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-
- **************************************************************
- * *
- * R E A D I N G F O R P L E A S U R E *
- * *
- * Issue #7 *
- * *
- * December 1989 *
- * *
- * *
- * Editor: Cindy Bartorillo *
- * *
- * *
- * HAPPY HOLIDAYS! *
- **************************************************************
-
- 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. You may copy
- freely, but please give us credit if you extract portions to use
- somewhere else. Sample copies of our print edition are available
- upon request. We ask for a donation of $1.50 each to cover the
- printing and mailing costs.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- DISTRIBUTION DIRECTORY
-
- Here are a few bulletin boards where you should be able to pick
- up the latest issue of READING FOR PLEASURE. See masthead for
- where to send additions and corrections to this list.
-
- Ad Lib Monroeville,PA John Williams 412-327-9209
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-
- RFP Home Board:
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-
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-
- NOTE: Back issues on CompuServe may have been moved to a
- different library.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
- Editorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137
- What's News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 179
- Featured Author: Charles Dickens . . . . . . . . . . . . 367
- Good Reading Periodically . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 645
- New From Carroll & Graf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 712
- Important Dates in December . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 804
- Fiction Into Film . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 906
- Religious Reading . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 966
- December Releases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1158
- Number One Fan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1241
- Recent Paperbacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1293
- An Incomplete Education . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1327
- Great Endings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1415
- New From Simon & Schuster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1549
- New From Underwood-Miller . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1642
- Christmas Mysteries & Other Yuletide Reading . . . . . . 1706
- Random Reviews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2070
- On Line With Steve Gerber . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2407
- Unfinished Novels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2483
- Back Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2514
- The Last Christmas Trivia Quiz . . . . . . . . . . . . . 302
- Trivia Quiz Answers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2566
-
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-
- Marley was dead, to begin with. There is no doubt whatever
- about that. The register of his burial was signed by the
- clergyman, the clerk, the undertaker, and the chief mourner.
- Scrooge signed it. And Scrooge's name was good upon 'Change for
- anything he chose to put his hand to.
- Old Marley was as dead as a door-nail.
- --from "A Christmas Carol in Prose" by Charles Dickens
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- EDITORIAL
-
- People have celebrated the winter solstice, in one form or
- another, for a very long time. As the autumn wears on we get more
- and more darkness, less and less daylight, until finally, on
- December 21, we get the shortest day of all the year. A
- celebration at this time is a form of nervous laughter at the
- darkness, our way of saying that we're highly developed beings
- who aren't in the least afraid of the dark. Well, maybe just a
- little.
-
- However you celebrate the winter solstice, I hope you'll include
- some books. Books make great gifts, of course. They last
- reasonably close to forever, don't get "used up", and contain
- wonders beyond counting. And don't forget to save a few good
- books for yourself this season. After all, it's been a rough year
- and you've been as good as good can be (provided the IRS doesn't
- find out about your little "white lie" on the 1040).
-
- Another subject dear to my heart is the sensual delights of
- winter reading. Picture this: It's snowing outside, or maybe it's
- just a blustery bitter cold--around 10 PM. You're tired, the day
- didn't go all that well, and you feel like you may be coming down
- with a cold. But very soon you're going to be as happy as you've
- been all year, because you're going to shower, put on your
- warmest flannel pajamas, get a hot drink, and settle down with a
- good book. The perfect ending to a not-so-perfect day.
-
- And speaking of endings, let's ring out the old year and old
- decade with goodwill and hope that the next decade finds us all
- healthy and happy. May your library grow ever larger.
-
- Happy Holidays!
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- It was always said of him, that he knew how to
- keep Christmas well.
- --from "A Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- WHAT'S NEWS
-
- * Simon & Schuster will be opening an office in Moscow by the
- first of the year. They currently distribute scientific,
- technical, medical, consumer and reference books in the Soviet
- Union, as well as professional information products. The new
- office will represent Simon & Schuster at scientific symposia and
- arrange book exhibitions.
-
- * The figures for 1988 are in. There were 55,483 books published
- in the U.S. in 1988 (what, you didn't get to all of them?).
- Here's how that figure breaks down: Agriculture (666), Art
- (1,602), Biography (2,250), Business (1,647), Education (1,113),
- Fiction (5,564); General Works (2,475); History (3,260); Home
- Economics (1,057); Juveniles (4,954); Language (628); Law
- (1,343); Literature (2,272); Medicine (3,900); Music (329);
- Philosophy and Psychology (1,955); Poetry and Drama (1,270);
- Religion (2,746); Science (3,743); Sociology and Economics
- (8,247); Sports and Recreation (1,099); Technology (2,694);
- Travel (669).
-
- * I thought you might be interested in the average price of
- fiction:
- 1986 1988
- ---- ----
- Hardcover $16.84 $17.63
- Trade paper $ 8.64 $10.07
- Mass market $ 3.46 $ 3.97
-
- * John Steptoe, author and illustrator of award-winning books for
- children, died of AIDS on August 28 at the age of 38. Two of his
- books were THE STORY OF JUMPING MOUSE and MUFARO'S BEAUTIFUL
- DAUGHTERS.
-
- * The U.S. Court of Appeals has overturned the ban won by Cliffs
- Notes against Doubleday's SPY NOTES in a lower court. The Cliffs
- Notes people felt that the cover of the Doubleday book, which
- closely resembles their famous yellow-and-black covers, infringed
- on their trademark and was likely to be confused with their
- books. The appeals court found that a greater latitude should be
- given works of parody, and that the cover was clearly different.
- For example, "A Satire" appears on the cover 5 times, and there
- are other "wry notations" that distinguish SPY NOTES from the
- real thing.
-
- * The British Sunday paper the Observer printed that Penguin
- Books plans to issue a British paperback of THE SATANIC VERSES at
- a specified, but secret, date in 1990. The date is a secret for
- security reasons, of course, but smart money says it'll be in the
- first few months of 1990.
-
- * The most-stolen book at the recent Moscow Book Fair was
- Doubleday's THE ELVIS CATALOGUE.
-
- * I hear that Mike O'Brien is now publishing a monthly newsletter
- called SEASONED BOOKS, opinionated commentary on books that are
- at least 30 years old and still in print. Subscriptions to
- SEASONED BOOKS are $12 for six months: P.O. Box 42615, Portland,
- OR 97242-0615.
-
- * Harlan Ellison has finally delivered the manuscript of THE
- HARLAN ELLISON HORNBOOK to Mirage Press, 20 years after signing
- the contract. Jack Chalker's Mirage Press will release a 500-copy
- limited edition for around $30, with Penzler Books publishing a
- trade edition.
-
- * If you like science fiction, you'll want to see THE WORLD
- BEYOND THE HILL: Science Fiction and the Quest for Transcendence
- by Alexei and Cory Panshin (Tarcher Nov89 ISBN 0-87477-436-5
- $29.95). Get a rich friend to buy it, then borrow it from him. Or
- get a rich friend to buy it for you as a present. Or hassle your
- local library into getting it.
-
- * This fall has brought us the first Mike Hammer novel in a very
- long time, marking the end of a 19-year writing hiatus for Mickey
- Spillane and the 40th anniversary of the publication of Signet's
- first Spillane thriller. To celebrate that anniversary NAL will
- rerelease six of Spillane's bestselling titles: VENGEANCE IS
- MINE; MY GUN IS QUICK; I, THE JURY; THE BIG KILL; ONE LONELY
- NIGHT; KISS ME DEADLY (all $3.95 and all with vintage-type
- covers). The new Mike Hammer novel is THE KILLING MAN, available
- at $17.95 from Dutton. And yes, Mickey is working on another one
- right now.
-
- * David Morrell is getting a million dollars for each of his next
- two books from Warner. The first is scheduled for next April--THE
- FIFTH PROFESSION, about a bodyguard to the famous. April also
- happens to be the time when the next Rambo movie will be filmed
- (Morrell wrote the novel FIRST BLOOD, which started the whole
- thing). I've heard that Morrell has been asked to write the
- first-draft screenplay for the new Rambo, but I don't know if he
- will or not.
-
- * For the Sherlock Holmes fan on your gift list, you couldn't do
- any better than the audio tape series from Simon & Schuster Audio
- called THE NEW ADVENTURES OF SHERLOCK HOLMES. These are original
- radio broadcasts starring Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce. They
- haven't been heard since the 1940s, and each one-hour tape has
- two complete original mysteries, along with the original 1940s
- commercials. There are five tapes that I know of, each one
- costing $9.95.
-
- * This fall you can buy the TE-TAO CHING (ISBN 0-34534-790-0)
- from Ballantine, the first of the five hardcovers in their
- prestigious Classics of Ancient China series. It incorporates
- texts that are fuller and at least 500 years earlier than
- anything previously available. The other four volumes (to be
- released one each fall) will be: I CHING, longer than any known
- version; SUN TZU'S ART OF WAR, containing chapters not found
- elsewhere; fragments of Sun Pin's ART OF WAR, a previously
- unknown text on military strategy; and a work that archeologists
- identified as the long-lost FOUR CLASSICS OF THE YELLOW EMPEROR.
- The TE-TAO CHING is $19.95, translated and with notes by Robert
- G. Henricks of Dartmouth University.
-
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-
- The only real blind person at Christmastime is he who has not
- Christmas in his heart.
- --Helen Keller
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- THE LAST CHRISTMAS TRIVIA QUIZ
-
- 1) What was the name of the novel of a small Texas town by Larry
- McMurtry? It was made into a major film, with Cybil Shephard
- in a featured role.
- 2) What was the name of the novel that Nikos Kazantzakis wrote
- about Jesus? It was recently made into a very controversial
- film.
- 3) Name the second of James Fenimore Cooper's Leatherstocking
- Tales.
- 4) What was the name of the historical novel by Edward Bulwer-
- Lytton that is particularly famous for putting readers to
- sleep?
- 5) What is the number of Beethoven's last symphony?
- 6) What is the number of Dvorak's last symphony?
- 7) What is the number of Mahler's last symphony?
- 8) Doesn't this bother you just a tiny bit?
- 9) The phrases on the left below all say the same thing. What?
- 10) Match the phrases on the left with the languages on the
- right. (These are cribbed from a very old book; languages may
- have changed since then, but we thought you might enjoy this
- exercise anyway.)
-
- 1. Boas Festas a. Afrikander
- 2. Buone Feste Natalizie b. Bohemian
- 3. Cestitamo Bozic c. Bulgarian
- 4. Chestita Koleda d. Croatian
- 5. Een Plesierige Kerfees e. Danish
- 6. Feliz Navidad f. Dutch
- 7. Froehliche Weihnachten g. Esperanto
- 8. Gajan Kristnaskon h. Esthonian
- 9. Glad Yul i. Finnish
- 10. Glaedelig Jul j. French
- 11. Gledelig Jul k. German
- 12. Hristos se rodi l. Hungarian
- 13. Iloista Joulua m. Irish
- 14. Joyeux Noel n. Italian
- 15. Kellemes karacsonyi unnepeket o. Jugoslav
- 16. Linksmu Kaledu p. Lettish
- 17. Nadolig Llawen q. Lithuanian
- 18. Nodlaig mhaith chugnat r. Norwegian
- 19. Priecigus Ziemassvetkus s. Polish
- 20. Roomsaid Joulu Puhi t. Portuguese
- 21. Sarbatori vesele u. Rumanian
- 22. Sretan Bozic v. Serbian
- 23. Srozhdestvom Kristovym w. Spanish
- 24. Vesele Vanoce x. Swedish
- 25. Vroolijk Kerfeest y. Ukrainian
- 26. Weselych Swiat z. Welsh
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- I am sorry to have to introduce the subject of Christmas. It is
- an indecent subject; a cruel, gluttonous subject; a drunken,
- disorderly subject; a wasteful, disastrous subject; a wicked,
- cadging, lying, filthy, blasphemous and demoralizing subject.
- Christmas is forced on a reluctant and disgusted nation by the
- shopkeepers and the press: on its own merits it would wither and
- shrivel in the fiery breath of universal hatred; and anyone who
- looked back to it would be turned into a pillar of greasy
- sausages.
- --George Bernard Shaw
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- FEATURED AUTHOR:
-
- CHARLES DICKENS
- (1812-1870)
-
- Charles Dickens was a hearty man who loved people and parties,
- the kind who'd yell a greeting across the room and slap your back
- to make his point. Amateur theatricals were a favorite pastime,
- and he gave dramatic readings of his works until shortly before
- his death (many attribute his death to overwork of this kind).
-
- Long regarded as one of the greatest writers that ever lived,
- many have been repulsed by the length of his novels, or their
- rambling style. It should be kept in mind, however, that Dickens'
- stories were printed in periodicals in weekly or monthly
- installments, and were, therefore, written with this serialized
- presentation in mind. Because of this, it makes more sense to
- think of Dickens' stories as you would a modern day TV soap
- opera, a constantly-modulating, episodic work of the imagination.
- And it helps to read the novels as they were meant to be read: 2
- or 3 chapters at a sitting, spaced out over an extended length of
- time.
-
- What else does it help to know about Charles Dickens? For one
- thing, like many gregarious optimists, he became disillusioned
- with age. He began by thinking that the world was flawed only
- because people were ignorant of the problems, but he ultimately
- realized that many just don't care. Consequently, his later books
- are decidedly darker, less cheerful, than the earlier ones.
- Another point: Dickens occasionally became obsessed with the
- political power of novelists and beat his drum about social
- injustices a bit tediously, a minor complaint but noticeable.
-
- If you want to talk a good game, any time Dickens' name comes up,
- be sure to mention CHARACTERIZATION. Charles Dickens is known,
- first and foremost, for the richness and variety of the
- characters he created, and it wouldn't hurt to memorize the names
- of some of the more memorable: Mr. Micawber and Uriah Heep from
- DAVID COPPERFIELD, Pip and Miss Havisham and Abel Magwitch from
- GREAT EXPECTATIONS, Sidney Carton and Charles Darnay from A TALE
- OF TWO CITIES, or Serjeant Buzfuz and Samuel Weller from THE
- PICKWICK PAPERS. If you decide to do yourself the favor of
- actually reading these novels, I guarantee you won't forget the
- characters (or their often-ridiculous names).
