembered today for only two: THUNDER ON THE
- LEFT (1925) and KITTY FOYLE (1939); and if you don't remember
- even those two you're in good company. The two Mifflin novels,
- from his early period, are unjustly forgotten.
-
-
- Morley sprinkles literary allusions throughout his stories,
- as well as direct quotations from all kinds of literature, so
- he's a real education in what was considered significant in the
- early years of this century. I've been wondering if Roger Mifflin
- was any relation to Houghton Mifflin. You'll also learn a few new
- words if you keep an open mind, like librocubicularist (one who
- reads in bed).
-
-
- Both of these books are out of print, so you'll have to
- haunt the used-book stores for them, but then that's the way
- Roger Mifflin would have wanted it.
-
-
-
-
- "Common sense?" he repeated. "Good Lord, ma'am, sense is the most
- uncommon thing in the world."
- --PARNASSUS ON WHEELS
-
-
- Talkers never write. They go on talking.
- --PARNASSUS ON WHEELS
-
-
- I have always suffered from the feeling that it's better to read
- a good book than to write a poor one...
- --PARNASSUS ON WHEELS
-
-
- It's a good thing to turn your mind upside down now and then,
- like an hour-glass, to let the particles run the other way.
- --from THE HAUNTED BOOKSHOP
-
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-
-
- I genuinely love writing. I consider myself one of the most
- blessed persons I know: I'm doing just what I want to do, just
- what all my good and bad karma got stored up for me to do.
- --Harlan Ellison, STRANGE WINE
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-
-
- FICTION INTO FILM:
-
-
- 84, CHARING CROSS ROAD
- by Helene Hanff
- (that's hel-LAIN HANF)
-
-
- This is just a small collection of letters. That's all.
- Letters between Helene Hanff and the staff of Marks & Co.,
- Antiquarian Booksellers (in London), from 1949 when Miss Hanff
- saw their ad in the Saturday Review of Literature (see also the
- article on Christopher Morley, elsewhere in this issue) to 1969.
-
-
- Miss Hanff was a TV screenwriter with a taste for old books
- and the reasonably rare ability to project her personality into a
- letter. The story that emerges from her correspondence with Frank
- Doel (DOH-el) and his family and the staff of the bookstore,
- it's, well, I'm afraid I'm going to have to say -- heartwarming.
-
-
- Nowadays, of course, if you wrote to a bookstore, it would
- probably be a chain store and you'd get a computer-generated
- response that began "Dear Sir or Madam". That's if they responded
- at all. No, times have changed, and Miss Hanff's book is our last
- chance to share in a transcontinental friendship built upon the
- love of good literature. Don't miss it.
-
-
- The movie is another matter. It's kind of like going to a
- Broadway theater to have someone sit on the stage and read to
- you. Very nice, but you wonder why you didn't stay home and read
- the book yourself. Not that it can't be well done, it just seems
- unnecesary. 84 CHARING CROSS ROAD, The Movie, IS a nice movie,
- competently bringing out the sentimental story at the core of the
- letters.
-
-
- Anne Bancroft plays Helene Hanff, and does a terrific job.
- She's almost exactly the woman I knew in the letters. Maybe her
- voice was a bit more New York than I'd imagined and maybe she was
- about 40% better looking than I'd pictured, but both of those are
- pleasant changes (Changes from what I'd imagined, you understand;
- I don't know what Miss Hanff was really like.).
-
-
- If there's any real excuse for the movie, it's Anthony
- Hopkins' portrayal of Frank Doel, because his personality isn't
- fully revealed in the letters. And the addition of a
- 3-dimensional Frank Doel changes the story somewhat. The look on
- his face when he reads that Miss Hanff must pay for dental work
- with her trip-to-England money -- I hadn't imagined that at all.
- Also, the movie may be the first time you hear the name Pepys
- (the guy with the diary) pronounced properly (it's PEEPS).
-
-
- GONE WITH THE WIND it's not, but if you loved the letters as
- much as I did, 84 CHARING CROSS ROAD, The Movie, will be a very
- pleasant two hours.
-
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-
-
- When you sell a man a book you don't sell him just twelve ounces
- of paper and ink and glue -- you sell him a whole new life.
- --Christopher Morley, PARNASSUS ON WHEELS
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- ASSORTED REFERENCES
-
-
- Here are fifteen books to consider for your reference shelf.
- They'll fill in those gaps in your education and give you a
- lifetime's worth of reading ideas. They're also great for
- browsing.
-
-
- FANTASY: THE 100 BEST BOOKS by James Cawthorn & Michael Moorcock
- (1988) -- One hundred short essays on significant fantastical
- works of fiction, ranging from 1726 to 1987. First-rate.
-
-
- CRIME & MYSTERY: THE 100 BEST BOOKS by H.R.F. Keating (1987) --
- Short essays on each of the 100 selections, all written by
- Keating. This makes for a coherent volume, but is limited by
- being one man's point of view. Many would argue with his
- selections, but he justifies them admirably.
-
-
- HORROR: 100 BEST BOOKS edited by Stephen Jones & Kim Newman
- (1988) -- Each contributing writer (I believe there are fully
- 100) contributed a short essay on one significant work of horror,
- making for a varied and interesting collection.
-
-
- SCIENCE FICTION: THE 100 BEST NOVELS by David Pringle (1985) --
- Another single-viewpoint selection limited to SF from 1949 to
- 1984, but excellent even with its limitations.
