faustus: (seventies)
( Nov. 29th, 2011 08:22 pm)
... I went back to a charity shop and bought Henry Green's Loving (1945) / Living (1929) / Party Going (1939) and Nothing (1950) / Doting (1952) / Blindness (1926), even though under the strict application of the two pound rule I don't have to. Together they come to £5.50, but as this is six novels that's actually about 90p a book...

Rather like Patrick Hamilton, he seems to be one of those literary blindspots - too late to be modernist, too early to be angry young man, a contemporary with Grahame Greene, who must surely have reviewed his near namesake (and don't forget Harry Lime). Both Green and his wife were descended from the first Baron Leconfield, the current title holder I recently heard speak about East Prussia (and I hope the merely Hon Henry Vincent Yorke is much more interesting).


My gut would be to start with Blindness, although it appears the omnibi have eschewed chronological ordering. I ought to be reading sf, of course. And Moonraker. But I need to wash the taste of a book I will not name out of my head.
faustus: (Default)
( Nov. 7th, 2011 01:28 pm)
Annoyingly the flu jab on Friday meant I lost two hours in London in which I would have gone (probably walked) to the Quaker centre in Euston to pick up a white poppy, the ones from the year before last being lost or decomposed.

I would have had to wait the best part of an hour to get the train to St P, or spent that time getting there, so instead I took a circuitous route to Oxfam on Strutton Ground.

In theory I could go to London on Tuesday to pick one up, and it's not as if there aren't exhibitions to see, but it feels a little, er, overkill. I am wearing it virtually.

See here




On the other hand, I bought a copy of Survivor for £1.99, which as far as I can see is at least £48 less than it should have been, and looks like a relatively mint British paperback, too. There is much interesting 1970s and 1980s sf in this shop.
faustus: (Default)
( Nov. 7th, 2011 12:09 am)
I know a number of you are interested in Girl's School novels and some of you collect them. This may be old news to you, but I came across a company in Edinburgh which reprints them - titles by Susan Scarlett (Noel Streatfeild), O. Douglas (Anna Buchan), Susan Pleydell, D.E. Stevenson and several more. Not my kind of thing - but Greyladies may be of interest to you.

ETA: "Girls’ School Stories - written for adults
Adult books by children’s authors
A spot of vintage crime"

Looks like a mix of other stuff they wrote and school stories aimed at adults not children
I've made two grisly discoveries today - the first a dead sparrow, the second how many Target novelisations I am adrift. I know I had The Cave Monsters and The Sea Devils, and I remember reading Androids of Tara on the bus, so I wonder if somewhere I have a box that has a pile of Pertwee and Baker era books in. Quite where that is, I do not know.

I simply don't believe I don't have these or have given them away or lent them. I wonder if I had them when I last tried to catalogue them - but as to where I've put them... I've picked up five because these are important title but I will hold off pre-1984 titles
But:

Cut for tedium )
faustus: (Comedy)
( Apr. 12th, 2011 03:28 pm)
I have a shelf of Doctor Who novelisations, pretty well all Target editions, presumably numbering somewhere in the region of a hundred, and stretching up to the end of Peter Davison's period, possibly including the odd Colin Baker. At one point it would have been complete, at least in the sense that I had all the novelisations available at that point. It became incomplete when they novelised virtually all the remaining Old Who stories (I'm guessing the Adams stories are the only ones left) and obviously there were Baker and McCoy adventures, plus the missing season. My records of which I have are not as accurate as they might be - I took a short cut when importing them into my database - and I think a couple have gone astray.

Every so often - as in on Thursday - I come across a bookshelf of novelisations, secondhand. A few times I've filled in gaps. It is an incomplete collection.

And that offends me.

On the other hand, I have virtually no interest in reading any more novelisations of Doctor Who, and certainly would not want to get into the Virgin adventures or New Who.

But, still. Offensive. Careless.

*

I notice Arden 3 has an edition of The Sonnets, unlike, as far as I can see, Arden 2.
faustus: (seventies)
( Mar. 26th, 2011 11:37 pm)
As far as I can tell, I have now got all the Shakespeare titles in Arden 2 -- having recently found a Love's Labour's Lost and now a Pericles and assuming there is no separate edition of The Sonnets. If I want The Two Noble Kinsmen I need to turn to Arden 3 (or possibly 4).

I am tempted to turn to Revels Editions, and indeed found a cache on Thursday, but they were mostly £6 each. Since I am unlikely to ever actually read them, this seemed a little excessive. I did pick up a The Alchemist, which I studied at ... A Level and didn't have a copy of. I need a better list, to check which I have already and some pricing research, although the two pound rule may be invoked.

I think I am up to seven copies of The Thirty Nine Steps, each of them a distinct edition. Six to go. The hunt continues.

I note also I have have been saying, "This used to be a bookshop" a lot this week.
faustus: (seventies)
( Oct. 27th, 2010 06:09 pm)
I picked up Troilus and Cressida and King Richard III from Oxfam today - over the £2 mark, but remember I have to buy it if it's less than £2, not can't buy it if it's more. Although I had hoped... But they were £2.49 and £2.99, so reasonably priced.

(I also bought Collected Plays 4 of Pirandello, which I fear completes the set, unless I can find evidence that Calder Publications released a volume 5. This is clearly a moment where we realise that Collected =/= Complete. At a guess I have only half of the plays. And at least one of his works of prose was interesting, which I think was called Shoot!. And it's online. Uh huh.