-
- In any case, here's a list to get yourself oriented. Remember,
- Charles Dickens became the greatest storyteller of all time by
- being loved by millions, NOT by impressing the critics. So don't
- expect long words, complex construction and obscure references.
- He was a novelist for the Common Man that he so loved, and he
- left a literary legacy that won't soon be equalled.
-
- SKETCHES BY BOZ -- Satires on daily life that originally appeared
- in various periodicals from 1833 to 1835. The pseudonym Boz was
- the nickname of one of Dickens' younger brothers.
-
- THE POSTHUMOUS PAPERS OF THE PICKWICK CLUB -- (1836-1837)
- Commonly known as the PICKWICK PAPERS. Dickens' first major
- success. This was also published under the pseudonym Boz, and
- originally began as simply a bit of prose to accompany some
- artwork, but the activities of the Pickwick Club became so
- popular that they completely eclipsed the drawings. Consistent
- with its purpose, this isn't so much a novel as a series of
- episodes, which appeared in 19 monthly parts. Humor and
- cheerfulness on every page, PICKWICK PAPERS contains some of
- Dickens' most famous characters--like Mrs. Bardell, Serjeant
- Buzfuz, Alfred Jingle, and of course Samuel Weller.
-
- OLIVER TWIST -- (1837-1839) His first novel of social
- injustices, this one about the treatment of the poor, children
- in particular. The new Poor Law of 1834, that cut off
- supplemental assistance to the poor and forced families to
- separate into men's, women's, and children's workhouses--this
- was the primary evil that he illustrated. Serialized
- irregularly in 24 parts of varying length. Dickens, by the way,
- had ten children. Famous characters here: Fagin, Jack Dawkins
- (AKA the Artful Dodger), Bill Sikes, and Mr. Bumble. The story
- follows the ups and downs of the childhood of Oliver, an
- adorable child who has the misfortune to be born an orphan in a
- big city. Though our hero manages to rise above his beginnings,
- Dickens' point here is that poverty breeds crime (which was a
- reasonably new idea at the time).
-
- NICHOLAS NICKLEBY -- (1838-1839) Serialized in 19 monthly parts.
- As OLIVER TWIST attacked the treatment of the poor, NICKLEBY
- attacks schools and teachers. As Dickens showed, students were
- often starved and seldom taught, and NICKLEBY led to the
- closing or reformation of many such schools. This is another
- story of a wonderful person (Nicholas) succeeding against
- enormous odds and much evil. Famous characters: Mr. Wackford
- Squeers and the Cheeryble brothers.
-
- THE OLD CURIOSITY SHOP -- (1840-1841) Serialized (40 parts) in
- Master Humphrey's Clock, a weekly periodical that Dickens
- started himself. Little Nell lives with her grandfather, who
- borrows money for good reasons, but when his compulsive
- gambling prevents paying it back they loose the Curiosity Shop
- and must roam the countryside as beggars. By the time they are
- found by some friendly rescuers, Little Nell has died and her
- grandfather soon follows. Secondary characters live happily
- ever after and tell the story of Little Nell, and The Old
- Curiosity Shop is torn down to make way for a new building.
- Some tastes find this story sweet, but for others the overdose
- of sentimentality is decidedly saccharin. Oscar Wilde said:
- "One must have a heart of stone to read the death of Little
- Nell without laughing."
-
- BARNABY RUDGE -- (1841) Serialized in Master Humphrey's Clock.
- Here Dickens moved from a simple close-up view of poverty, to
- an examination of the government policies that afflict the poor
- (and the consequences of those policies). The highlight of
- RUDGE are the anti-Catholic Gordon riots of 1780, but otherwise
- the plot is generally considered to be one of Dickens' weakest.
-
- AMERICAN NOTES -- (1842) His opinion of the U.S., and not
- entirely favorable. He didn't like slavery, and he particularly
- didn't like the way we published his books over here without
- his permission and without paying him royalties of any kind
- (Dickens advocated an international copyright). In addition to
- all that, he thought American's were narrow-minded and
- uncultured. Not surprisingly, Americans were angered and
- insulted by AMERICAN NOTES (as they were meant to be).
-
- A CHRISTMAS CAROL -- (1843) Probably his best-known work, this
- was the first of five Christmas Books. This is the story of
- selfish miser Ebenezer Scrooge, who is reformed by visits from
- three ghosts during the night of Christmas Eve. Famous
- characters: all of them, but especially Bob Cratchit and his
- son Tiny Tim.
-
- MARTIN CHUZZLEWIT -- (1843-1844) A powerful, satiric novel of
- selfishness, hypocrisy and financial speculation. Published in
- 19 monthly parts. Martin Chuzzlewit, Sr., kicks Junior out of
- the house to cure him of greed and selfishness. It works, but
- only after much difficulty and misfortune. Part of Martin
- Junior's trouble occurs in America, in a section of the novel
- which once again insulted Americans greatly. Dickens really was
- irritated with us. Famous characters: Sarah Gamp, Seth
- Pecksniff.
-
- THE CHIMES -- (1844) This Christmas Book bears the unfortunate
- flaw of being pretty depressing. The forced and sudden happy
- ending is not convincing, and the reader is left with an
- emotional hangover of hopelessness. Not actually a bad tale,
- but not the best choice for a happy holiday.
-
- THE CRICKET ON THE HEARTH -- (1845) Another Christmas Book, this
- one not quite as successful as A CHRISTMAS CAROL. It involves a
- young man who masquerades as an old man to find out if his
- girlfriend really loves the man she is engaged to marry. This
- was very popular at the time and outsold A CHRISTMAS CAROL,
- though time has relegated it to secondary position. A nice
- sentimental Yuletide tale nonetheless.
-
- PICTURES FROM ITALY -- (1846) Dickens' second travel book, and
- don't worry if you've never heard of it--very few people have.
- Without the emotional involvement and anger of AMERICAN NOTES,
- there was very little left to be of interest to anyone.
-
- THE BATTLE OF LIFE -- (1846) A Christmas Book that sold
- enormously well and was reviewed very badly. The Times said:
- "of all the bad Christmas books...the worst...the very worst."
- Possibly not the worst, but it is tedious. And it doesn't even
- have anything to do with Christmas.
-
- DOMBEY AND SON -- (1846-1848) Written in Switzerland, this novel
- is more complex than usual (I don't think there's any
- connection there, but you never know). Published in 19 monthly
- parts. All Mr. Dombey wants out of life is a son to go into
- business with him, an obsession which causes him to drive his
- son past his limits and ignore his daughter. Much is made (in
- circles I don't travel in) of the symbolism of death as the sea
- and life as the flow of the river into the sea, a recurrent
- Dickens symbol used for the first time here.
-
- THE HAUNTED MAN -- (1848) The last Christmas Book. Dickens
- returned to his famous Christmas themes and produced one last
- memorable story. The full title was THE HAUNTED MAN AND THE
- GHOST'S BARGAIN: A FANCY FOR CHRISTMAS TIME.
-
- DAVID COPPERFIELD -- (1849-1850) Largely autobiographical, this
- was Dickens' favorite of his novels. Once again Dickens harps
- on the cruel treatment of children, but expands from there into
- a wonderful coming-of-age story. Published in 19 monthly parts.
- Famous characters: loads, including Mr. Creakle, Steerforth,
- Betsey Trotwood, Mr. Micawber, Uriah Heep, Dora, Barkis,
- Peggotty.
-
- BLEAK HOUSE -- (1852-1853) Published in 19 monthly parts. The
- major social injustice here is the slow and unsatisfactory
- legal system. As background to the major plot, Jarndyce vs.
- Jarndyce is a dispute over the administration of a will, a
- legal suit which goes on so long it is actually passed from one
- generation to the next. By the time the suit is settled, the
- funds to be administered have all been eaten up in legal fees.
- A large motivation for this novel was Dickens' attempt to sue
- the pirate publishers of his "A Christmas Carol". Famous
- character: the wily detective Mr. Bucket.
-
- HARD TIMES -- (1854) Published in 20 weekly parts. This novel is
- Dickens' harshest indictment of the practical and philosophical
- environment surrounding the Industrial Revolution. Thomas
- Gradgrind raises his children in an emotional void, everything
- is a matter of scientific fact and logic. Needless to say, the
- kids grow up psychologically stunted and get themselves into
- BIG trouble.
-
- LITTLE DORRIT -- (1855-1857) Dickens' father was confined in
- debtors' prison, a memory which shows up in DAVID COPPERFIELD
- but is front and center in LITTLE DORRIT, published in 19
- monthly parts. William Dorrit lives in debtors' prison with
- his 3 children: Edward, Fanny, and Amy (who is Little Dorrit).
- One day they come into great wealth, and all of them turn out
- to be as insufferably pretentious when rich as they were
- pathetic when poor. All, that is, except for Little Dorrit, who
- falls in love with Arthur Clennam, who struggles mightily with
- the civil service's Circumlocution Office (Dickens' diatribe on
- bureaucracy).
-
- A TALE OF TWO CITIES -- (1859) To begin with, the two cities are
- London and Paris, and the time is the French Revolution. This
- is high drama, and involves lookalikes and unjust imprisonment
- and great self-sacrifice. Possibly not Dickens' finest novel,
- but certainly good for stirring the blood. This is the source
- of that famous quote: "It's a far, far better thing that I do
- than I have ever done..." Published in 31 weekly parts.
-
- GREAT EXPECTATIONS -- (1860-1861) A story of the maturation of a
- boy into a man. Philip Pirrip (called Pip) is raised by his
- sister and her husband, a simple blacksmith. Money for his
- education is provided by a secret benefactor, who will
- supposedly leave Pip his fortune when he dies. With delusions
- of grandeur, Pip leaves all of his humble friends and heads for
- the city to be Important. You can figure out the rest of the
- plot, which still succeeds with style and characters, though
- the plot is no longer fresh. This is frequently considered to
- be Dickens' greatest novel, though some think the cheery ending
- a bit forced. Famous characters: many, including Miss Havisham,
- Abel Magwitch, Biddy, the Pocket family, Uncle Pumblechook,
- Dolge Orlick, and Mr. Jaggers. Published in 36 weekly parts.
-
- OUR MUTUAL FRIEND -- (1864-1865) It's Mr. Boffin and Wilfers who
- have a mutual friend, and the friend is John Harmon, who has
- been left a fortune on the condition that he marry Bella
- Wilfer. To make things interesting, Mr. Boffin gets the money
- if the condition is not fulfilled. This novel definitely shows
- Dickens' increasing pessimism about life. Dickens had always
- hoped that the upper classes would use their money to improve
- the quality of life for everyone, and his disappointment is
- shown in the recurrent use of dust as a symbol of money. This
- is also a much more contrived or deliberate novel than his
- usual, pleasing some and not others. Published in 19 monthly
- parts.
-
- THE MYSTERY OF EDWIN DROOD -- (1870) Rosa Bud is loved by two
- men: Edwin Drood's supposedly devoted Uncle Jasper, and young
- Neville Landless. Unfortunately for all concerned, Edwin Drood
- and Rosa Bud have been betrothed by their fathers, and the
- forcing of the relationship has made any real feeling between
- them impossible. The night before they are to be wed two things
- happen--Edwin and Rosa agree to call it off, and Edwin
- disappears. Neville is arrested for the murder, but is released
- when no body can be found. A mysterious character called Mr.
- Datchery shows up, and then.... Unhappily, what happens then
- is that Dickens dies and doesn't finish the story, leaving a
- fascinating literary puzzle for armchair sleuths. What's your
- theory? The two key questions you have to answer are: 1) Is
- Edwin really dead? and 2) Who is Mr. Datchery? DROOD was
- originally planned to appear in 12 parts, of which 6 appeared,
- so it was left approximately half completed.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- Please, sir, I want some more.
- --from OLIVER TWIST (Chapter 2) by Charles Dickens
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- GOOD READING PERIODICALLY
-
- You say you'd like a literary magazine, for people who actually
- READ, but not TOO literary? You say The New Yorker is nice, but
- just a bit too snooty? You say you're tired of glitz and lack of
- substance? If so, be sure you don't miss a new magazine called
- WIGWAG (don't laugh, wigwag means "to signal someone home"). If
- you were to send them $19.95, you'd get 10 issues a year, and
- you'll probably be very happy with your purchase. WIGWAG manages
- to strike a very nice balance of highbrow and fun--it won't
- insult your intelligence and it won't bore you either. Send your
- money to Wigwag, P.O. Box 823, Farmingdale, NY 11737, or call
- 1-800-257-6700 with your credit card in your hand.
-
- There's yet another new magazine in town, this one with the
- delightful name GARBAGE. I just couldn't resist--what a kick to
- write a check made out to GARBAGE. So what is GARBAGE? The
- subtitle is The Practical Journal for the Environment, and when
- you think about it, they're right. The basic environmental issue
- is wastes, of all kinds; and this magazine is dedicated to
- helping us be better earthlings. It's full of things that real
- people can do to make things better; if not for the whole planet,
- at least for the parts of it that are closest to you. Here's a
- quick look at the main features of the Premier Issue:
-
- KITCHEN DESIGN FOR RECYCLING by Jonathan Poore (Separating your
- garbage is a fact of life. Here's how to design (or redesign) a
- kitchen to make recycling and composting practical and easy.
- First in a series on the efficient kitchen.)
-
- THE TRUTH ABOUT SEAFOOD by Lisa Lefferts (An evenhanded
- assessment of health benefits versus risks in eating fish: good
- fish/bad fish, shellfish and fin fish, saltwater and fresh;
- pollutants, poisons, and disease. Tips on safe preparation of
- fish.)
-
- GARBAGE AT THE GROCERY by Janet Marinelli (About half of what we
- throw away everyday is food packaging. Here's a saner way to shop
- at the supermarket and do something about the garbage glut.)
-
- NATURAL PEST CONTROLS: ARE THEY REALLY SAFER? by Cheryl Best
- (There has been an explosion in the number of companies selling
- natural pest controls for safer and healthier cultivation. We
- sort out chemistry, risks, and effectiveness.)