-
-
- GOOD READING: A Guide for Serious Readers, edited by J. Sherwood
- Weber (1978) -- The best handbook for the self-educated. Small,
- easy-to-digest bits on all the great classical and academically-
- approved modern literature, all sensibly arranged.
-
-
- MURDER INK / MURDERESS INK both perpetrated by Dilys Winn --
- These are for mystery lovers; large collections of articles
- ranging from serious coverage of a tangential topic to humor to
- trivia. Both are rather short on hard information, particularly
- considering their size, but they're fun reading for the mystery
- buff.
-
-
- ENCYCLOPEDIA OF MYSTERY & DETECTION by Christ Steinbrunner & Otto
- Penzler (1976) -- It's now out of date, but for pre-1976 stuff,
- this is THE mystery reference volume. Covers the authors, the
- books, the sleuths, movies, TV, everything.
-
-
- GOOD BOOKS: A Book Lover's Companion by Steven Gilbar (1982) --
- What a splendid idea! Oodles of books, all arranged by subject.
- Decide what you're in the mood for (say, a book about Missouri),
- then look up a few titles, each with a two- or three-sentence
- description. Absolute best browsing book ever.
-
-
- HOW TO READ A BOOK by Mortimer J. Adler & Charles Van Doren
- (1972) -- First published in 1940, this is an absorbing book for
- the serious reader. The approach to literature is an old-
- fashioned academic one, but the ideas are sound; and both authors
- are fascinating to listen to (or read) when they get on the
- subject of reading. Apt to be of most help to you with
- nonfiction.
-
-
- BENET'S READER'S ENCYCLOPEDIA (1987) -- This is the one big all-
- around reference to have. Covers terms and famous characters as
- well as authors and titles. You don't have to know everything as
- long as you've got your Benet's nearby.
-
-
- VICTORIAN LIFE AND VICTORIAN FICTION by Jo McMurtry (1979) --
- Everything you've ever needed to know to read Victorian fiction.
- How much is a shilling? What does it mean to be high church? When
- do you call someone Lord and when do you call them Sir? Every-
- thing that the contemporary reader was expected to know, and
- therefore isn't explained in the text. All in readable prose (no,
- really!). This book fills a genuine need.
-
-
- THE PENGUIN ENCYCLOPEDIA OF HORROR AND THE SUPERNATURAL edited by
- Jack Sullivan (1986) -- This is a beautiful volume covering all
- aspects of the horror field (I particularly liked the pieces on
- horror music). The coverage is opinionated, but full of good
- information and reading ideas.
-
-
- STEPHEN KING: THE ART OF DARKNESS by Douglas E. Winter (updated
- regularly) -- Yes, I know that the field of Stephen King
- scholarship is overcrowded, but if you stick to books and essays
- written by Mr. Winter, you can't go wrong. He is the foremost
- expert on Stephen King, and is one of the most literate and
- insightful writers on any aspect of horror fiction.
-
-
- STEPHEN KING'S DANSE MACABRE (1981) -- Stephen King tells us all
- about horror; the books, the movies, the radio, the TV, the
- comics, etc. This is, typically, more like conversation than
- lecturing. Mr. King is simply one of the most charming writers of
- our time, and this is an enormously enjoyable volume.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- You see, it's like this. I'm a writer. That's not just what I DO,
- it's what I AM.
- --Harlan Ellison, THE GLASS TEAT (16 May 69)
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- Like Reading For Pleasure? Let us know. We shamelessly solicit
- all compliments.
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- MYSTERY DEPARTMENT:
-
-
- BIBLIOMYSTERIES
-
-
- In keeping with our theme, here is a list of mysteries with
- a particularly bookish setting. Just a small list to get you
- started -- Bibliomysteries is a popular sub-genre and there are
- many, many more.
