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Posts posted by RedFury
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- Point Five, pmpknface, waaaghboss and 3 others
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- pmpknface, waaaghboss, Pat Calhoun and 3 others
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- Pat Calhoun, Darwination, pmpknface and 2 others
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- Point Five, Pat Calhoun, pmpknface and 2 others
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- pmpknface, dickymoe74, Pat Calhoun and 2 others
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- dickymoe74, Darwination, Point Five and 2 others
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- Darwination, waaaghboss, Point Five and 2 others
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- Pat Calhoun, waaaghboss, pmpknface and 3 others
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Sent some of my Weird Tales in and got some pretty nice grades.
- Point Five, Darwination, waaaghboss and 4 others
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Not a pulp, but I think this will be of interest here.
For Sale: The Outsider and Others by H.P. Lovecraft
The Outsider and Others is the 1st Arkham House book and H.P. Lovecraft's 1st book of collected stories. It is, of course, a cornerstone book for both H.P. Lovecraft and Arkham House collections. It was published in 1939 and limited to just 1,268 copies.This copy was owned by fan John Malone, who in a letter in the Eyrie had nearly deduced that Hazel Heald's story Out of the Aeons was really mostly by H.P. Lovecracft: “How does Hazel Heald do it? ‘Out of the Eons’ was like a masterpiece by H. P. Lovecraft. Hardly any of the horror was pictured, most of it was suggested, until the climax, when the revelation came!"The book is in very good condition. The spine gilt is intact but lightly worn. Inside front and rear boards have small signature and stamps from former owner John Malone. The dust jacket is in Fair condition. It is original and complete, but has some wear, creases, and tape repairs.$5,000- Pat Calhoun, asimovpulps, jimjum12 and 4 others
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On 3/4/2024 at 2:21 PM, Pat Calhoun said:I don't own one (or the Amazing) but I'd far prefer a Aug 1928 WT: re space opera it features the first half of 'Crashing Suns' by Edmond Hamilton, the first story in his 'Interstellar Patrol' series. As the title implies, Hamilton's yarn goes far beyond a little space chase. REH too (Solomon Kane!), and the first sale for a young Tennessee Williams...
It's funny how hugely important sci-fi works are overshadowed by other things in both those issues.
I have copy of the Aug 1928 Weird Tales signed by Tennessee Williams.
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Here's a real rarity, a copy of The Fourth Book of Jorkens (Arkham House, 1948) signed by Lord Dunsany. He may have only signed a few copies. He lived in Ireland, and the Arkham House edition was actually a reprint of the UK edition that had been published in 1947, so it's unlikely many copies of this new US edition made it to him. This copy was inscribed (with Dunsany's typical quill pen) to Herman C. Koenig, a friend of Lovecraft and member of the Kalem Club.
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Here's a real interesting book I just bought, Ecstasy, by Donald Wandrei (weird fiction writer, friend of Lovecraft's, co-founder of Arkham House). It's his first book and was published in 1928 by W. Paul Cook (Recluse Press) in an edition of 300 copies. This is Don's personal copy and has his ownership signature inside.
What really makes this copy special, however, are the heavy edits and re-writes Don made in it. I asked myself "Why would he edit the text after the book had been published?" The only reasonable answer I could come up with was he was preparing the texts for re-publication. So I pulled my copy of Wandrei's Arkham House poetry collection, Poems for Midnight (1964), off the shelf and compared the texts. Bingo! The edits made in the 1928 book match the texts in the 1964 book. In all, there are 8 heavily revised poems in Don's copy of Ecstasy, all of which appear in the same form in Poems for Midnight.
I asked a friend of mine who is a noted expert in the Wandrei brother about this, and he was surprised by the discovery. He had never compared the texts in the two editions before.
Here's a comparison of the 1928 edition with edits in red pencil and the final 1964 edition from Arkham House.
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On 2/23/2024 at 4:29 PM, Book Guy said:
Great piece! I don't think it is one either, but there is a reasonable chance and worth investigating. I am going to try and post on the Arkham Facebook forum again. The 'possible' sculpt doesn't belong to me BTW, but to a friend.
Collecting the Lovecraft Circle, Weird Tales, and Arkham House
This Facebook group was created by me. It's a private group so you'll have to join to post. But it's a really good group.
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On 2/22/2024 at 8:10 PM, Book Guy said:
A little off the subject post, but of interest to Arkham House Collectors.
The greenish sculpture below is possibly (though not likely) a Clark Ashton Smith Sculpture. I tried to post pictures and details on an Arkham House Facebook page, but they did not go through probably because I'm not a member. Perhaps someone on these boards can point somebody who might be expert in the subject to this post.
Why might it be a CAS Sculpt? Well it came into a Thrift Store in North Oakland many years ago on the same street and nearby to where noted HPL Circle member and close friend of CAS George Haas lived for many years. George was known as 'Ji Eich' to the other HPL circle members and corresponded with many. He was a close friend with CAS and collected his Art and had quite a number of Smith's sculptures. The theme of the piece is in Smith's wheelhouse. The main problem is the signature on the base. CAS had two known signatures 'CAS' and 'KA' with the 'K' reversed. Perhaps there is a third signature variant I am unaware of? Probably not, but the close proximity of where this turned up to where Haas lived, the general overall 'look' of a Smith piece and the intriguing signature make me wonder. There is a book about Haas which I have, though can't get to at the moment. If somebody has one, they might look through the pictures and let me know if the green sculpt shows up. Thanks in advance.
The dark sculpture of the little guy with a helmet/hat is a genuine CAS sculpture for comparison, It once belonged to George Haas and is signed my Smith in the usual 'KA' manner.
Any help is appreciated.
I have one CAS sculpture, but it's a cast one, not carved. Still, it has the "KA" on the bottom with the backwards "K". I have never seen "KAYS" before. I really don't know if yours is by CAS or not. It is similar to his sculpts, but feels different to me. Hm, interesting.
- Pat Calhoun, Sarg, Book Guy and 1 other
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On 5/13/2023 at 8:05 PM, Hibou said:
In terms of the 1938 issues of Weird Tales, is there one issue that's more coveted or rare among WT collectors?
The June 1938 cover by Brundage for Suicide Chapel is definitely higher demand than other 1938 issues. And the covers for Jan and Aug would be 2nd and 3rd.
As for story content, the overall quality is pretty good, but nothing really jumps out as a key. There are lots of Lovecraft and Howard pieces, mostly reprints, and some good CA Smith, Wellman, and Bloch contributions.
I don't think any 1938 is more rare than another. It's really just those three covers I mentioned that have stronger demand.
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Thanks guys! I just got it back, reframed with museum glass, and it looks great.
- Book Guy, Pat Calhoun, FoggyNelson and 5 others
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Speaking of The Outsider, here are two lovely association copies, Robert Bloch's and Clark Ashton Smith's. Bloch's copy has both Bloch's bookplate and Lovecraft's bookplate, which Lovecraft had sent to Bloch in 1933. Smith's is signed and dated by him.
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Lee Brown Coye
An early Coye illustration of a pirate or buccaneer, done the same year, 1944, he began illustrating weird fiction. Early works by Coye are scarce due to multiple studio fires. Colgate University's collection of his works is mostly smoke and water damaged. This is possibly a published book or pulp illustration but I've been unable to find its source. It was published in some Coye retrospective art books.
13" x 18.5" framed
Professionally framed and matted, with museum glass
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The WEIRD TALES Thread: Collecting The Unique Magazine
in Pulp Magazines
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