-
- PRINTING GARBAGE ON RECYCLED by Patricia Poore (Print this
- magazine on recycled paper? The answer wasn't at all obvious.
- Here's how we decided in favor of the environment--AND the
- business.)
-
- GARBAGE is the environmental magazine for the rest of us--the
- ones who don't march on Washington, D.C. twice a year and who
- won't consider living in a cave. And who are mighty tired of
- being told that EVERYTHING is hazardous and cancer-causing. If
- GARBAGE sounds good, you can get 6 issues a year for your very
- own for $21. Send a check to Old-House Journal Corp., 435 Ninth
- St., Brooklyn, NY 11215 or call 1-800-274-9909 with your charge
- card.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- There are books of which the backs and covers
- are by far the best parts.
- --from OLIVER TWIST (Chapter 14) by Charles Dickens
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- NEW FROM CARROLL & GRAF:
-
-
- THE BLACK CABINET
- Superb Stories Based on Real Crimes
- edited and introduced by Peter Lovesey
-
- Where do crime writers get their ideas? Usually out of their
- imaginations, triggered perhaps by a chance occurrence. But
- sometimes their stories are based on real crimes, and that is the
- case with the fifteen masterful stories presented here by Peter
- Lovesey, whose prize-winning novel THE FALSE INSPECTOR DEW,
- selected by H.R.F. Keating for his CRIME & MYSTERY: THE 100 BEST
- BOOKS, was based on an actual case.
-
- Lovesey leads off with a recounting by Abraham Lincoln of a weird
- murder mystery he encountered as a young lawyer in Springfield.
- Though it is a true story presented factually it is probably the
- strangest story in the collection. Other stories include Sir
- Arthur Conan Doyle's fictional solution to the mystery of the
- Marie Celeste, and Angela Carter's marvelous reconstruction of
- the hours--and the lives--that led to Lizzie Borden's mad
- murders. O. Henry, Aldous Huxley, Anthony Boucher and Osbert
- Sitwell complete what we may call the "period" portion of the
- book, with Lillian de la Torre's delightful Dr. Sam Johnson story
- "Milady Bigamy" providing an engaging break before we move on to
- the modern era of murder.
-
- Here, stories by Peter Lovesey, Roy Vickers, Jorge Luis Borges,
- Anthony Berkley, and Miriam Allen De Ford provide a full measure
- of passion and horror, ending with Harlan Ellison's Edgar Award-
- winning story "The Whimper of Whipped Dogs", based on the murder
- of Kitty Genovese before the eyes of thirty-eight witnesses in
- Kew Gardens.
-
- John Dickson Carr wraps up the book and brings it full circle
- with an historical extravaganza that gives this volume its name
- and is based on the murder of--Abraham Lincoln!
-
- ISBN 0-88184-513-2 196 pages $17.95
-
-
- BEYOND THE OCCULT
- by Colin Wilson
-
- Twenty years after his first highly successful book on the
- subject, THE OCCULT (1970), Colin Wilson sets out to prove that
- the picture of the world presented by investigations into the
- paranormal is as consistent and comprehensive as that of science.
-
- Wilson begins with the human mind, and with vivid examples of its
- unseen powers: ESP, precognition, clairvoyance, psychokinesis,
- out-of-body experiences, and mystical occurrences of all kinds.
- From there he moves to profoundly mysterious phenomena--
- poltergeists, spirit possessions, reincarnations--that have
- convinced him of the reality of disembodied spirits.
-
- Hundreds of fascinating glimpses into the universe of the
- paranormal are linked to the latest scientific thinking to
- support Wilson's powerful case: that our so-called "normal"
- experience may in fact be sub-normal, and that evolution may have
- brought us near to the edge of a quantum leap into a highly
- expanded human consciousness.
-
- ISBN 0-88184-520-5 380 pages $19.95
-
-
- MURDER CAN BE FUN
- by Fredric Brown
-
- Originally written for the pulps, Fredric Brown's Edgar Award
- winning books stand out for their ingenious plots, lucid style,
- and headlong pace. Concealed beneath the surface are complex
- themes and plots that nevertheless always play fair with the
- reader.
-
- MURDER CAN BE FUN is a tense, fast-paced tale of multiple murder
- set in the world of radio soap opera. A script writer finds
- himself prime suspect when a series of murders follow scripts he
- wrote but never showed to anyone! He must think fast and act
- faster to stay alive and out of jail.
-
- ISBN 0-88184-504-3 219 pages $3.95
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- "If the law supposes that," said Mr. Bumble, ...
- "the law is a ass, a idiot."
- --from OLIVER TWIST (Chapter 51) by Charles Dickens
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- IMPORTANT DATES IN DECEMBER
-
- 01 1886 Rex Stout, American detective-story writer
- 01 1905 Charles Finney, American writer
- 01 1935 Woody Allen, American film director and writer
- 01 1947 Aleister Crowley died at 74
- 02 1937 Brian Lumley, English writer
- 03 1857 Joseph Conrad, Polish-born English writer
- 04 1795 Thomas Carlyle, Scottish-born English writer
- 04 1835 Samuel Butler, English writer and satirist
- 04 1875 Rainer Maria Rilke, German poet
- 04 1903 Cornell Woolrich, American writer
- 05 1830 Christina Rossetti, English poet
- 05 1901 Walter Elias Disney, American cartoonist/film producer
- 05 1934 Joan Didion, American writer
- 05 1935 Calvin Trillin, American writer and critic
- 06 1883 Kahlil Gibran, Syrian-American writer
- 06 1886 Joyce Kilmer, American (male) poet
- 06 1892 Osbert Sitwell, English poet and writer
- 07 43 BC Marcus Tullius Cicero, Roman writer, gets his head and
- right hand chopped off by Mark Antony's soldiers.
- 07 1873 Willa Cather, American writer
- 07 1888 Joyce Cary, Anglo-Irish (male) writer
- 08 65 BC Horace, Roman lyric poet and satirist
- 08 1894 James Grover Thurber, American humorist/artist/writer
- 08 1913 Delmore Schwartz, American writer
- 09 1608 John Milton, English writer
- 09 1848 Joel Chandler Harris, American journalist and writer
- 09 1905 Dalton Trumbo, American writer
- 10 1824 George MacDonald, Scottish writer
- 10 1830 Emily Dickinson, American poet
- 10 1903 William Plomer, South African writer
- 10 1907 Rumer Godden, English writer
- 11 1810 Alfred de Musset, French writer
- 11 1918 Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Russian writer
- 12 1821 Gustave Flaubert, French novelist
- 12 1929 John Osborne, English playwright
- 13 1797 Heinrich Heine, German poet/satirist/journalist
- 13 1911 Kenneth Patchen, American poet and novelist
- 14 1919 Shirley Jackson, American writer
- 15 1888 Maxwell Anderson, American playwright
- 15 1913 Muriel Rukeyser, American writer
- 15 1932 Edna O'Brien, Irish writer
- 16 1775 Jane Austin, English novelist
- 16 1863 George Santayana, Spanish-born American writer
- 16 1899 Noel Coward, English actor/composer/playwright
- 16 1900 Sir V.S. Pritchett, English writer and literary critic
- 16 1917 Arthur C. Clarke, English writer of science fiction/fact
- 16 1928 Philip K. Dick, American writer
- 17 1807 John Greenleaf Whittier, American poet and editor
- 17 1830 Jules de Goncourt, French writer
- 17 1873 Ford Madox Ford, English novelist and editor
- 17 1929 William Safire, American wordsmith
- 17 1944 Jack Chalker, American writer
- 18 1870 Saki (H.H. Munro), Scottish-born English writer
- 18 1907 Christopher Fry, English playwright
- 18 1913 Alfred Bester, American author of science fiction
- 18 1927 Sterling Lanier, American writer
- 18 1939 Michael Moorcock, English writer
- 19 1861 Italo Svevo, Italian novelist
- 19 1906 H. Allen Smith, American humorist
- 19 1910 Jean Genet, French playwright and novelist
- 20 1875 T.F. Powys, English writer
- 20 1902 Max Lerner, American journalist
- 20 1911 Hortense Calisher, American writer
- 21 1804 Benjamin Disraeli, English statesman and novelist
- 21 1905 Anthony Powell, English novelist
- 21 1917 Heinrich Bll, German writer
- 21 1940 F. Scott Fitzgerald dies of heart attack and is buried in
- Rockville, MD
- 22 1639 Jean-Baptiste Racine, French playwright
- 22 1869 Edwin Arlington Robinson, American poet
- 22 1905 Kenneth Rexroth, American poet/critic/translator
- 23 1804 Charles-Augustin de Sainte-Beuve, French writer/critic
- 23 1896 Giuseppe di Lampedusa, Sicilian writer
- 23 1926 Robert Bly, American poet/editor/translator
- 24 1754 George Crabbe, English poet
- 24 1822 Matthew Arnold, English poet and critic
- 24 1881 Juan Ram"n Jimnez, Spanish poet
- 24 1910 Fritz Leiber, American writer
- 25 1721 William Collins, English poet
- 25 1892 Dame Rebecca West, English novelist/critic/journalist
- 25 1924 Rod Serling, American playwright
- 25 1931 Carlos Castaneda, American writer and mystic
- 26 1716 Thomas Gray, English poet and letter-writer
- 26 1891 Henry Miller, American writer
- 26 1921 Steve Allen, American Renaissance man
- 26 1927 Alan King, American writer/humorist/actor
- 27 1896 Louis Bromfield, American writer
- 27 1930 Wilfrid Sheed, English-born American writer
- 28 1872 Pio Baroja, Spanish writer
- 29 1915 Robert Ruark, American writer
- 30 1865 Rudyard Kipling, English writer
- 30 1869 Stephen Leacock, Canadian humorist and economist
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- "God bless us every one!" said Tiny Tim.
- --from "A Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- FICTION INTO FILM:
-
- A CHRISTMAS CAROL
- written by Charles Dickens
- filmed by many
-
- What would Christmas be without A CHRISTMAS CAROL? Since the
- moment Dickens told the world that Old Marley was dead (as a
- door-nail), we've been charmed and delighted (or nauseated) by
- the story of Ebenezer Scrooge, Bob Cratchit, Tiny Tim, and the
- ghosts of Christmas Past, Present, and Future.
-
- Here are some of the versions of A CHRISTMAS CAROL available for
- your holiday viewing, all available on videotape. They are
- arranged by the actor playing Scrooge.
-
- Alistair Sims (A CHRISTMAS CAROL, 1951, B&W, 86 min.)
- A British production directed by Desmond Hurst and generally
- considered to be the finest feature film version. The cast also
- includes: Mervyn Johns, Kathleen Harrison, Jack Warner, Michael
- Hordern, George Cole, Miles Malleson, Hermione Baddeley, and
- Patrick Macnee (The Avengers) as the young Marley.
-
- Albert Finney (SCROOGE, 1970, 113 min.)
- Directed by Ronald Neame, this is a musical version that
- garners widely divided opinions. I guess it depends on how you
- like the music: I like it, but it seems to drive most reviewers
- to distraction. Also in the cast: Michael Medwin, Alec
- Guinness, Kay Walsh, David Collings, Laurence Naismith, Edith
- Evans, and Kenneth More.
-
- Reginald Owen (A CHRISTMAS CAROL, 1938, B&W, 69 min.)
- Directed by Edwin L. Marin, this is generally considered much
- inferior to the Alistair Sims version. Scrooge was supposed to
- have been played by Lionel Barrymore, who was replaced due to
- illness at the last minute. This is a fairly mindless rendition
- of the Dickens story, more suitable for children than adults.
- Cast includes: Gene Lockhart, Kathleen Lockhart, Terry Kilburn,
- Leo G. Carroll, and Lynne Carver.
-
- Mr. Magoo -- I couldn't resist. A delightful version for kids
- (big and small), with lots of raucous music. Jim Backus died
- this year, which makes it especially appropriate.
-
- George C. Scott (A CHRISTMAS CAROL, 1984)
- This was made for television but is, in my opinion, the finest
- rendition of them all. This is a dark, moody CAROL that may not
- fit the bill for small children, but added layers of realism
- make it perfect for adults whose imagination has withered a bit
- with time. And Mr. Scott is, of course, brilliant. I've HEARD
- that this is on videotape but have been unable to confirm it.
- Let's hope a rerun shows up on TV.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- Barkis is willin'.
- --from DAVID COPPERFIELD by Charles Dickens
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- RELIGIOUS READING
-
-
- DICTIONARY OF RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY
- by Geddes MacGregor
- A reference of extraordinary scope. Over 3,000 entries on the
- meanings of religious and philosophical ideas; identifies
- contributions of theologians and writers. An indispensable
- desktop reference.
- (Paragon House; 624 pages; ISBN 1-55778-019-6 $35)
-
- INTERRELIGIOUS DIALOGUE: Voices from a New Frontier
- edited by M. Darrol Bryant & Frank K. Flinn
- A rich mine of insights about interfaith experience. Spiritual
- leaders, scholars and educators report on the questions that
- emerge from an attempt to learn from religious traditions other
- than one's own.
- (Paragon House; 250 page; ISBN 0-89226-067-X $24.95)
-
- THE TAO TE CHING: A New Translation with Commentary
- by Ellen M. Chen
- This new translation with running commentary "has considerably
- more depth than other recent efforts...depict(s) this work as a
- unified religious document...re-integrating the social with the
- natural..."--Library Journal
- (Paragon House; 274 pages; ISBN 1-55778-238-5 $10.95)
-
- THE BUDDHA: His Life Retold
- by R.A. Mitchell; Preface by Roshi Philip Kapleau
- A brilliant, lyrical retelling of the life of Prince Siddhartha
- Gautama. Mitchell's poetic style brings to life the seed of
- Buddhism. "Engaging, even magical."--Roger J. Corless
- (Paragon House; 368 pages; ISBN 1-55778-151-6 $19.95)
-
- TAKING A CHANCE ON GOD: Liberating Theology for Gays, Lesbians
- and Their Lovers, Families and Friends
- by John J. McNeill
- Develops a Christian theology for lesbians and gays.
- (Beacon Press; September paper; $9.95)
-
- THE CASE FOR CHRISTIANITY
- by C.S. Lewis
- A trade paperback edition of the classic.