-
-
- Asimov, Isaac MURDER AT THE ABA
- Barnard, Robert THE CASE OF THE MISSING BRONTE
- DEATH OF A LITERARY WIDOW
- DEATH OF A MYSTERY WRITER
- Beck, Charlton DEATH BY CLUE
- Bell, Josephine TREACHERY IN TYPE
- Berckman, Evelyn THE HOVERING DARKNESS
- Blackburn, John BOUND TO KILL
- Blake, Nicholas END OF A CHAPTER
- Block, Lawrence THE BURGLAR WHO LIKED TO QUOTE KIPLING
- Boucher, Anthony THE CASE OF THE BAKER STREET IRREGULARS
- Boyd, Marion MURDER IN THE STACKS
- Breen, Jon L. THE GATHERING PLACE
- Bristow & Manning THE GUTTENBERG MURDERS
- Campbell, R.T. BODIES IN A BOOKSHOP
- Candy, Edward WORDS FOR MURDER, PERHAPS
- Carr, John Dickson THE DEAD MAN'S KNOCK
- Clarke, Anna LAST JUDGMENT
- PLOT COUNTER PLOT
- THIS DOWNHILL PATH
- Collins, Max Alan KILL YOUR DARLINGS
- Cross, Amanda many titles
- Daly, Elizabeth MURDERS IN VOLUME 2
- NOTHING CAN RESCUE ME
- NIGHT WALK
- DeCaire, Edwin DEATH AMONG THE WRITERS
- Delving, Michael SMILING, THE BOY FELL DEAD
- Dewey, Thomas B. DRAW THE CURTAIN CLOSE
- Dickinson, Peter HINDSIGHT
- Dutton, Charles J. MURDER IN A LIBRARY
- Dwight, Olivia CLOSE HIS EYES
- Eustis, Helen THE HORIZONTAL MAN
- Ferrars, E.X. BREATH OF SUSPENSE
- Fisher, David E. KATIE'S TERROR
- Forrest, Norman DEATH TOOK A PUBLISHER
- Fraser, Antonia A SPLASH OF RED
- Goodrum, Charles A. DEWEY DECIMATED
- Goulart, Ron A GRAVEYARD OF MY OWN
- Grierson, Edward A CRIME OF ONE'S OWN
- Hansen, Joseph DEATH CLAIMS
- Harriss, Will THE BAY PSALM BOOK MURDER
- Hoch, Edward D. THE SHATTERED RAVEN
- Innes, Michael THE LONG FAREWELL
- THE PAPER THUNDERBOLT
- James, P.D. Unnatural Causes
- Keeler, Harry S. THE GREEN JADE HAND
- Kenney, Susan several titles
- Kyd, Thomas COVER HIS FACE
- Langton, Jane THE TRANSCENDENTAL MURDER
- Lemarchand, Elizabeth STEP IN THE DARK
- Lewis, Roy Harley many titles
- Lockridge, F & R MURDER WITHIN MURDER
- Lupoff, Richard THE COMIC BOOK KILLER
- Magoon, Carey I SMELL THE DEVIL
- Masur, Harold Q. SEND ANOTHER HEARSE
- McCloy, Helen TWO-THIRDS OF A GHOST
- McIver, N.J. COME BACK, ALICE SMYTHEREENE!
- Monteilhet, Hubert MURDER AT THE FRANKFURT BOOK FAIR
- Morley, Christopher THE HAUNTED BOOKSHOP
- Muller & Pronzini CHAPTER AND HEARSE
- Nash, Simon UNHALLOWED MURDER
- Nelson, Hugh Lawrence THE TITLE IS MURDER
- Page, Marco FAST COMPANY
- Papazoglou, Orania SWEET, SAVAGE DEATH <--- about romance
- WICKED, LOVING MURDER <-- writers
- Parker, Robert B. THE GODWULF MANUSCRIPT
- LOOKING FOR RACHEL WALLACE
- Patterson, Richard N. ESCAPE THE NIGHT
- Peters, Elizabeth DIE FOR LOVE
- THE MURDERS OF RICHARD III
- Potts, Jean DEATH OF A STRAY CAT
- Purtill, Richard MURDERCON
- Quentin, Patrick MY SON THE MURDERER
- Rhode, John DEATH OF AN AUTHOR
- Robinson, Robert LANDSCAPE WITH DEAD DONS
- Ross, Barnaby DRURY LANE'S LAST CASE
- Sharp, David I, THE CRIMINAL
- Sims, George SLEEP NO MORE
- Stone, Hampton THE FUNNIEST KILLER IN TOWN
- Stout, Rex PLOT IT YOURSELF
- MURDER BY THE BOOK
- AND BE A VILLAIN
- Strong, L.A.G. ALL FALL DOWN
- Sutton, Henry THE SACRIFICE
- Symons, Julian THE COLOR OF MURDER
- Taylor, Andrew CAROLINE MINISCULE
- Tilton, Alice BEGINNING WITH A BASH
- Valin, Jonathan FINAL NOTICE
- Wells, Carolyn MURDER IN THE BOOKSHOP
- Wiltz, Chris THE KILLING CIRCLE
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- A Parody by Mary Ann Madden
-
-
- Judith Krantz's
- MY FIRST DAY AT SCHOOL
-
-
- April Rane shuddered into the clinging Pucci and turned to
- appraise herself in the full length mirror. "Perfect," she
- thought, "the body of a twenty-year old." She held the large gold
- hoops to her ears. "Too much," she decided. No sense diverting
- attention from the sleek chestnut hair caressing her shoulders.
- Once more she twirled before the mirror--a flick of mascara--and
- smiled at her reflection. April tiptoed across the bedroom (Brick
- was still asleep), picked up her pencil box, and with a soft
- click the door closed upon summer. "P.S. 501 look out," she
- breathed, "here comes April Rane."
-
-
- (This is an excerpt from LITERATURE IN BRIEFS: Great Writers
- Indecently Exposed edited by William Zaranka, illustrated by Dave
- Werner, Apple-wood Books, 1983)
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- Wish List: Tell us what book, or type of book, you'd most like to
- get for Christmas.
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- The world has been printing books for 450 years, and yet
- gunpowder still has a wider circulation. Never mind! Printer's
- ink is the greater explosive: it will win.
- --Christopher Morley, THE HAUNTED BOOKSHOP
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- RECEIVED:
-
-
- DEEP QUARRY
- by John E. Stith
-
-
- I knew the day was improving when the mailman gave me a book
- (I love that). Better still, it was an SF Mystery, and you know
- how rare those are. They're rare, of course, because they're
- difficult. Isaac Asimov explained it somewhere far better than I
- could, but it's got to do with possibilities. As Sherlock Holmes
- said, once you've eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, no
- matter how improbable, must be true. Trouble is, in SF the author
- monkeys around with what's possible, making most SF Mysteries
- what mystery fans call "unfair".