(Across in the general Oxfam, I picked up two more Skinner novels, of which more anon, both at the ankle displaying £1.99. I see that Jardine gives up on having Skinner in the title, so I must check if they have those two as well. There are two more with his name I don't have - will have to think if I want to read them out of order, as there does appear to be an internal chronology. [Although the also by list doesn't list them in order, so perhaps Trail is a prequel, so it's too late as it were. I don't think so, from a quick look at Amazon, which also reveals I can buy it for a penny and £2.75 postage. I invoke the £2 law, maybe it needs to be cheaper than £2 because I don't want it that badly])

I see I still need to acquire:

  • Cymbeline
  • Love's Labours Lost
  • Merry Wives of Windsor
  • Pericles


which is odd, since I have held all of them in my hand. If so they haven't made it to the shelves.

There's also the Sonnets, helpfully listed on Amazon as by Katherine (Editor) Duncan-Jones (Author). I don't recall ever seeing this - and it isn't cheap secondhand. I need another edition of The Sonnets even less than I need the plays (I have the other poems in an Arden edition), but... I would also need to find a couple of The Two Noble Kinsmen, but that's an Arden 3 and everything else is Arden 2 (clearly it wasn't thought to be sufficiently by Shakespeare between 1950 and 1985 or so).

It also strikes me than I have huge Renaissance gaps - aside from Marlowe - in the shape of Webster, Dekker, Ford, Jonson, and it would be nice to collect the Revels editions (in preference to New Mermaids). Must hunt down a little list. Not that I'll ever read any of them, but the Renaissance was part of my life for a long time, off and on.
The presence of T.S. Eliot's Prufrock and Other Observations and Thom Gunn's The Sense of Movement on my 15 Books Meme list notes what poetry got to me first - although it was in a sense the lovesong and "On the Move" in particular, and now I'm more likely to go back to The Waste Land. I have all the Eliot and Gunn I want (although if I ever saw the juvenilia of the former at a reasonable price I'd pick it up - Inventions of the March Hare: Poems 1909-1917, and no doubt there are scattered late poems by Gunn).

But a handful of poems by Auden got to me first. Auden became a minefield, though - in terms of quality and texts. The general consensus is that he lost something once he had settled in the US - and I note that there is The English Auden: Poems, Essays and Dramatic Writings, 1927-1939, but no corresponding American Auden. But he also rewrote and revised poems, even dropping those he no longer liked. Thus the available Collected Poetry have varying contents and aren't complete - as the English opts for the earliest texts, they opt for the latest. There are Collected Longer and Collected Shorter poems, but I'm not sure how complete these are. I've also picked up a couple of his travel books and a libretto or two over the years, and a Selected Poetry which covers the whole ground - but selectively.

At some point I picked up Juvenilia: Poems 1922-1928 and Libretti and Other Dramatic Writings, 1939-1973, both of which I assumed to be part of the Complete Works edited by Mendleson. I've seen other volumes over the years - but priced so I talked myself out of them. I mean, when would I read them? But the find of Prose and Travel Books in Prose and Verse, Volume I: 1926-1938 led to me to follow it upo.

The Juvenilia turns out to be a separate project - and there is a different, expanded, paperback. There is no sign of the poem volumes, and the projected is projected to have eight volumes. Thus far:


  • Plays and Other Dramatic Writings, 1927-1938 (1989)
  • Libretti and Other Dramatic Writings, 1939-1973 (1993)
  • Prose and Travel Books in Prose and Verse, Volume I: 1926-1938 (1997)
  • Prose, Volume II: 1939-1948 (2002)
  • Prose, Volume III: 1949-1955 (2008)


I guess there's Prose, Volume IV: 1956-1965? (2012?) and Prose, Volume V: 1966?-1973? (2016), then two volumes of the poetry? At this rate I shall die of old age...

On Tolkien, meanwhile, Christopher seems to be publishing every scrap - and I faithfully followed Silmarillion, Unfinished Tales and Lost Tales before running out of steam. Curiously I stopped at the fourth volume, The Shaping of Middle-earth, just before The Lost Road, a text I'd always wanted to read. I'm sure I bought it, but I can't find a copy. In Liverpool and Tonbridge I picked up War of the Rings, Children of Hurin and the lectures on Beowulf etc (having found Return of the Shadow in a local secondhand bookshop), then in Whitstable last week found a run of them from Return to The War of the Jewels. As I'd nearly bought a couple in the Fantasy Centre at a fiver the week before, I was trapped in by the pesky two pound rule - each were £1.95. I'd sadly forgotten I already had War of the Rings, and still no Lost Road.

I have no idea when I shall read these - probably not before Dec 2010 - but clearly I need to get the remaining two volumes.
faustus: (culture)
( Dec. 27th, 2007 04:44 pm)
You'd hope when a DVD had a title like Collected Shorts or 32 Short Films that Amazon (or the online retailer of your choice) would feel the need to list the contents, since the picture of the cover isn't always clear enough. Sometimes they have "Includes ..." and then a list, but there's no way to be certain if that is complete or partial. Other times you are dependent on reviews.

Given how many boxsets there are on the market these days, this is an issue. They start overlapping. And if the online sites don't give you complete information, it can get expensive. More expensive. Or you end up with two copies of Juno and the Paycock (The Early Hitchcock Collection and The Collection).

Cut for Obsessive Compulsion )
.

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