- (Collier Books; $3.95)
-
- CLASSICS FOR CHRISTMASTIME:
- Five Novels About the Spirit of the Holiday
- A beautifully illustrated hardcover edition of Christmas
- classics, featuring: THE STORY OF THE OTHER WISE MAN by Henry van
- Dyke; BROTHERLY HOUSE by Grace S. Richmond; THE BIRDS' CHRISTMAS
- CAROL and THE ROMANCE OF A CHRISTMAS CARD by Kate Douglas Wiggin;
- and A CHRISTMAS CAROL by Charles Dickens.
- (Ballantine Epiphany Books; $14.95)
-
- THE BUSINESSWOMAN'S BIBLE and
- THE BUSINESMAN'S BIBLE
- Success starts with the Bible! Nelson's Business Bibles in the
- New King James Version give you the edge with Priority Profiles
- (tm), 52 spiritual directives for success, by Dr. Charles
- Stanley--author, senior pastor of Atlanta's First Baptist Church,
- and host of the radio/TV ministry "In Touch". Elegant design and
- Slimline (tm) format make this volume a welcome gift, desk
- reference, and travel Bible. SPECIAL FEATURES: How to Introduce
- Your Friends to Christ by Dr. Stanley; Over 60,000 Center-Column
- References; Concordance; Center-Column Notes; Full-Color Study
- Maps. Available in Full-Color Hardcover or Dusty Rose and Gray
- bonded leather. Gift boxed with ribbon marker.
- (Thomas Nelson; from $24.95 to $34.95)
-
- ENCOUNTER: ESSAYS ON TORAH AND MODERN LIFE
- edited by H. Chaim Schimmel & Aryeh Carmell
- Debates a wide range of issues in the context of the Torah.
- (Philipp Feldheim; $19.95)
-
- THE BIBLE VISUAL RESOURCE BOOK, FOR DO-IT-YOURSELF SCHOLARS
- Contains such reproducible visual teaching aids as pictures,
- maps, charts.
- (Gospel Light; $19.95)
-
- FUN OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE STUDIES
- by Mike Gillespie
- Contains 32 creative studies on topics important to young people.
- (Group Publishing; $12.95)
-
- CHESTERTON ON DICKENS and
- THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF CHESTERTON
- by G.K. Chesterton
- Two additional volumes in the Collected Works of G.K. Chesterton
- series. This will make 13 volumes so far. The autobiography, with
- 37 rare photos, is the best book about Chesterton, and his
- writings on Dickens are masterpieces of literary criticism.
- (Ignatius Press; $17.95 and $14.95 respectively)
-
- THE YOGA-SUTRA OF PATANJALI
- by George Feuerstein
- A new translation and commentary on the landmark scripture on
- classical yoga.
- (Inner Traditions; $12.95)
-
- SETTINGS OF SILVER: An Introduction to Judaism
- by Stephen M. Wylen
- Provides a comprehensive and easy to understand overview of
- Judaism as the belief system and way of life in the Jewish
- people.
- (Paulist Press; $10.95)
-
- HEALING AND RESTORING: Health and Medicine in the World's
- Religious Traditions
- by Lawrence E. Sullivan
- Looks at health, healing, sickness and death in Islam, Buddhism,
- Taoism, Hinduism and native religions of the Americas, Africa and
- Asia.
- (Macmillan; $35)
-
- A CHRISTMAS COLLECTION
- by Patricia St. John, illustrated by Kay Hodges
- Features tales and illustrations from North Africa, England and
- Switzerland.
- (Moody Press; $7.95)
-
- RAISING KIDS ON PURPOSE FOR THE FUN OF IT
- by Gwen Weising
- Creative, practical suggestions for teaching Christian values
- through shared family times.
- (Revell; ISBN 0-8007-5322-4 $7.95)
-
- STRESSED OUT BUT HANGIN' TOUGH
- by Andrea Stephens
- A handbook to help teens cope with stress.
- (Revell; ISBN 0-8007-5326-7 $6.95)
-
- CHRISTMAS MEMORIES
- by Corrie ten Boom
- A nostalgic celebration of the true meaning of Christmas.
- Illustrated.
- (Revell; ISBN 0-8007-1626-4 $8.95)
-
- THE C.S. LEWIS HOAX
- by Kathryn Lindskoog
- Millions of C.S. Lewis fans heap well-deserved honor and praise
- upon their favorite author, and rightly so. But in the last
- twenty-five years a hoax has been perpetrated that threatens the
- integrity of the Lewis legacy--"a deception that has gone on long
- enough", according to author Kathryn Lindskoog. Seeking to
- protect the wonderful heritage of his writings, THE C.S. LEWIS
- HOAX is at once a fascinating detective story and an invaluable
- contribution to C.S. Lewis studies. Read it and judge for
- yourself whether or not one of the biggest literary deceptions in
- years is finally laid to rest.
- (Multnomah)
-
- MAY YOUR DAYS BE MERRY AND BRIGHT: Christmas Stories by Women
- edited and introduced by Susan Koppelman
- Includes works by Willa Cather, Pearl S. Buck, Grace Paley and
- Ntozake Shange.
- (New American Library; $8.95)
-
- 1990 CATHOLIC ALMANAC
- edited by Felician A. Foy & Rose M. Avato
- A one-volume encyclopedia of facts and information on things
- Catholic.
- (Our Sunday Visitor; $15.95)
-
- THE REVISED ENGLISH BIBLE
- The first major revision of a Bible already recognized as one of
- the finest literary and scholarly translation in modern English.
- (Oxford Univ. Press; $19.95; with Apocrypha $21.95; leather
- versions $44.95 and $49.95 respectively)
-
- TEST YOUR CHRISTIAN LITERACY: What Every Christian Needs to Know
- by Judith A. Lunsford
- Contains the major facts about the Bible, Christian doctrine and
- church history.
- (Wolgemuth & Hyatt; $10.95)
-
- A GUIDED TOUR OF THE BIBLE: Six Months of Daily Readings
- by Philip Yancey
- Will help those who struggle to learn how to read and study the
- Bible habitually.
- (Zondervan; $15.95)
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- And I DO come home at Christmas. We all do, or we all should. We
- all come home, or ought to come home, for a short holiday--the
- longer, the better--from the great boarding-school, where we are
- forever working at our arithmetical slates, to take, and give a
- rest.
- --from "A Christmas Tree" by Charles Dickens
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- DECEMBER RELEASES
-
- (The 10-digit number is the ISBN, useful for ordering.)
-
- Eating People is Wrong by Malcolm Bradbury (fiction)
- Academy Chicago Dec89 PB $5.95 0-89733-189-3
- (Satirizes the members of an English department at a provincial
- university.)
- Object-Oriented Programming in Turbo Pascal 5.5 by Ben Ezzell
- Addison-Wesley Dec89 TP $22.95 0-201-52375-2 500 pages
- Time Gate by Robert Silverberg
- Baen Dec89 PB $3.95
- (This novel mixes "top award-winning science fiction authors
- and the cutting edge of computer technology.")
- The Veiled One by Ruth Rendell
- Ballantine Dec89 PB $4.95
- (The three-time Edgar Award-winner brings back Inspector
- Wexford to solve the murder of a perfectly ordinary housewife.)
- Rama II by Arthur C. Clarke & Gentry Lee
- Bantam Dec89 HC $18.95 0-553-05714-6
- (In this sequel to the Nebula and Hugo Award-winning Rendezvous
- with Rama, the crew boards a second Raman spacecraft that
- enters our solar system.)
- The Blooding by Joseph Wambaugh
- Bantam Dec89 PB $5.95
- (This bestseller recounts the murder of two English girls that
- was solved by genetic-fingerprinting.)
- Mona Lisa Overdrive by William Gibson
- Bantam/Spectra Dec89 PB $4.95
- (Gibson returns to the high-tech future of "cyberspace" and
- world-dominating multinational corporations.)
- Murder Can Be Fun by Fredric Brown
- Carroll & Graf Dec89 PB $3.95 0-88184-504-3
- The Demoniacs by John Dickson Carr
- Carroll & Graf Dec89 PB $3.95 0-88184-543-4
- Beyond the Occult by Colin Wilson
- Carroll & Graf Dec89 HC $19.95 0-88184-520-5
- (The author of The Occult claims that the world of the
- paranormal is as consistent and comprehensive as that of
- science.)
- Love Is All Around: The Making of the Mary Tyler Moore Show by
- Robert S. Alley & Irby B. Brown
- Delacorte Dec89 TP $9.95 0-385-29773-4 (or Nov89)
- (This paperback original chronicles the production of the
- popular TV program.)
- Gone With the Wind: The Screenplay by Sidney Howard, edited by
- Herb Bridges and Terryl C. Boodman
- Delacorte Dec89 TP $12.95 0-385-29833-1
- (Based on the novel by Margaret Mitchell, contains the original
- script plus a behind-the-scenes look at how it evolved.)
- Thornyhold by Mary Stewart
- Fawcett Crest Dec89 PB $4.95
- (This is the bestselling author's first romantic suspense novel
- in 12 years.)
- The Case of the Constant Suicides by John Dickson Carr
- Harper & Row Dec89 PB $4.50 0-06-081016-5
- The Four False Weapons by John Dickson Carr
- Harper & Row Dec89 PB $4.50 0-06-081017-3
- Comic Books as History: The Narrative Art of Jack Jackson, Art
- Spiegelman, and Harvey Pekar by Joseph Witek
- Mississippi Dec89 TP $14.95 0-87805-406-5
- (Not just for kids any more, comic books of the '80s are used
- by serious artists to tell realistic stories for adults.)
- Everyone's Favorite Duck by Gahan Wilson
- Mysterious Dec89 PB $4.95
- (Introduces Enoch Bone and his sidekick John Weston in this
- pastiche by the noted humorist.)
- Nepal: A Photographic Introduction by Sandra Gibson
- Summer Wild Productions Dec89 HC $39.95 0-9692807-1-8
- Some Freaks by David Mamet (essays)
- Viking Dec89 HC $16.95 0-670-82933-1
- A Little Class on Murder by Carolyn G. Hart
- Bantam Dec89 PB
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- Heap on more wood!--the wind is chill;
- But let it whistle as it will,
- We'll keep our Christmas merry still.
- --from "Marmion" by Sir Walter Scott
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- NUMBER ONE FAN
- by Annie Wilkes
-
- Trash Books vs. Literature -- I don't know any reader who doesn't
- make some kind of distinction between Good Books and Garbage. Of
- course, the line we draw is personalized and not likely to be in
- the same place as someone else's. But we have a line nonetheless.
-
- What I want to talk about is not WHERE anybody draws the line,
- but HOW. Take two books that I read as a child: DAVID
- COPPERFIELD by Charles Dickens and DR. NO by Ian Fleming. It was
- easy to understand why adults were more comfortable with my
- reading Dickens than Fleming. Dickens was short on the sex and
- violence; Fleming wasn't. But is that a valid distinction for a
- mature reader to make? I don't think so.
-
- I chose DAVID COPPERFIELD and DR. NO mainly because I thought
- most of us could agree on these--the first is clearly on the Good
- side of the line, the second, if not on the Trash side, is
- certainly very close. So what's the difference?
-
- Most people would probably say these books differ primarily in
- the quality of the writing, which is an easy position to agree
- with. But does that mean that Good Writing = A Good Book? It's
- tough to put my finger on the reason, but instinctively I want to
- say No. For one thing, I'm not at all sure that Good Writing is a
- scientifically-defined entity. One reader's Good Writing is
- another's pretentious babbling.
-
- Another point: A lot of people like to throw around the concept
- of Worth. This book is worthwhile; this other one is not. This
- doesn't get us any further because Worth is no more definable
- than Good. Ambiguous terminology follows us everywhere.
-
- I know a person who collects hardcover first editions
- of a certain author's novels. I know another person who wouldn't
- be caught dead reading this author's books. Which of them is
- Right? Is there any meaning to the concept of Right in such a
- situation? Would it help if I were to tell you the author's name,
- so that we could all have an opinion and vote on the subject? In
- other words, if the majority votes that the author is Worthwhile,
- does that make it so?
-
- The Big Fizzle: I have no answers to these questions. Somehow I
- feel that too much of the issues are tied up with personal
- environment and experience. My literary choices won't be EXACTLY
- the same as yours because we are fundamentally different people.
- We disagree on an author because he speaks to some deep-seated
- part of one of us, but not the other. So which of us is Right?
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- RECENT PAPERBACKS
-
- Here are some recent paperback releases, presented just in case
- you missed them. HINT: They also make great stocking-stuffers.
-
- Anything For Billy by Larry McMurtry
- Pocket $5.50 ISBN 0-671-67091-3
- The Dragonbone Chair by Tad Williams
- Daw $5.95 ISBN 0-88677-384-9
- Eternity by Greg Bear (sequel to Eon)
- Popular $3.95 ISBN 0-445-20547-4
- Koko by Peter Straub
- NAL $5.95 ISBN 0-451-16214-5
- Midnight by Dean R. Koontz
- Berkley $4.95 ISBN 0-425-11870-3
- Summit by D.M. Thomas
- Pocket $4.95 ISBN 0-671-67661-X
- McBain's Ladies by Ed McBain
- Mysterious $4.95 ISBN 0-445-40334-9
- Skiing: The Art of Catching Cold And
- Going Broke While Rapidly Heading
- Nowhere At Great Personal Risk
- by Henry Beard and Roy McKie
- Workman $5.95 ISBN 0-89480-650-5
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- At Christmas I no more desire a rose
- Than wish a snow in May's new-fangled mirth;
- But like of each thing that in season grows.
- --from LOVE'S LABOUR'S LOST by William Shakespeare
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- AN INCOMPLETE EDUCATION
- by Judy Jones & William Wilson
- (Ballantine, Oct89 HC $24.95 ISBN 0-345-29570-6)
-
- It's like this: You're reading the Sunday book section and
- there, in a review of a book that isn't even about physics but
- about how to write a screenplay, you're confronted by that word
- again: QUARK. You have been confronted by it at least twenty-five
- times, beginning in at least 1978, but you have not managed to
- retain the definition (something about building blocks), and the
- resonances (something about threesomes, something about birdshit)
- are even more of a problem. You're feeling stymied. You worry
- that you may not use spare time to maximum advantage, that the
- world is passing you by, that maybe it WOULD make sense to
- subscribe to a third newsweekly. Your coffee's getting cold. The
- phone rings. You can't bring yourself to answer it.