-
-
- The only thing to do is what John E. Stith has done: avoid
- the 1930s puzzle mystery and go for a mystery of characterization
- and plot. It's like this: Ben "Bug Eye" Takent is a private
- investigator on the planet Tankur, where one side of the planet
- faces the sun all the time, making for a hot, dusty city. While
- waiting for the heat exchanger repair people to show up, he takes
- the case of Kate Dunlet, an archaeologist who's been losing
- artifacts from a high-security dig. Ben knows two things about
- Ms. Dunlet immediately: she's beautiful and she's lying.
-
-
- One aspect of this novel that particularly impressed me was
- the unobtrusive use of exposition. An author of realistic fiction
- doesn't have to explain things like what houses look like or how
- normal people dress. It's assumed that you know that stuff. But
- the author of any type of fantasy must explain a great deal. This
- adds an enormous load of exposition, and exposition has the
- unfortunate characteristic of being frequently boring. It can
- also sound darned awkward when you have to stop and explain that
- the three noses on that guy is the way his race is supposed to
- look because he's from the planet Whatever....etc.
-
-
- Anyway, what I started to say 15 minutes ago was that the
- expository portions of DEEP QUARRY are sprinkled in small bits
- throughout the story, never leaving you in any great confusion,
- but never boring your either. Very nicely done.
-
-
- The problem here is, you're going to have to move quick on
- this book. It was a February 1989 paperback release from Ace, and
- paperbacks have a habit of not being available for too long. So
- see your bookseller Real Soon Now, and you too can read all about
- Bug Eye Takent, Private Defective (no, that's not a typo).
-
-
- By the way, DEEP QUARRY is also educational. Have you always
- wanted to know what a non sequitur is? Turn to page 46 and read
- along with me: "I think the rain in Tripoli is tighter than a
- dozen hamsters." THAT's a non sequitur.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- I like my writing to be a little like a good roller coaster ride.
- You get on it for the thrill, expecting to be deposited safely
- back where you came from. Writing a negative book, where petty
- crime or fate overcome the protagonist is a little like coming
- back into the station only to find they've removed the rails for
- the last fifty feet.
- --John E. Stith (author of DEEP QUARRY)
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- JULY BIRTHDAYS
- AND OTHER IMPORTANT DATES
-
-
- 01 1804 George Sand, French writer
- 01 1892 James M. Cain, American novelist
- 02 1877 Hermann Hesse, German/Swiss novelist and poet
- 02 1961 Ernest Hemingway committed suicide with a shotgun
- 03 1883 Franz Kafka, Austrian novelist
- 03 1906 Francis Steegmuller, American writer
- 03 1937 Tom Stoppard, British dramatist
- 04 1804 Nathaniel Hawthorne, American writer
- 04 1845 Thoreau moves into his shack on Walden Pond
- 04 1905 Lionel Trilling, American literary critic
- 04 1918 Ann Landers, American columnist
- 04 1927 Neil Simon, American dramatist
- 05 1889 Jean Cocteau, French writer, artist, film maker
- 06 1866 Beatrix Potter, English writer and illustrator
- 07 1907 Robert Heinlein, American SF writer
- 09 1764 Ann Radcliffe, English writer
- 10 1867 Finley Peter Dunne, American journalist and humorist who
- created Mr. Dooley
- 10 1871 Marcel Proust, French novelist
- 10 1915 Saul Bellow, American novelist
- 11 1754 Thomas Bowdler, self-appointed literary censor
- 11 1899 E.B. White, American humorist and essayist
- 12 1817 Henry David Thoreau, American essayist, naturalist, poet
- 12 1895 Buckminster Fuller, U.S. engineer, architect,
- philosopher, author, invented the geodesic dome
- 12 1904 Pablo Neruda, Chilean poet
- 13 1793 Jean-Paul Marat assassinated by Charlotte Corday
- 13 1865 Horace Greeley advises his readers to "Go west".
- 13 1894 Isaak Babel, Russian short-story writer and dramatist
- 13 1934 Wole Soyinka, Nigerian dramatist
- 14 1869 Owen Wister, American writer
- 14 1895 F.R. Leavis, British literary critic
- 14 1903 Irving Stone, American writer
- 14 1904 Isaac Bashevis Singer, Polish/American novelist
- 14 1918 Arthur Laurents, playwright; New York City
- 15 1779 Clement Moore, who wrote "A Visit From St. Nicholas"
- 15 1796 Thomas Bulfinch, American writer and teacher
- 15 1919 Iris Murdoch, British novelist and philosopher
- 17 1889 Erle Stanley Gardner, American detective-story writer
- 17 1902 Christina Stead, Australian novelist
- 18 1811 William Makepeace Thackeray, English novelist
- 18 1906 Clifford Odets, American dramatist
- 18 1933 Yevgeny Yevtushenko, Soviet poet
- 19 1893 Vladimir Mayakovsky, Russian poet
- 19 1896 A.J. Cronin, Scottish novelist and physician
- 20 1304 Petrarch, Italian poet and scholar
- 20 1924 Thomas Berger, American novelist
- 21 1898 Ernest Hemingway, American novelist
- 21 1899 Hart Crane, American poet
- 21 1933 John Gardner, American novelist and medievalist
- 22 1844 Rev. William Archibald Spooner, invented 'spoonerisms'
- 22 1849 Emma Lazarus, American poet
- 22 1898 Stephen Vincent Bent, American writer
- 23 1888 Raymond Chandler, American detective-story writer
- 24 1802 Alexandre Dumas, pre, French novelist and dramatist
- 24 1842 Ambrose Bierce, American writer
- 24 1878 Lord Dunsany, Irish dramatist and poet
- 24 1895 Robert Graves, British poet
- 25 1905 Elias Canetti, Bulgarian/British novelist and essayist
- 26 1856 George Bernard Shaw, Irish dramatist and critic
- 26 1892 Pearl S. Buck, American novelist
- 26 1894 Aldous Huxley, British writer
- 27 1824 Alexandre Dumas, fils, French dramatist
- 27 1870 Hilaire Belloc, French/British writer
- 28 1844 Gerard Manley Hopkins, British poet
- 28 1909 Malcolm Lowry, British novelist, poet, essayist
- 29 1805 Count Alexis de Tocqueville, French historian
- 29 1869 Booth Tarkington, American novelist and dramatist
- 30 1818 Emily Bront , English novelist
- 30 1857 Thorstein Veblen, American economist, wrote THE THEORY OF
- THE LEISURE CLASS (1899)
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- People need books, but they don't know they need them. Generally
- they are not aware that the books they need are in existence.
- --Christopher Morley, THE HAUNTED BOOKSHOP
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- FEATURED AUTHOR:
-
-
- HARLAN ELLISON
- (hereinafter referred to as HE)
-
-
- HE was born in 1934 and is an essayist, a screenwriter,
- and a prolific short-story writer; and has won more awards than
- any other science fiction writer. So much for the Who's Who.
-
-
- Read enough HE (and can anyone ever REALLY read enough HE?)
- and you'll find out more about writing, from the inside, than you
- ever expected to know. About screenwriting. About TV. About the
- SFWA. About being on a talk show. HE sees all, feels all, and
- tells all. That makes a mighty hard life for him, but it makes
- terrific reading for us.
-
-
- The problem with analyzing HE through his writing is that
- he's such a magician with words. So manipulative. When you see
- the shadow of the author in the story, as you ALWAYS do in HE's
- work, you wonder if that is the actual shadow of HE, or only the
- dummy shadow he's allowed us to see? We'll probably never know.
-
-
- He's one of the most controversial people on this planet;
- his writing is never boring. That's a guarantee. Beyond this I'm
- going to give you the supreme joy of finding out about Ellison
- yourself. To start you out, here's what some other people have
- had to say about Ellison:
-
-
- Robert Bloch: "I am not about to do a biographical sketch of the
- man: surely he wouldn't need me for that. Ellison has told the
- story of his life so many times, you'd think he'd know it by
- now."
-
-
- Michael Crichton: "He seems to be a kind of energy focus and no
- one who brushes against him comes away with an indifferent
- response. His advocates are every bit as vehement as his critics.
- Other writers have readers; Ellison has fans who will get into
- fistfights with anyone who says a word against him."
-
-
- Brian Aldiss: "Harlan Ellison is more a master of the hammer than
- the keyboard."
-
-
- Robert Bloch: "No matter what the apparent grammatical form may
- be, one is conscious that Ellison is really always writing in
- first person."
-
-
- Michael Crichton: "He moves restlessly, talks non-stop, jumping
- from books to television to politics to sex to movies, taking up
- each new subject with considerable humor and aggressive
- enthusiasm."
-
-
- Tom Snyder: "He fights battles most of us haven't even thought
- of, much less cared about. ... He fights the wars that aren't
- even worth fighting, and delights in our frustrations when we
- finally figure it out."
-
-
- Stephen King: "Harlan is the sort of guy who makes an ordinary
- writer feel like a dilettante, and an ordinary liver (i.e., one
- who lives, not a bodily organ which will develop cirrhosis is you
- pour too much booze over it) feel like a spinster librarian who
- once got kissed on the Fourth of July."
-
-
- Michael Crichton: "He is not an easy man. His opinions are
- strongly held and his feelings strongly felt; he is not tolerant
- of compromise where it affects his life and his work. In someone
- else, this obstinacy might appear petty or fanatical, but in
- Harlan it is natural and attractive. It is simply the way he is."
-
-
- Robert Bloch: "...he is the only living organism I know whose
- natural habitat is hot water."
-
-
- Stephen King: "He has quite deliberately provoked a storm of
- controversy over his own work--one writer in the field whom I
- know considers him to be a modern incarnation of Jonathan Swift,
- and another regularly refers to him as 'that no-talent son of a
- bitch.' It is a storm that Ellison lives in quite contentedly."
-
-
- Michael Crichton: "He doesn't write like anybody else. The same
- paradoxes and odd juxtapositions which appear in his house and in
- his casual speech, are present in all of his writing. What
- emerges is a surprising, eclectic, almost protean series of
- visions, often disturbing, always strongly felt."
-
-
-
-
- ELLISON: THE SCREENPLAYS
-
-
- HE has written more screenplays than I've been able to count,
- many of which never made it into viewable form. But if you want
- to hold up your end of an Ellison conversation, you must know
- about two of them. "Demon With the Glass Hand" was, according to
- most fans of THE OUTER LIMITS, the finest episode of that series.
- And "The City on the Edge of Forever" is well-known to any
- Trekkie as at least ONE of the finest STAR TREK episodes ever.