-
- Or it's like this: You DO know what a quark is. You can answer
- the phone. It is an attractive person you have recently met. How
- are you? How are you? The person is calling to wonder if you feel
- like seeing a movie both of you missed the first time around.
- It's THE YEAR OF LIVING DANGEROUSLY, with Mel Gibson and that
- very tall actress. Also, that very short actress. "Plus," the
- person says, "it's set in Indonesia, which, next to India, is
- probably the most fascinating of all Third World nations. It's
- like the political scientists say, 'The labyrinth that is India,
- the mosaic that is Indonesia.' Right?" Silence at your end of the
- phone. Clearly this person is into overkill, but that doesn't
- mean you don't have to say something back. India you could field.
- But Indonesia? Fortunately, you have cable--and a Stouffer's
- lasagna in the freezer.
-
- Or it's like THIS: You know what a quark is. Also something
- about Indonesia. The two of you enjoy the movie. The new person
- agrees to go with you to a dinner party one of your best friends
- is giving at her country place. You arrive, pulling into a
- driveway full of BMWs. You go inside. Introductions are made.
- Along about the second margarita, the talk turns to World War II.
- Specifically, the causes of World War II. More specifically,
- Hitler. Already this is not easy. But it is interesting. "Well,"
- says another guest, flicking an imaginary piece of lint from the
- sleeve of a double-breasted navy blazer, "you really can't
- disregard the impact Nietzsche had, not only on Hitler, but on a
- prostrate Germany. You know: The will to power. The bermensch.
- The transvaluation of values. Don't you agree, old bean?"
- Fortunately, you have cable--and a Stouffer's lasagna in the
- freezer.
-
- So what's your problem? Weren't you supposed to have learned all
- this stuff back in college? Sure you were, but then, as now, you
- had your good days and your bad days. Ditto your teachers. Maybe
- you were in the infirmary with the flu the week your Philosophy
- 101 class was slogging through ZARATHUSTRA. Maybe your poli-sci
- prof was served with divorce papers right about the time the
- class hit the nonaligned nations. Maybe you failed to see the
- relevance of subatomic particles given your desperate need to get
- a date for Homecoming. Maybe you actually HAD all the answers--
- for a few glorious hours before the No-Doz (or whatever it was)
- wore off. No matter. The upshot is that you've got some serious
- educational gaps. And that, old bean, is what this book is all
- about.
- --from the Introduction
-
- I have never seen SO MUCH information presented SO ENTERTAININGLY
- and SO ECONOMICALLY before. This is one of those books for when
- you're stranded on a Desert Island. Even if you know the
- information being presented, you'll enjoy the text, and I
- guarantee that there's LOADS here that you don't know.
-
- The 12 chapters are: American Studies, Art History, Economics,
- Film, Literature, Music, Philosophy, Political Science,
- Psychology, Religion, Science, World History. And there's a
- Lexicon in the back that's priceless; it's got foreign words and
- phrases (and how to pronounce them), abbreviations, semantic
- distinctions (oral vs. verbal, pathos vs. bathos, authentic vs.
- genuine, etc.).
-
- This is one of the most useful, and used, volumes on my shelves.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- The holiest of all holidays are those
- Kept by ourselves in silence and apart;
- The secret anniversaries of the heart.
- --from "Holidays" by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- GREAT ENDINGS
-
- Since we're finishing up not only the year but the decade as
- well, I thought it would be nice to remember how some great
- storytellers have finished up their stories. Do these bring back
- any good memories?
-
- There was a point to this story, but it has temporarily escaped
- the chronicler's mind.
- --Douglas Adams (SO LONG, AND THANKS FOR ALL THE FISH)
-
- And this story, having no beginning, will have no end.
- --Clive Barker (WEAVEWORLD)
-
- When spring arrived, the roses were really beautiful in Joe
- Marks' garden. Passing strangers paused to admire their rich
- redness and asked Joe what he'd done.
- The old man smiled. "The secret," he said, "lies in the
- compost."
- --Robert Bloch (THERE IS A SERPENT IN EDEN)
-
- "Doc," he was saying, "sit down and hang on till I get there
- before you fall down flat on your face."
- But the nearest stool was miles away through the brillig, and
- slithy toves were gimbling at me from the wabe. Smiley's warning
- had been at least half a second too late.
- --Fredric Brown (NIGHT OF THE JABBERWOCK)
-
- It will always be too late. Fortunately.
- --Albert Camus (THE FALL)
-
- "It is a far, far better thing that I do, than I have ever done;
- it is a far, far better rest that I go to, than I have ever
- known."
- --Charles Dickens (A TALE OF TWO CITIES)
-
- It is cold in the scriptorium, my thumb aches. I leave this
- manuscript, I do not know for whom; I no longer know what it is
- about: stat rosa pristina nomine, nomina nuda tenemus.
- --Umberto Eco (THE NAME OF THE ROSE)
-
- 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.
- --Harlan Ellison ("Paladin of the Lost Hour")
-
- They endured.
- --William Faulkner (THE SOUND AND THE FURY)
-
- And so my thoughts turned away from the still shape that lay on
- the floor of the stately old room in Lincoln's Inn, away to the
- sunny vista of the future, where I should walk hand in hand with
- Ruth until my time, too, should come; until I, too, like the grim
- lawyer, should hear the solemn evening bell bidding me put out
- into the darkness of the silent sea.
- --R. Austin Freeman (THE EYE OF OSIRIS)
-
- There's nothing to say.
- All I can do is keep walking.
- --Charles L. Grant (THE ORCHARD)
-
- But in a last word to the wise of these days let it be said that
- of all who give gifts these two were the wisest. Of all who give
- and receive gifts, such as they are wisest. Everywhere they are
- wisest. They are the magi.
- --O. Henry ("The Gift of the Magi")
-
- They asked for my story. I have told it. Enough.
- --Susan Hill (THE WOMAN IN BLACK)
-
- In the world according to her father, Jenny Garp knew, we must
- have energy. Her famous grandmother, Jenny Fields, once thought
- of us as Externals, Vital Organs, Absentees, and Goners. But in
- the world according to Garp, we are all terminal cases.
- --John Irving (THE WORLD ACCORDING TO GARP)
-
- P.S. please if you get a chanse put some flowrs on Algernons
- grave in the bak yard.
- --Daniel Keyes (FLOWERS FOR ALGERNON)
-
- But now the hour is late, and all of that is another tale, for
- another day.
- --Stephen King (THE EYES OF THE DRAGON)
-
- That's the end. I have to turn off the light now. Good night.
- --Stephen King (RAGE)
-
- Now my tale is told.
- --Stephen King (MISERY)
-
- For like his accursed picture a year before, Joseph Curwen now
- lay scattered on the floor as a thin coating of fine bluish-grey
- dust.
- --H.P. Lovecraft (THE CASE OF CHARLES DEXTER WARD)
-
- A battle had been won, but the war went on.
- --Robert R. McCammon (THE WOLF'S HOUR)
-
- "I'll think of it all tomorrow, at Tara. I can stand it then.
- Tomorrow, I'll think of some way to get him back. After all,
- tomorrow is another day."
- --Margaret Mitchell (GONE WITH THE WIND)
-
- She emptied her mind of all thought of herself, of her children,
- of all anger, of all rebellion, of all questions. Then with a
- profound and deeply willed desire to believe, to be heard, as she
- had done every day since the murder of Carlo Rizzi, she said the
- necessary prayers for the soul of Michael Corleone.
- --Mario Puzo (THE GODFATHER)
-
- "Now vee may perhaps to begin. Yes?"
- --Philip Roth (PORTNOY'S COMPLAINT)
-
- Walker pulled the trigger.
- And let God sort it out.
- --John Skipp & Craig Spector (THE SCREAM)
-
- Suddenly there was blinding light and noise and pain, then
- nothing.
- --Olaf Stapledon (ODD JOHN)
-
- Come, children, let us shut up the box and the puppets, for our
- play is played out.
- --William M. Thackeray (VANITY FAIR)
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- It was the almost unconscious act of fictionalizing one's own
- life, and Thad didn't know a single writer of novels or short
- stories who didn't do it.
- --Stephen King (THE DARK HALF)
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- NEW FROM SIMON & SCHUSTER
- (January Releases)
-
-
- THE LIFE AND DEATH OF A DRUID PRINCE
- The Story of Lindow Man, an Archaeological Sensation
- by Anne Ross & Don Robins
-
- The most sensational archaeological discovery of the decade
- unlocks the mysteries of the Druid past.
-
- When a well-preserved human torso was found by a peat cutter in
- the Lindow Moss of the English Midlands on August 1, 1984, it set
- off an archaeological investigation as exciting as any detective
- story. The tools of 20th-century science worked in concert with
- archaeological expertise and led to a series of astonishing
- discoveries. Lindow Man, as he came to be known, was 2,000 years
- old and close examination of the marks on his body and even the
- contents of his stomach revealed his identity, how he lived, and
- how he died. Anne Ross, an archaeologist and an expert on the
- Celts, and Don Robins, a chemist specializing in archaeological
- investigations, lead the reader through their investigations and
- show us that this is the body of a Druid nobleman and priest who
- was ritually murdered after eating a special meal. As the facts
- emerge, Celtic Britain under the Roman occupation comes sharply
- into focus: Romans determined to destroy the Druid religion....
- the Celts, defeated in battle, look to their gods for help.
- Caught up in this human tragedy, we come to know the man who gave
- his life to save his people and his religion and who, mute for
- nearly 20 centuries, now speaks to us from his watery grave. THE
- LIFE AND DEATH OF A DRUID PRINCE is as fascinating a human drama
- as it is spectacular scientific detection.
-
- (Summit Books) ISBN 0-671-69536-3 $19.95
-
-
-
- THE SEAT OF THE SOUL
- by Gary Zukav
-
- From the American Book Award-winning author of THE DANCING WU LI
- MASTERS comes a basic and rational explanation of New Age
- thought, consciousness, and spirituality.
-
- With the same extraordinary skill that he used to demystify
- scientific abstraction and the new physics in THE DANCING WU LI
- MASTERS, Zukav here gives a brilliantly lucid and very simple
- explanation of what this change in consciousness we call New Age
- is all about.
-
- Grounded in the essential concerns of existence, THE SEAT OF THE
- SOUL explains how we create our experience with the power of our
- own thoughts, traces the path of the soul's evolution, and
- describes our ability to transform our lives by developing our
- own inherent authentic power. In addition, Zukav examines the
- distinction between five-sensory and multi-sensory individuals,
- conventional marriages and spiritual partnerships, and
- traditional and spiritual psychology. Here is a compelling
- odyssey for thousands of readers from one of the New Age
- movement's liveliest intellectual explorers.
-
- (Fireside) ISBN 0-671-69507-X $8.95
-
-
-
- DESERT SOLITAIRE: A Season in the Wilderness
- by Edward Abbey
-
- The best work of a great American writer, this journal of three
- seasons in the Southwestern desert is "a forceful encounter with
- a man of character and courage" (The New Yorker).
-
- First published in 1968, DESERT SOLITAIRE is one of the most
- celebrated books of our time. Now, a generation of readers can
- experience the joy and challenge of Abbey's fierce, uniquely
- American view of the desert day by day--untamed, glorious, and
- endangered. As a park ranger in the vast canyon region of Utah,
- Abbey accommodates rattlesnakes, sleeps under starry skies,
- confronts bureaucrats, finds artifacts and a dead body, and
- delivers an angry, moving hymn to the last American wilderness--
- and to the society that would let it be destroyed.
-
- (Touchstone) ISBN 0-671-69588-6 $9.95
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- When a man wantonly and wastefully destroys one of the works of
- man we call him a vandal. When he wantonly and wastefully
- destroys one of the works of God we call him a sportsman.
- --Anonymous
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- NEW FROM UNDERWOOD-MILLER:
-
- CLIVE BARKER'S SHADOWS IN EDEN
- edited by Stephen Jones
-
- "Somewhere between what the biographer writes, the conscience
- confesses and the critic accuses you of, can be insights the
- reader may find of interest and amusement. This book promises to
- contain all of the above, plus some stuff even my analyst doesn't
- know...." --Clive Barker
-
- CLIVE BARKER'S SHADOWS IN EDEN is a unique insight into the
- career of literature's young Turk of imaginative fiction. Through
- interviews, essays, reviews and discussions, the full spectrum of
- Barker's immense talent is revealed. From the grand guignol stage
- plays of the 1970s, through his notorious ground-breaking
- collections, the BOOKS OF BLOOD, and acclaimed novels THE
- DAMNATION GAME, WEAVEWORLD and CABAL, to his burgeoning movie
- career and the box-office hits HELLRAISER I & II, Barker's
- diverse output is chronicled here for the first time.
-
- Produced in close collaboration with the writer himself, CLIVE
- BARKER'S SHADOWS IN EDEN contains insightful commentaries by
- Ramsey Campbell, J.G. Ballard, Dennis Etchison, Lisa Tuttle,
- Stephen King, Douglas E. Winter, Stanley Wiater, and others, as
- well as previously uncollected introductions and articles by
- Barker and an extensive bibliography.
-
- CLIVE BARKER'S SHADOWS IN EDEN is a book that no horror fan or
- Clive Barker aficionado will want to be without.
-
- Profusely illustrated with rare photographs, stills, jacket art
- and illustrations -- many from Clive's own private collection --
- and boasting a new afterword by the author himself, CLIVE
- BARKER'S SHADOWS IN EDEN is a fascinating exploration of the dark
- and hidden side of paradise.
-
- ** Clive Barker is the winner of The British Fantasy Award and
- The World Fantasy Award.
-
- ** The first non-fiction book about the author, with a complete
- bibliography, and an Afterword by Clive Barker.
-
- ** Art by Barker on almost every page, sketches and posters from
- his plays for the London stage, scenes and illustrations from his
- movies and book covers, including stills from his upcoming
- NIGHTBREED.