-
-
- ELLISON: THE STORIES
-
-
- If you can possibly afford it, the very best collection is
- the recent THE ESSENTIAL ELLISON. Not only is it a great, big,
- fat book, but the controversial Ellison, whose prose is often
- "edited", is here presented in its author-approved form. Why
- waste your time with watered-down stories?
-
-
- If you really need something cheaper, STALKING THE NIGHTMARE
- is a good choice, or maybe SHATTERDAY, or ANGRY CANDY, or STRANGE
- WINE. But for first-timers, STALKING is the best Ellison sampler.
-
-
- Personal favorites: "Jeffty Is Five", "The Hour That
- Stretches", "Paladin of the Lost Hour", "All The Lies That Are My
- Life", and "Shatterday".
-
-
- ELLISON: THE ESSAYS
-
-
- Sorry to say it, but the absolute best collection of Ellison
- essays is SLEEPLESS NIGHTS IN THE PROCRUSTEAN BED. I'm sorry
- because this could be a tough volume to come up with. If your
- bookseller can't get it, try writing to the publisher, The Borgo
- Press, P.O. Box 2845, San Bernardino, CA 92406. If they give you
- a choice, get a paperbound edition rather than hardcover. Borgo
- publishes some great prose, but their hardcover bindings are the
- pits. In any case, the trouble you might have getting this volume
- will be certainly be worth it -- these are Ellison's finest
- essays. And that's SAYING something.
-
-
- If you want more essays, STALKING THE NIGHTMARE has a few
- great ones. His other essay-only collections are: THE GLASS TEAT,
- THE OTHER GLASS TEAT, AN EDGE IN MY VOICE, and HARLAN ELLISON'S
- WATCHING (assuming it is released finally). Pick any of these.
-
-
- Personal favorites: Other than everything in SLEEPLESS
- NIGHTS, there's "The 3 Most Important Things In Life", the
- funniest piece of prose I think I've ever read. In particular,
- the tale of his 4-hour career at Disney Studio is hilarious, with
- a great punch line that is, unfortunately, not printable here.
-
-
-
-
- ELLISON: THE CHRONOLOGY
-
-
- (This is an attempt, probably not successful, to be complete.)
-
-
- WEB OF THE CITY (1958)
- THE DEADLY STREETS (1958)
- THE SOUND OF A SCYTHE (1960)
- A TOUCH OF INFINITY (1960)
- CHILDREN OF THE STREETS (1961)
- GENTLEMAN JUNKIE AND OTHER STORIES OF THE HUNG-UP GENERATION
- (1961)
- MEMOS FROM PURGATORY (1961)
- SPIDER KISS (1961)
- ELLISON WONDERLAND (1962)
- PAINGOD, AND OTHER DELUSIONS (1965)
- I HAVE NO MOUTH & I MUST SCREAM (1967)
- DOOMSMAN (1967)
- DANGEROUS VISIONS (editor) (1967)
- FROM THE LAND OF FEAR (1967)
- NIGHTSHADE & DAMNATIONS: THE FINEST STORIES OF GERALD KERSH
- (editor) (1968)
- LOVE AIN'T NOTHING BUT SEX MISSPELLED (1968)
- THE BEAST THAT SHOUTED LOVE AT THE HEART OF THE WORLD (1969)
- THE GLASS TEAT: ESSAYS OF OPINION ON TELEVISION (1970)
- OVER THE EDGE (1970)
- PARTNERS IN WONDER: SF COLLABORATIONS WITH 14 OTHER WILD TALENTS
- (1971)
- ALONE AGAINST TOMORROW: STORIES OF ALIENATION IN SPECULATIVE
- FICTION (1971)
- AGAIN, DANGEROUS VISIONS (editor) (1972)
- APPROACHING OBLIVION (1974)
- THE STARLOST #1: PHOENIX WITHOUT ASHES (w/Edward Bryant) (1975)
- DEATHBIRD STORIES (1975)
- THE OTHER GLASS TEAT: FURTHER ESSAYS OF OPINION ON TELEVISION
- (1975)
- NO DOORS, NO WINDOWS (1975)
- STRANGE WINE (1978)
- THE BOOK OF ELLISON (edited by Andrew Porter) (1978)
- THE ILLUSTRATED HARLAN ELLISON (edited by Byron Preiss) (1978)
- THE FANTASIES OF HARLAN ELLISON (1979)
- ALL THE LIES THAT ARE MY LIFE (1980)
- SHATTERDAY (1980)
- STALKING THE NIGHTMARE (1982) - short stories and essays
- SLEEPLESS NIGHTS IN THE PROCRUSTEAN BED (1984)
- AN EDGE IN MY VOICE (1985)
- MEDEA: HARLAN'S WORLD (editor) (1985)
- THE ESSENTIAL ELLISON (1987)
- ANGRY CANDY (1988)
- HARLAN ELLISON'S WATCHING (any minute, we hope)
- THE LAST DANGEROUS VISIONS (who knows?)
-
-
- ELLISON: THE SAMPLES
-
-
- The delusion that genius and madness are but opposing faces of
- the same rare coin is one to which most writers subscribe, as a
- cop-out. It allows them to be erratic, beat their wives, demand
- fresh coffee at six ayem, come in late with manuscripts, default
- on their obligations, laze around reading paperback novels on the
- pretext that they are "researching," pick up stakes and move when
- things get too regimented, snarl and snap at fans, be tendentious
- or supercilious. It is safe for all of us to goof off as long as
- we can bilk the Average Man into believing it is necessary for
- the creative process.
- --DANGEROUS VISIONS
-
-
- Nonetheless, having become something of an ingroup cult figure
- among those with a high death-wish profile and a taste for cheap
- thrills, I am often asked, "What's the big secret, Ellison?"...I
- try to explain that Life is Real, Life is Earnest. In my own
- toe-scuffling fashion I attempt to encapsulate in three or four
- apocryphal phrases the Ethical Structure of the Universe.
- --"The 3 Most Important Things in Life"
-
-
- The truth is simply that the entire concept of modern television
- is corrupt....They want to sell you, and they don't give a damn
- what it takes on either side of that commercial to do it.
- --"Down the Rabbit-Hole to TV-Land" (SLEEPLESS NIGHTS)
-
-
- Toulouse-Lautrec once said, "One should never meet a man whose
- work one admires. The man is always so much less than the work."
- Painfully, almost always this is true. The great novelist turns
- out to be a whiner. The penetrator of the foibles of man picks
- his nose in public. The authority on South Africa has never been
- beyond Levittown. The writer of swashbuckling adventures is a
- pathetic little homosexual who still lives with his invalid
- mother. Oh, Henri the Mad, you were so right.
- --DANGEROUS VISIONS
-
-
- A fifteen- year-old student summarily rejected the reading of
- books because it "wasn't real". Because it was your imagination,
- and your imagination isn't real. So Shelley asked her what was
- "real" and the student responded instantly, "Television".
- --"Revealed At Last! What Killed the Dinosaurs!
- And You Don't Look So Terrific Yourself"
- (SLEEPLESS NIGHTS)
-
-
- ...the interesting aspect of their watching the show emerged when
- a student responded to Shelley's comparison of watching something
- that "wasn't real" with a living event that "was real". The
- student contended that it WAS real, he had seen it. No, Shelley
- insisted, it wasn't real, it was just a show. Hell no, the kid
- kept saying, it WAS real: he had SEEN it....Though he was
- seventeen years old, the student was incapable of perceiving,
- UNAIDED, the difference between a dramatization and real life.
- --"Revealed At Last! What Killed the Dinosaurs!
- And You Don't Look So Terrific Yourself"
- (SLEEPLESS NIGHTS)
-
-
- But don't ever fool yourselves. Not even those of you who make
- your living from literary analyses. Don't for a second fool
- yourselves into thinking you've got our number.
- --"You Don't Know Me, I Don't Know You"
- (SLEEPLESS NIGHTS)
-
-
- There in the place where all lost things returned, the young man
- sat on the cold ground, rocking the body of his friend. And he
- was in no hurry to leave. There was time.
- --"Paladin of the Lost Hour" (ANGRY CANDY)
-
-
- They've taken the most incredibly potent medium of imparting
- information the world has ever known, and they've turned it
- against you. To burn out your brains. To lull you with pretty
- pictures. To convince you nothing's going on out there, nothing
- really important. To convince you throwing garbage in the river
- after your picnic is okay, as long as the factories can do it,
- too. To convince you all those bearded, longhair freaks are
- murderers and dumb Communist dupes. To convince you that Viet Nam
- is more a "struggle for Democracy" than a necessity for selling
- American goods. To convince you that certain things should not be
- said because it will warp the minds of the young. To convince you
- that this country is still locked into a 1901-Midwestern stasis,
- and anyone who tries to propel us beyond that chauvinism and
- bigotry is a criminal.
- --THE GLASS TEAT (4 October 68)
-
-
- I was riding down Beverly Glen with Arthur Byron Cover. I said to
- Arthur, "You know, one of the things that always bothered me
- about those fantasies in which some dude comes across a magic
- shop that sells real magic, or three wishes, or genuine love
- potions, or whatever, is they never told you what kind of life
- was lived by the proprietor. I mean, where did he get his stock?
- In what sort of coin could you pay someone for things that
- valuable? When the dude leaves the shop it always vanishes; where
- does it go? What happened to the poor schmuck who ran the joint?
- Huh, answer me that!"
- Arthur looked at me seriously and said, "You know, you're a
- very weird person."
- --SHATTERDAY
-
-
- ...there have been essays and monographs and even treatises
- published in learned journals about the rampant symbolism in my
- stories, my preoccupation with the Machine As God, the deeply
- religious anti-religiousness in DEATHBIRD STORIES, obvious uses
- of the Jungian archetypes, the crucifixion and resurrection
- symbology peppered through my stories, and the frequency of the
- use of the word "ka-ka".
- --SHATTERDAY
-
-
- This story ["Alive and Well and on a Friendless Voyage"] was
- written in direct response to the killing pain of my last wife
- taking off with another guy. The pain lasted at least twelve
- minutes, which is the actually recorded duration of genuine pain.
- Everything OVER twelve minutes is self-indulgence and pointless
- attempts to make the first twelve minutes seem more important.
- --SHATTERDAY
-
-
- I'll be DAMNED if I can make any sense out of life. It gets more
- complex the longer I keep breathing. And everything I thought I
- knew for sure keeps coming up for grabs, keeps changing and
- shifting like one of those oil-seep toys you can buy that change
- color and shape from moment to moment depending on how you hold
- it. Most of the time it seems to be an insane universe, filled
- with pain. Then, every once in a bit, some moment of joy or love
- or true friendship presents itself, and you get the strength to
- maintain, to go on a little longer.