-
- First edition: Dustjacket by Stephen Player. Clothbound,
- oversize: 7-1/2" x 10". 288 p. Illustrations by Clive Barker.
- ISBN 0-88733-073-8 $29.95
-
- 500 numbered copies in deluxe binding and slipcase, signed by
- Clive Barker (if there are any left).
- ISBN 0-88733-074-6 $75
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- God, in his bounty and generosity, always creates more horses'
- asses than there are horses to attach them to.
- --from METZGER'S DOG by Thomas Perry
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- CHRISTMAS MYSTERIES AND OTHER YULETIDE READING
-
- I'm not sure why mystery writers seem attracted to Christmas; I'm
- hoping it's the contrast. But whatever the reason, there are a
- huge number of mysteries with some kind of Christmas setting or
- theme, many of which are listed below. There are also some other
- non-mystery seasonal titles suggested that you might care to seek
- out. Hope you find something of interest.
-
- Abbot, Anthony About the Murder of a Startled Lady (1935)
- About the Murder of Geraldine Foster (1930)
- Alexander, David Shoot a Sitting Duck (1955)
- Allen, Michael Spence and the Holiday Murders (1977)
- (Rich and handsome bachelor Roger Parnell is found murdered
- three days before Christmas. Very soon police find that Roger
- had a mysterious past and a long list of enemies.)
- Altman, Thomas Black Christmas (1983)
- Amory, Cleveland The Cat Who Came for Christmas (1987)
- (Must reading for cat fanciers.)
- Asimov, Isaac, ed. The Twelve Crimes of Christmas (1981)
- (Yuletide mayhem: "Christmas Party" by Rex Stout, "Do Your
- Christmas Shoplifting Early" by Robert Somerlott, "The Necklace
- of Pearls" by Dorothy L. Sayers, "Father Crumlish Celebrates
- Christmas" by Alice Scanlan Reach, "The Christmas Masque" by
- S.S. Rafferty, "The Dauphin's Doll" by Ellery Queen, "By the
- Chimney With Care" by Nick O'Donohoe, "The Problem of the
- Christmas Steeple" by Edward D. Hoch, "Death on Christmas Eve"
- by Stanley Ellin, "The Adventure of the Unique Dickensians" by
- August Derleth, "Blind Man's Hood" by John Dickson Carr, "The
- Thirteenth Day of Christmas" by Isaac Asimov.)
- Asimov, Isaac, ed. The Twelve Frights of Christmas (1986)
- (You had to expect this. Contains: "The Chimney" by Ramsey
- Campbell, "Markheim" by Robert Louis Stevenson, "The Night
- Before Christmas" by Robert Bloch, "The Festival" by H.P.
- Lovecraft, "The Old Nurse's Story" by Mrs. Gaskell, "Glamr" by
- S. Baring-Gould, "Pollock and the Porroh Man" by H.G. Wells,
- "The Weird Woman" by Anonymous, "The Hellhound Project" by Ron
- Goulart, "Wolverden Tower" by Grant Allen, "Planet of Fakers"
- by J.T. McIntosh, "Life Sentence" by James McConnell, plus a
- Christmas present: "The Star" by Arthur C. Clarke.)
- Babson, Marian The Twelve Deaths of Christmas (1980)
- (The holidays become a season of terror when a serial killer
- comes out of a cozy West End rooming house to strike at random,
- leaving no motive and no clues.)
- Baker, North Dead to the World (1944)
- Ballinger, W.A. A Corpse for Christmas (1962)
- Black, Gavin A Dragon for Christmas (1963)
- (Paul Harris is warned that his life is in danger even before
- he sets foot on Chinese soil.)
- Blackstock, Charity The Foggy, Foggy Dew (1964)
- Blake, Nicholas Thou Shell of Death (1936)
- (Fergus O'Brien receives letters threatening his murder on
- Boxing Bay, so he invites all his enemies to his country house
- for the holidays, so he can keep an eye on them.)
- The Corpse in the Snowman (1941)
- (Another house party, and this time the corpse is found in a
- snowman.)
- The Smiler With a Knife (1939)
- (Nigel Strangeways and his wife Georgia investigate fascists in
- Devonshire, shortly before WWII.)
- Brown, Carter A Corpse for Christmas (1965)
- Bruce, Leo Such is Death (AKA Crack of Doom) (1963)
- (Carolus Deene must find the perpetrator of the Perfect Crime
- in a seaside resort town during the off-season.)
- Burley, W.J. Death in Willow Pattern (1970)
- (Dr. Henry Pym and his secretary Susan are invited to a country
- manor house supposedly to look at some old manuscripts, but
- really because the baronet wants him to investigate the
- threatening letters he has been receiving.)
- Carter, Nick The Christmas Kill (1983)
- Chalmers, Irena The Great American Christmas Almanac (1988)
- (A complete compendium of facts, fancies, and traditions; and
- great fun to wade through.)
- Chastain, Thomas 911 (1976)
- Chaze, Elliot Goodbye Goliath (1983)
- Christie, Agatha Murder for Christmas (AKA A Holiday for Murder,
- AKA Hercule Poirot's Christmas) (1939)
- (Elderly Mr. Simeon Lee gathers his abrasive family around him
- at Christmas, to amuse him as they fight amongst themselves.
- He's found murdered in a room locked from the inside with only
- two clues: a tiny piece of rubber and a tiny piece of wood.)
- Clad, Noel The Savage (1958)
- Clark, Mary Higgins Stillwatch (1984)
- Constantine, K.C. Upon Some Midnights Clear (1985)
- Cornish, Constance Dead of Winter (1959)
- Craig, Alisa Murder Goes Mumming (1981)
- Creasey, John Death of a Postman (AKA Parcels for Inspector
- West) (1957)
- Dalton, Moray The Night of Fear (1931)
- Dane, Joel The Christmas Tree Murders (1938)
- Darby, J.N. Murder in the House With the Blue Eyes (1939)
- Davis, Frederick C. Drag the Dark (1953)
- Davis, Mildred Tell Them What's Her Name Called (1974)
- (Three supposedly accidental deaths were each preceded the same
- phone message. One girl suspects the truth, but nobody will
- believe her.)
- Three Minutes to Midnight (1971)
- Dean, Spencer Credit for a Murder (1961)
- DeAndrea, William L. Killed on the Ice (1984)
- (Matt Cobb's TV network is making a special starring a young
- ice skating star when a psychiatrist is found dead "on the
- ice".)
- Dick, Alexandra An Old-Fashioned Christmas (1944)
- Dickson, Carter The White Priory Murders (1934)
- "Diplomat" The Corpse on the White House Lawn (1932)
- Douglas, Laura W. Never Kill Santa Claus (1974)
- Downing, Todd The Last Trumpet (1937)
- Duncan, Francis Murder for Christmas (1949)
- Durham, Mary Keeps Death His Court (1946)
- Eberhart, Mignon Postmark Murder (1956)
- (A tale of impersonation and murder, with a war orphan and a
- relative miraculously returned from the dead.)
- Egan, Lesley Crime for Christmas (1983)
- Erskine, Margaret House of the Enchantress (AKA A Graveyard
- Plot) (1959)
- (On his way to visit friends of his aunt, Inspector Septimus
- Finch is caught in a snowstorm and made a captive audience to a
- murder.)
- Farjeon, Jefferson Mystery in White (1937)
- (Train passengers, stranded on Christmas Eve, are each drawn to
- Valley House, a house that is awaiting guests for tea but that
- is apparently untenanted.)
- Ferrars, Elizabeth X. The Small World of Murder (1973)
- (Nicola Foley's baby is snatched from its carriage, then her
- marriage fall apart, then she starts having one "accident"
- after another. Is she just unlucky?)
- Fleming, Ian On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1963)
- Flynn, Brian The Murders Near Mapleton (1929)
- Foley, Rae The Hundredth Door (1950)
- Where is Mary Bostwick? (1958)
- Ford, Leslie The Simple Way of Poison (1937)
- Godfrey, Thomas, ed. Murder for Christmas (1982)
- (Great holiday reading: "Back for Christmas" by John Collier,
- "The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle" by Arthur Conan Doyle,
- "The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding" by Agatha Christie,
- "Maigret's Christmas" by Georges Simenon, "A Christmas Tragedy"
- by Baroness Orczy, "Inspector Ghote and the Miracle Baby" by
- H.R.F. Keating, "Dr. Marigold's Prescription" by Charles
- Dickens, "The Adventure of the Dauphin's Doll" by Ellery Queen,
- "The Thieves Who Couldn't Help Sneezing" by Thomas Hardy,
- "Death on Christmas Eve" by Stanley Ellin, "The Case is
- Altered" by Margery Allingham, "The Murder For Christmas Guide
- to Gift Giving" by A.A. Milne, "Mother's Milk" by James Mines,
- "The Flying Stars" by G.K. Chesterton. Illustrated by Gahan
- Wilson.
- Godfrey, Thomas, ed. Murder For Christmas Volume II (1982)
- (And more: "Death on the Air" by Ngaio Marsh, "Mr. Big" by
- Woody Allen, "Cambric Tea" by Marjorie Bowen, "A Terrible
- Night" by Anton Chekhov, "Christmas Is for Cops" by Edward D.
- Hoch, "The Butler's Christmas Eve" by Mary Roberts Rinehart,
- "Blind Man's Hood" by Carter Dickson, "Silent Night" by Baynard
- Kendrick, "Markheim" by Robert Louis Stevenson, "Dancing Dan's
- Christmas" by Damon Runyon, "The Necklace of Pearls" by Dorothy
- L. Sayers, "A Chaparral Christmas Gift" by O. Henry, "The
- Stolen Christmas Box" by Lillian de la Torre, "Christmas Party"
- by Rex Stout, and a Boxing Day Bonus: "Ring Out, Wild Bells" by
- D.B. Wyndham Lewis. Illustrated by Gahan Wilson.
- Gouze, Roger A Quiet Game of Bambu (1964)
- Gray, Dulcie Dead Giveaway (1974)
- Grimes, Martha Jerusalem Inn (1984)
- (It's Christmas Eve in the English countryside, and Inspector
- Richard Jury and amateur detective Melrose Plant must solve the
- murder of an attractive woman with no known relatives and no
- enemies.)
- The Man With a Load of Mischief (1981)
- (One body is found on a mechanical clock. Another is found in a
- keg of beer. Inspector Jury must discover not only whodunit,
- but why in these crazy places?)
- Gunn, Victor Death on Shivering Sand (1946)
- Hammett, Dashiel The Thin Man (1934)
- (This was Hammett's last novel and is a definite change of
- pace. Nick and Nora Charles solve a murder from the comfort of
- their New York hotel at Christmastime.)
- Hardwick, Richard The Season to be Deadly (1966)
- Hare, Cyril An English Murder (1951)
- (Another English country house during Christmastime, as Lord
- Warbeck gathers his family around his deathbed. A great plot,
- with amateur detective Dr. Wenceslaus Bottwink.)
- Hay, M. Doriel The Santa Klaus Murder (1936)
- Hays, Lee Black Christmas (1976)
- Herman, Henry The Crime of a Christmas Toy (1893)
- Herriot, James The Christmas Day Kitten
- Heyer, Georgette Envious Casca (1941)
- (A contentious family gathers for an old-fashioned Christmas
- get-together. Inspector Hemingway is called in when the host is
- found stabbed to death in his bedroom.)
- Hinkemeyer, Michael T. A Time to Reap (1984)
- (Former sheriff Emil Whippletree comes out of retirement to
- solve a local murder in a German-American community in
- Minnesota.)
- Howie, Edith Murder for Christmas (1941)
- Howlett, John The Christmas Spy (1975)
- Hughes, Cledwyn The Inn Closes for Christmas (AKA He Dared Not
- Look Behind) (1947)
- Hume, Fergus A Coin of Edward VII (1903)
- Hunter, Alan Landed Gently (1976)
- (Lord Somerhayes invites a loud young American home for the
- holidays. Chief Inspector Gently is called in when the young
- man is found dead at the foot of the staircase.)
- Iams, Jack Do Not Murder Before Christmas (1949)
- Innes, Michael A Comedy of Terrors (AKA There Came Both Mist and
- Snow (1940)
- (The Roper family gathers for Christmas but a new hobby, target
- shooting, ultimately involves Inspector John Appleby.)
- Christmas at Candleshoe (1953)
- (Mrs. Feather and her son, Americans, find just want they want:
- an old castle owned by old Miss Candleshoe.)
- Jeffers, H. Paul Murder on Mike (1984)
- Jordan, Cathleen A Carol in the Dark (1984)
- Kane, Henry A Corpse for Christmas (1955)
- Kelly, Mary C. The Christmas Egg (1966)
- Kezer, Glenn The Queen is Dead (1979)
- (Max Ambrose must solve the crimes when bodies start turning up
- all over a small Hudson River village at Christmastime.)
- Kitchin, C.H.B. Crime at Christmas (1935)
- (A gathering of houseguests are shocked on Christmas morning to
- find one of their number dead.)
- Knight, Kathleen Moore They're Going to Kill Me (1955)
- Lambert, Elizabeth The Sleeping House Party (1951)
- Lathen, Emma Banking on Death (1961)
- Lawrence, Alfred Colombo: A Christmas Killing (1972)
- L'Engle, Madeleine The Twenty-Four Days Before Christmas
- (For younger readers.)
- Lewis, Ted Jack Carter's Law (1975)
- Lockridge, Richard Dead Run (1976)
- Lynch, Miriam Crime for Christmas (1959)
- MacKenzie, Donald Death is a Friend (1967)
- Macleod, Charlotte The Convivial Codfish (1984)
- Rest You Merry (1978)
- (In his first case, professor Peter Shandy finds the body of a
- faculty wife in his living room.)
- Manley, Seon & Gogo Lewis, eds. Christmas Ghosts (1978)
- Marsh, John Monk's Hollow (1968)
- Marsh, Ngaio Tied Up in Tinsel (1972)
- (Another Christmas house party, only all the servants are
- convicted murderers.)