- --STRANGE WINE
-
-
- The sixty-one personal essays that make up this book are my proud
- statement of enmity toward the people. Not just to people like
- Patukas and "Rosetta" and the pinheads at HEAVY METAL whose
- dreary little lives move them to such ignoble attacks of foaming
- idiocy against their betters, but enmity toward the censors and
- the pro-gun lobbyists and the filmmakers who brutalize women in
- the name of "art" and the smoothyguts politicians who secure
- their futures with arms manufacturers by stealing money from the
- schools and the lousy writers who monopolize the spinner racks
- and their venal publishers who have destroyed the mid-list in
- search of bestsellers and the bible-thumpers who want prayer in
- the schools as long as we pray to THEIR God and to the gray
- little bookkeepers who know their dancing decimal points cheat
- honest men and women out of their annuities and the garage
- mechanics who lie and tell you they can't repair that thingamajig
- unless you buy a new whatzit for seventy-five bucks and the
- headless snakes that are the multi national corporations that
- remove products you like from the supermarkets because cheaper
- items move more units per capita and the terrorists and the
- zealots and the true believers and the insensitive and the
- dull-witted and the self-righteous. All of whom are parts of "the
- people".
- --AN EDGE IN MY VOICE
-
-
- My car has a bumper sticker that says A CLEAN CAR IS A SIGN OF A
- SICK MIND. It's not a crusade with me; it's just my belief that
- if God, or Whoever's-In-Charge, had wanted my car to be clean,
- God, or Whoever's-In-Charge, wouldn't have filled the world with
- dirt.
- --AN EDGE IN MY VOICE
-
-
- For a brief time I was here; and for a brief time I mattered.
- --THE ESSENTIAL ELLISON
-
-
- -* Amen *-
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- Harlan Ellison once received a letter from a man who said, "You
- are always using midgets in your stories as heavies. They are
- always evil and terrible people. Well, I am three feet tall, and
- I want you to know we don't like being called MIDGETS! We want to
- be called LITTLE PEOPLE!" Harlan responded: "Dear Sir: I am five
- foot five. I am a little person. YOU, sir, are a midget."
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- Harlan Ellison parodied his own car commercials in a skit at the
- Writers Guild of America's televised awards banquet, "selling his
- collected works and stressing his enormous output and matching
- ego," according to a favorable review in the Los Angeles Times.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- NUMBER ONE FAN
- by Annie Wilkes
-
-
- Have you ever considered how pleasurable an activity reading
- is, and how little nuts-and-bolts consideration it's given? Like,
- for instance, what motivates most of your reading?
-
-
- 1. To get through a boring period (waiting for something, etc.)
- 2. To help you get to sleep.
- 3. To learn something specific.
- 4. To read.
-
-
- I've talked to some people who seem to have a difficulty with
- admitting that they're going to sit down right now and, no
- apologies to anyone, READ. They seem to feel they should be
- "accomplishing" something, not "just" reading. How sad.
-
-
- Where do you do most of your reading? Are you a reading-in-
- bed type? Or maybe your have one of those Alistair Cooke,
- Masterpiece Theater kind of chairs that's good for sitting in the
- Library of your mansion and reading Dante. Or are you a hedonist
- with a chaise lounge? Or the impish sort who read on the ground,
- propped up on elbows? Or the hi-tech sort with a paperback hidden
- under your computer keyboard? Or even the Romantic kind, outside
- with your back against a broad oak?
-
-
- Do you normally read in brief ten-minute bursts? Or are you
- prone to all-weekend binges? When someone accosts you with an
- asinine question while you're reading, can you be pleasant to
- them despite the fact that they were obviously raised by wolves?
-
-
- Do you ever get a funny look when you say you spent
- yesterday evening reading instead of watching TV? Do you worry
- about having to explain to the landlord that you didn't drink the
- rent money, you spent it at the bookstore? Are you now, or have
- you ever been a partner in a Mixed Marriage (Reader and
- Non-Reader)? Do you ever wonder about the mental capacity of the
- Buyer at your local library? Have you ever considered that the
- joys of reading, like the joys of smoking, don't show from the
- outside and are therefore mostly invisible to others?
-
-
- You see, you and I aren't like the Others. For one thing
- ours is a solitary preoccupation. We occasionally glare at each
- other suspiciously at the bookstore (Is that the kind of moronic
- trash you always read?), or push in front of each other at the
- library (If you think you're getting the only copy of that
- Rushdie you're out of your mind, fella). So, next time we meet
- (I'll be the one with the worn Nicholas Nickleby), just pretend
- you don't see me.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- We'd like to know where you get Reading For Pleasure
- to help us distribute efficiently.
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- TRIVIA ANSWERS
-
-
- 1. The Baker Street Irregulars
- 2. The Terminator
- 3. UNCLE TOM'S CABIN by Harriet Beecher Stowe
- 4. Hamlet
- 5. Cordwainer Bird
- 6. Peter Pan
- 7. Excalibur
- 8. Adolf Hitler
- 9. Contact lenses
- 10. ROBINSON CRUSOE
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- COMING NEXT MONTH:
- Next month Reading For Pleasure goes Hollywood -- read about
- Tinseltown along with us. And the Featured Author will be Fredric
- Brown. Keep those cards and letters coming!
-
-
-
-