- McBain, Ed The Pusher (1956)
- Sadie When She Died (1972)
- Ghosts (1980)
- McCloy, Helen Two Thirds of a Ghost (1956)
- Mr. Splitfoot (1968)
- Burn This (1980)
- McClure, James The Gooseberry Fool (1974)
- Meredith, Ann Portrait of a Murderer (1934)
- Meredith, David William The Christmas Card Murders (1951)
- Michaels, Fern Without Warning (1981)
- Millar, Margaret Vanish in an Instant (1952)
- Miner, Valerie Murder in the English Department (1982)
- (Dr. Nan Weaver finds the body of a colleague at Berkeley and
- winds up on trial for murder.)
- Moore, Clement C. The Night Before Christmas (1848)
- (When is the last time you read this wonderful poem?)
- Moyes, Patricia Season of Snows and Sins (1971)
- (A ski instructor with a very complicated love life is
- murdered, probably by his wife. Or maybe it was someone
- else...)
- Nabb, Magdalen Death of An Englishman (1982)
- Nash, Anne Said With Flowers (1943)
- Nielsen, Helen Borrow the Night (1956)
- Palmer, Stuart Omit Flowers (1937)
- Parker, Robert B. The Widening Gyre (1983)
- (A senator's wife needs Spenser's help when sex and drugs lead
- to blackmail.)
- Pearl, Jack Victims (1972)
- Queen, Ellery The Egyptian Cross Mystery (1932)
- The Finishing Stroke (1958)
- (The Twelve Days of Christmas becomes a murderous joke, as
- cryptic rhymes and anonymous gifts portend murder. The case
- that took Ellery a quarter of a century to solve.)
- Quentin, Patrick The Follower (1950)
- (Mark Liddon's wife is missing and her ex-fiance is dead. He
- must find her in squalid criminal underworld of Mexico.)
- Rea, M.P. Death of an Angel (1943)
- Reinsmith, Richard A Body for Christmas (1984)
- Roberts, Patricia Tender Prey (1983)
- Ruell, Patrick Red Christmas (1972)
- (Dingley Dell, a remote country inn, promised a true Dickensian
- Christmas; but when it's used as a cover for a top-secret
- convention of master spies the plot becomes more Ian Fleming
- than Charles Dickens.)
- Sanders, Lawrence The First Deadly Sin (1973)
- Serafin, David Christmas Rising (1983)
- Seuss, Dr. How the Grinch Stole Christmas
- Shannon, Del No Holiday for Crime (1973)
- Simcoe, Mary Ann, ed. A Christmas Sourcebook
- Simenon, Georges Maigret's Christmas (1977)
- Smith, Naomi Royde The Altar Piece (1939)
- Spain, Nancy Cinderella Goes to the Morgue (1950)
- Stagge, Jonathan The Yellow Taxi (1942)
- Symons, Julian The Name of Annabell Lee (1983)
- (Dudley Potter has started over again in the U.S., but must
- return to England to follow actress Annabell Lee.)
- Taylor, Elizabeth Atwood The Cable Car Murder (1982)
- (Maggie gets involved when her half-sister Celia is killed in a
- bizarre cable car accident. Improbable but charming.)
- Thomas, Dylan A Child's Christmas in Wales
- Toral, Judith Daddy's Gone a Hunting (1983)
- Treat, Lawrence Q as in Quicksand (1947)
- Underwood, Michael A Party to Murder (1983)
- (Goodwill is in short supply at the Christmas party in the
- chief prosecuting solicitor's office, particularly since one of
- them has been promoted beyond his due.)
- Walsh, Thomas The Resurrection Man (1966)
- Warren, Charles Marquis Deadhead (1952)
- Witting, Clifford Catt out of the Bag (1939)
-
- NEW BOOKS:
-
- Ghosts for Christmas edited by Richard Dalby
- Carroll & Graf Nov89 $18.95 ISBN 0-88184-518-3
- (Comprehensive collection with material by: Charles Dickens,
- Algernon Blackwood, J. Sheridan Le Fanu, E. Nesbit, Hugh
- Walpole, M.R. James, Marjorie Bowen, J.B. Priestley, Ramsey
- Campbell, L.P. Hartley, H. Russell Wakefield, and many more)
- All About Christmas by Ian Guthridge
- Australia In Print Dec89 $9.95 0-9588-6451-9 146 pages
- A Garfield Christmas by Jim Davis
- Ballantine Dec89 TP $5.95 0-345-35368-4
- Merry Christmas, Murdock by Robert Ray (mystery)
- Delacorte Dec89 HC $16.95 0-385-29832-3
- (Murdock returns in a tale of mayhem among Orange County's
- moneyed elite. From the author of The Hitman Cometh.)
- Christmas Trees: Growing and Selling Trees, Wreaths, and Greens
- by Lewis Hill
- Storey/Garden Way Dec89 TP $9.95 0-88266-566-9
- A Fatal Advent by Isabelle Holland
- Doubleday Nov89 $16.95
- (Another case for Rev. Claire Aldington, assistant rector at
- Manhattan's St. Alselm's parish.)
- Deadly Promise by Mignon F. Ballard
- Carroll & Graf Nov89 $15.95 0-88184-515-9
- (Newly widowed Molly, along with daughter Joy, visit her late
- husband's relatives for a quiet small-town Christmas. Quiet,
- that is, until the poisoned fruitcake, the dead mouse, and the
- funeral wreath.)
- Historical Christmas Stories by various authors
- Silhouette Nov89 $4.25 0-373-83211-7
- (Popular Silhouette authors evoking memories of Christmas in
- the America of the 1800s.)
- Silhouette Christmas Stories by various author
- Silhouette Nov89 $4.25 0-373-48218-3
- (The fourth edition of Silhouette Christmas Stories contains
- four contemporary Silhouette stories.)
- Corpus Christmas by Margaret Maron
- Doubleday Nov89 HC (Holiday mystery)
- Mistletoe Mysteries edited by Charlotte MacLeod
- Mysterious Nov89 $16.95 0-89296-400-6
- (Anthology of stories by: Charlotte MacLeod, Peter Lovesey,
- Dorothy Salisbury Davis, Eric Wright, John Lutz, Howard Engel,
- Mary Higgins Clark, Bill Pronzini, Sharyn McCrumb, Henry
- Slesar, Edward D. Hoch, Aaron Elkins, Susan Dunlap, Isaac
- Asimov, Marcia Muller)
- Martha Stewart's Christmas: Entertaining, Decorating and Giving
- by Martha Stewart, photography by Christopher Baker, design by
- Virginia Edwards
- Potter Nov89 $18.95 0-283-99975-6
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- To die for an idea is to set a rather high price on conjecture.
- --Anatole France
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- RANDOM REVIEWS:
-
- VERY OLD MONEY
- by Stanley Ellin
- (1985)
-
- Mike and Amy Lloyd are unemployed schoolteachers down on
- their luck. When they decide to become a "couple in residence" at
- the Duries (she's a private secretary, he's a chauffeur), they
- discover what the title of this book means.
-
- The Duries live very quietly and very well, and Mike and Amy
- are worried about how they're going to live with the indignity of
- being servants. Of being subservient. But, to their surprise,
- they like their jobs very much indeed, which is part of Stanley
- Ellin's message here, which (as I see it) is that our values are
- upside down. There's more dignity in being a servant than in
- having servants. Servants are so capable, they can take care of
- their life and other peoples'. Masters are so incapable, they
- need others to care for them. This book can really make you think
- about class systems.
-
- Of course, there is a mystery here, and a typically well-
- crafted one. Why did Margaret Durie want a secretary that was
- tall? What happened to the old chauffeur? Why is Margaret Durie,
- a blind woman, buying paintings? What are all of those pills she
- takes? Every revelation makes you wonder why you didn't see it
- all along. Stanley Ellin uses each scene for a specific purpose,
- to say something or to drop careful hints. Good reading.
-
-
- THE MEDIA LAB: Inventing the Future at MIT
- by Stewart Brand
- (Viking, 1987)
-
- MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) has a beautiful
- building called the Media Lab (also a department of the college)
- where some of the finest work in the future of communications
- technology is being done. This book raises the lid of the Media
- Lab and lets you peer in.
-
- Mental candy for high-tech types, that's what this is. If you
- like gadgets and look forward to tomorrow's inventions, this book
- will give you LOTS of material to ooh and aaahhh over. Stewart
- Brand (THE WHOLE EARTH CATALOGs) has a lot of experience at
- ferreting out what people would be interested in and making it
- intelligible. You'll read about:
-
- ** NewsPeek, computer software that creates a custom newspaper
- for you, with just the stuff you're interested in, arranged
- with consideration to priorities. You could get YOUR news quickly
- and easily every day, wherever you are in the world.
-
- ** Movie Map, the interactive video version of Aspen, Colorado.
- It puts a street scene from Aspen on the monitor and you can
- follow that street anywhere you want to go, even going into many
- of the buildings to see what's there.
-
- ** Conversational Desktop, software that takes the place of a
- secretary. It will answer the phone for you, recognizing the
- voices of friends, giving and receiving messages--and it will
- know who should be told you're busy and who should be put through
- immediately. It will also make appointments, reservations, and
- tell you the weather. And of course it does the simple things
- like keeping track of your personal calendar.
-
- ** NewsPrint watches the TV news for you, collecting the stories
- that you would be interested in. Later, you can read a printed
- version of these stories on your computer, which NewsPrint will
- provide for you, along with appropriate illustrating video, also
- collected from the TV news show.
-
- ** Talking Heads would allow you to have a group meeting with
- people who aren't there. We're not talking videophone, though.
- Life masks would be taken of all the people, with live video
- projected into the back to animate them. You would sit there
- talking to an animated mask of Joe, while Joe's somewhere else
- talking to an animated mask of you. The masks show facial
- expressions and head movements. Kind of ghoulish.
-
- ** Paperback Movies, if they can invent a new data compression
- method, will put full feature-length films on CDs (which cost 30
- cents to produce), making movies cheaper to buy than to copy
- (like paperbacks). This would short-circuit the large worldwide
- pirating industry, not to mention what it would do to rentals.
-
- ** The Hennigan School, a grade school in inner-city Boston
- that's been given enough computers to give each child several
- hours' access every day. The result: some "learning-disabled"
- children are reaching goals beyond those of "normal" children.
-
- ** The Connection Machine, created by Daniel Hillis, which makes
- parallel processing possible on a grand scale, having 64K (K is
- thousands) processors. Unlike your PC, which can only handle one
- job at a time (even if it LOOKS like it's doing more), the
- Connection Machine can literally do 64K things at one time.
-
- Another part of THE MEDIA LAB that you shouldn't miss is the
- Bibliography, which is a great list of more good reading in the
- field of communications technology. Don't miss Stewart Brand's
- semantic inventiveness either. Like a true computer disciple,
- when the word he wants doesn't exist (or come to mind), he
- creates one. I caught: expectable, message (used as a verb, as in
- "I messaged him"), detaily (adjective), and bogglement.
-
- THE MEDIA LAB: A Sampler:
-
- "Imagine what it would be like if TV actually were good. It would
- be the end of everything we know."
- --Marvin Minsky
-
- "The Japanese HDTV (high-definition TV) format is outdated now,
- because they designed it at a time when VLSI (very large scale
- integrated) chips did not exist, so computation was not
- considered as a way to get a better picture. To get five times
- the resolution, they used five times the bandwidth, which would
- be dumb today."
- --Nicholas Negroponte, Director of the Media Lab
-
- About Marvin Minsky: "He collects an enthusiastic audience
- whenever he speaks, often on short notice, always
- improvisationally, always with humor as dry as lunar dust and a
- tendency to veer off topic with parentheses that don't close."
-
- "Anything that you hear about computers or AI should be ignored,
- because we're in the Dark Ages. We're in the thousand years
- between no technology and all technology. You can read what your
- contemporaries think, but you should remember they are ignorant
- savages."
- --Marvin Minsky
-
-
- NOT THAT YOU ASKED...
- by Andrew A. Rooney
- (1989)
-
- Even though Mr. Rooney has had books published since 1944,
- NOT THAT YOU ASKED can be considered the fifth of the books that
- we're familiar with today, the "Andy Rooney" books. In case
- you've forgotten, there's: A FEW MINUTES WITH ANDY ROONEY (1981),
- AND MORE BY ANDY ROONEY (1982), PIECES OF MY MIND (1984), and
- WORD FOR WORD (1986). And by the way, friends call him (and he
- prefers to be called) "Andrew".
-
- If you've ever seen one of Mr. Rooney's commentaries on 60
- MINUTES, or read one of the previous collections, you know what
- to expect here. Many people like his downhome common sense
- approach to issues, as well as his very personal delivery. Others
- find him too smug and self-satisfied. I like his ideas. He says
- things that need saying, brings up issues that need bringing up.
- You could consider him the philosopher for the rest of us.
-
- Andrew A. Rooney sampler:
-
- "With so many fools in the world, it's impossible to make the
- world foolproof."
-
- "I do not accept the inevitability of my own death. I secretly
- think there may be some other way out."
-
- "I don't favor abortion although I like the people who are for it
- better than the people who are against it."
-
- "I dislike loud-mouthed patriots who suggest they like our
- country more than I do. Some people's idea of patriotism is
- hating other countries."
-
-
- ALL I REALLY NEED TO KNOW I LEARNED IN KINDERGARTEN:
- Uncommon Thoughts on Common Things
- and
- IT WAS ON FIRE WHEN I LAY DOWN ON IT
- by Robert Fulghum
- (Villard, 1986 and 1988)
-
- Both of these books are runaway bestsellers, and after reading
- them it's easy to see why. Robert Fulghum is a very wise and very
- charming man, with the talent of a born storyteller to use words
- to convey his meaning of the moment.
-
- It's unavoidable to compare him to Andrew Rooney--both speak to
- us of values and of priorities that need reshuffling. But where
- Mr. Rooney is a cantankerous curmudgeon, Mr. Fulghum is a gentle
- nonconformist. Where Mr. Rooney uses satire, Mr. Fulghum uses the
- heartwarming parable. Where Mr. Rooney constructs perfectly
- grammatical and often quotable sentences, Mr. Fulghum follows a
- different grammatical drummer and his sentences are mere threads
- of his overall fabric and few will stand alone. Where Mr. Rooney
- talks about humanity and reveals himself, Mr. Fulghum talks about
- himself and reveals humanity. As Mr. Fulghum himself says of his
- essays, "It is my stuff from home--that place in my mind and
- heart where I most truly live."
-
- How can you tell the two books apart? Well, his second volume
- deals with a few tougher, darker subjects that the first avoids,
- so if you want nonstop cheerfulness, try ALL I REALLY NEED TO
- KNOW. What's my favorite story? Hard to say, but I really liked
- the girl who was sitting on her plane ticket.
-
- Oh, yes, and what DID Robert Fulghum learn in kindergarten?
-
- Share everything.
- Play fair.
- Don't hit people.
- Put things back where you found them.
- Clean up your own mess.
- Don't take things that aren't yours.
- Say you're sorry when you hurt somebody.
- Wash your hands before you eat.
- Flush.
- Warm cookies and cold milk are good for you.
- Live a balanced life--learn some and think some and draw and
- paint and sing and dance and play and work every day some.
- Take a nap every afternoon.
- When you go out into the world, watch out for traffic, hold
- hands, and stick together.
- Be aware of wonder. Remember the little seed in the Styrofoam
- cup: The roots go down and the plant goes up and nobody really
- knows how or why, but we are all like that.
- Goldfish and hamsters and white mice and even the little seed in
- the Styrofoam cup--they all die. So do we.
- And then remember the Dick-and-Jane books and the first word you
- learned--the biggest word of all--LOOK.
-
- "The line between good and evil, hope and despair, does not
- divide the world between 'us' and 'them'. It runs down the middle
- of every one of us."
- --Robert Fulghum
-
-
- RICH, RADIANT SLAUGHTER
- by Orania Papazoglou
- (Doubleday, 1988)
-
- This is marginally a Christmas mystery, meaning it DOES take
- place during the Christmas season, but the holidays play no part
- in the story. Beyond an occasional reference to December and
- seasonal decorations, RICH, RADIANT SLAUGHTER could take place at
- any time of year.
-
- The amateur sleuth in Ms. Papazoglou's mysteries is Patience
- McKenna, former romance novelist who's now writing true crime
- books. Her best friend and many of her acquaintances are still
- romance writers, however, so the subject continues to be
- prominent, which the title implies also. (The three previous
- books have romance titles too: SWEET, SAVAGE DEATH; WICKED,
- LOVING MURDER; and DEATH'S SAVAGE PASSION.)
-
- This time Patience is on a book tour to aid another of Evelyn
- Nesbitt Kleig's charities. There are complications aplenty: her
- best friend, romance novelist Phoebe Damereaux, has morning
- sickness that lasts all day long; Pulitzer Prize-winning
- Christopher Brand is an irritating alcoholic; Christian Romance
- novelist Tempesta Stewart is a sanctimonious prig; and "boy
- billionaire" Jonathon Hancock Lowry, who's backing the tour, is
- an awkward nerd.
-
- When the tour gets to their last city, Baltimore, the murders
- start, and McKenna turns detective. The first body is found at a
- mystery bookstore called The Butler Did It, owned and run by Gail
- Larson (this is a real store, and Gail is the real proprietor),
- and, as usual, it's someone nobody liked. There are many elements
- of this story that seem contrived or unnecessary, like the
- presence of McKenna's adopted daughter and fiance, or the clue
- about the chalk. The murder method seemed unusually bizarre, too,
- and was never adequately explained.
-
- The bottom line is that this is an Adventures of Patience McKenna
- story, enormously enjoyable as such but not of much value to
- mystery purists. Also, RICH, RADIANT SLAUGHTER, like Ms.
- Papazoglou's other novels, seem to be targeted more to women than
- men--not just because romance writing is featured prominently,
- but because most of the characters are female, and the overall
- point of view and sensibility of the stories is female. That
- being said though, I found that the chance to spend a couple more
- hours with Patience and Phoebe makes RRS definitely worth
- reading.
-
-
- THE DARK HALF
- by Stephen King
- (Viking, 1989)
-
- the sparrows are flying
-
- Picture this: You are Maine novelist Thad Beaumont, married and
- with two babies (fraternal twins). You've published two books
- under your own name; the first critically acclaimed, the second
- much less so (and neither sold well). To overcome a writers'
- block you then wrote four violent, commercially successful
- novels, all published under a pseudonym (George Stark). The Stark
- books are pretty disgusting, but it's been better than not
- writing at all.
-
- Then a creep named Frederick Clawson discovers the Beaumont-Stark
- connection and sticks his hand out for some money to keep the
- secret. You decide you no longer need George Stark and his
- revolting novels any more, and you certainly don't need
- blackmail, so you go public with the Stark story yourself. Boy,
- is Clawson pissed off. But you have everything under control,
- right?
-
- Wrong. Because shortly after the People Magazine story about you
- being George Stark comes out, the police come knocking on your
- door and they're REAL mad. Seems like someone committed the
- brutal, senseless murder of a harmless local fellow and the
- police lifted some truly fabulous fingerprints of the killer and
- guess what? Surprise! The prints are yours. It sure is lucky that
- you have an airtight alibi for the time of the murder. Whew! But
- hold it, shortly thereafter, your prints show up at another
- bestial murder, and this time the victim is Frederick Clawson.
-
- Remember him? Don't you think it's interesting that somebody with
- your fingerprints has killed somebody that you had a motive to
- kill? The police think it's mighty interesting. And according to
- them, there's no known way to fake fingerprints. So what are your
- fingerprints doing somewhere where you aren't? You don't suppose
- it could be your alter ego who you just killed? That's silly--
- George Stark was only a figment of your imagination. Or was he?
- And what connection does George Stark have to that supposed brain
- tumor you had removed when you were eleven years old? And what do
- sparrows have to do with anything?
-
- That's as far as I'm going to take you. If you'd like to hear the
- rest of this story, you're going to have to go to the storyteller
- himself. You'll never look at sparrows quite the same way again.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- I am reminded of the Fundamentalists who go into agonies at the
- very thought of their children's being EXPOSED to Darwin. It
- strikes me as a feeble God indeed who can't weather a heresy now
- and then.
- --William L. DeAndrea
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- ON LINE WITH STEVE GERBER
-
-
- Recently READING FOR PLEASURE was able to contact Steve Gerber,
- one of the finest writers in comics today (see the review of his
- NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET in RFP #6). We asked him what he was up
- to, and here's what he had to say:
-
-
- Okay. Here's the laundry list of the stuff I'm working on now,
- all of it for Marvel Comics:
-
- Beginning with issue #10 -- on sale any minute now, I gather --
- I'll be writing the SHE-HULK comic book on a monthly basis. Of
- the various monthly books I'm doing for Marvel, this is my
- favorite at the moment. Wildly satirical. Lots of acerbic social
- commentary. A chance to be funny and say something important, I
- hope, at the same time. If you liked my old Howard the Duck
- stories, you'll like this.
-
- Beginning with issue #29, I'm writing the HAWKEYE strip in
- AVENGERS SPOTLIGHT. Up until now, this book has been what I call
- a "costume-versus-costume" title. A superhero and supervillain
- get together and beat on each other for a certain number of
- pages, then turn around and go home. I've changed the whole
- thrust of the book. Beginning with #29, Hawkeye gets involved in
- a very down-to-earth story about Los Angeles street gangs and the
- Beverly Hills drug trade. I'm still not completely comfortable
- with what I'm doing on the book -- Hawkeye is one of the oldest
- of the Marvel characters, with a long history behind him and yet
- almost NO personality, and I'm trying to change that drastically
- -- but, for whatever it's worth, the editors at Marvel are very
- enthusiastic about what's been done so far.
-
- I'm also working on a limited series called FOOLKILLER, based on
- the villain I created for MAN-THING some fifteen years ago. This
- is a very dark, very violent story of a vigilante propelled on
- his mission by something other than the standard motive of
- vengeance.
-
- Oh, the Hawkeye stuff should begin to appear on the stands in a
- couple of months. The first issue of FOOLKILLER will probably be
- released in early spring of 1990.
-
- In addition to these ongoing series, I'm doing several special
- projects as well, including a MAN-THING graphic novel (a
- psychological horror story about an animation writer undergoing a
- nervous breakdown), a sort of graphic novella called SUBURBAN
- JERSEY YUPPIE SHE-DEVILS (about three housewives and their
- sensei, Melba Slotnik, battling to save the world from being
- ingested by the largest mouth in the universe), and another
- horror-oriented mini-series called LEGION OF NIGHT (difficult to
- describe, but it combines elements of the horror and superhero
- genres with a modern reinterpretation of some of the ancient
- Marvel monster characters).
-
- SHE-HULK is being drawn by Bryan Hitch, a newcomer from Britain
- with talent oozing out of his ears. The HAWKEYE strip is drawn by
- Al Milgrom and Don Heck. FOOLKILLER is pencilled by J.J. Birch,
- who did the recent CATWOMAN mini for DC.
-
- And I'm just about out of time, or I could go on.
-
- --Steve
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- But if HIP means seeing through all the bourgeois baloney and
- embracing an alternative (excuse the expression) life-style, I
- note with interest that, as I spit on my hands in preparation for
- pushing 40, I seem to be embracing the very bourgeois life-style
- the baloney of which I so mercilessly continue to see through.
- --Ellis Weiner (SPY magazine)
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- UNFINISHED NOVELS
-
- If you didn't manage to finish all of your 1989 chores, don't
- feel bad. The unfinished project affects even the great ones, as
- the following list from Steven Gilbar's THE BOOK BOOK shows. Of
- course these people probably had a better excuse than you do, but
- it's the principle that counts, not the trivial details.
-
- Jane Austen, SANDITON
- James Agee, A DEATH IN THE FAMILY
- Joseph Conrad, SUSPENSE
- Charles Dickens, THE MYSTERY OF EDWIN DROOD
- Fedor Dostoevski, THE BROTHERS KARAMAZOV
- F. Scott Fitzgerald, THE LAST TYCOON
- Nikolai Gogol, DEAD SOULS
- Nathaniel Hawthorne, DR. GRIMSHAWE'S SECRET
- Gustave Flaubert, BOUVARD AND PECUCHET
- Henry James, THE IVORY TOWER
- Franz Kafka, AMERIKA
- D.H. Lawrence, MR. NOON
- Malcolm Lowry, OCTOBER FERRY TO GABRIOLA
- Robert Musil, THE MAN WITHOUT QUALITIES
- Marcel Proust, JEAN SENTEUIL
- Sir Walter Scott, THE SIEGE OF MALTA
- Stendhal, LAMIEL
- Robert Louis Stevenson, WEIR OF HERMISTON
- William Thackeray, DENIS DUVAL
- Thomas Wolfe, THE HILLS BEYOND
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- BACK ISSUES
-
- ELECTRONIC EDITION: Check the BBSs in the Directory first. If
- what you want isn't available, send $5 to us for a disk
- containing ALL available issues. Disk will be formatted using
- PC/MS-DOS (for IBM clones). Specify 3-1/2" or 5-1/4" floppy.
-
- PRINT EDITION: Send $1.50 for each issue requested.
-
- Checks: Make checks payable to Cindy Bartorillo.
-
- Address: See masthead on Table of Contents page.
-
- ISSUES AVAILABLE:
-
- #1: Premier issue: 1988 World Fantasy Awards; Books I'm Supposed
- to Like, But Don't; Pronunciation Guide to Author's Names;
- Christie Characters on Film; Featured Author: Richard Matheson;
- Baseball & Cricket Mysteries; Stephen King Checklist; Time Travel
- Books
-
- #2: Summer Reading Issue: Award Winners & Nominees; Beach Bag
- Books; Featured Author: Stanley Ellin; Splatterpunk; Murderous
- Vacations; The Psychology of Everyday Things; The Shining; SF
- Fan-Lingo; Pseudonyms
-
- #3: Books About Books Issue: Two-Bit Culture; Christopher Morley;
- 84 Charing Cross Road; Assorted References; Bibliomysteries; Deep
- Quarry; Featured Author: Harlan Ellison
-
- #4: Hollywood Issue: Recent Awards; About Hollywood; Silver
- Scream; Death of a Salesman; Joe Bob Briggs; The Hollywood
- Mystery; Featured Author: Fredric Brown; The Dark Fantastic;
- Darryl Kenning Reviews
-
- #5: Halloween Issue: Hugo Awards; Year's Best Horror Stories
- XVII; Tracy Kidder; Supernatural Mysteries; Thomas Harris;
- Falling Angel Heart; Ray Garton; New From Underwood-Miller;
- Featured Author: Robert R. McCammon; The Modern Halloween Shelf;
- Darryl Kenning Reviews; The Ultimate Stephen King Character Quiz
-
- #6: Computers & Robots Issue: 1989 World Fantasy Award
- Nominations; Donald M. Grant, Publisher; Cyberpunk & Neuromancer;
- Computer Books; Digital Delights; Nightmare On Elm Street, The
- Comic; Banned Books; Featured Author: Josephine Tey; Mystery
- Terminology; Darryl Kenning Reviews; Books On A Chip; New From
- Carroll & Graf; Computer Cowboy Reading; and the usual
-
- #7: Happy Holidays Issue (the one you're reading now).
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- TRIVIA QUIZ ANSWERS
-
- 1) The Last Picture Show
- 2) The Last Temptation of Christ
- 3) The Last of the Mohicans
- 4) The Last Days of Pompeii
- 5) 9
- 6) 9
- 7) 9
- 8) It should
- 9) Merry Christmas
- 10) 1-t 2-n 3-o 4-c 5-a 6-w 7-k 8-g 9-x 10-e
- 11-r 12-v 13-i 14-j 15-l 16-q 17-z 18-m 19-p 20-h
- 21-u 22-d 23-y 24-b 25-f 26-s
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- He sprang to his sleigh, to his team gave a whistle,
- And away they all flew like the down of a thistle.
- But I heard him exclaim, ere he drove out of sight,
- "Happy Christmas to all, and to all a good-night!"
- --from "A Visit From St. Nicholas" by Clement C. Moore
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-