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Surfing Alien

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Everything posted by Surfing Alien

  1. Pretty copies I need to re-read "Grapes" myself, when I don't have a semester end deadline to enjoy it more I think my fattest is either Dune or one of the Signet Ayn Rand books, i'll have to check them. Love Norton's yarns, they're great adventures. Robert Silverberg, is a whole other level in my mind. His early books are fun reads but starting with "Thorns" in 1967, through "The Stochastic Man" in 1976, he wrote a body of work that is mind boggling in variety, originality and character depth. They're very psychological and soul-baring, not swashbuckling adventures, so not everyones cup of tea but I love them. "A Time of Changes", "The Book of Skulls" and "Dying Inside" are my favorites.
  2. Just one today but she's a doozy, near the top of the drug/jd heap ...
  3. Some snail mail arrivals A scarce Diversey diversion Dames with stogies Joy by Gross Sinners and a nice copy of the Barton/Marchetti Ace that Pat previously posted
  4. Killer! I knew i'd seen this classic swipe but couldn't locate which pulp. Looking at the online archives, there's quite a few G-Men Belarski covers re-used on Popular Library's
  5. Nice book. Globe end papers mean 1st printing every time, off the top of my head I'm not sure at which "no number" they ended the globe endpapers. The no numbers go up to number 40 I think and I'm pretty sure the later ones did not have globe end papers. For those you can only tell 1st print by being roughly near the number of the book in hand. They released a couple at a time so it will only be the exact number for certain ones.
  6. Cool find. Lets just say that Avon was very thrifty with their artwork. I assume the artists got nothing extra for the multiple usages
  7. Here's the only half decent uncreased scan i've seen available on the whole interwebs (possibly my old copy ) It's Canadian actually - Studio Pocket #4 from 1952. It originally was published in Hardcover as "Heed the Thunder" in 1946 and It's not even the 1st paperback edition - that would be the (also Canadian) Newstand Library edition of "Heed the Thunder" from 1949. Both the hardcover and the Newstand Library edition show up in nice shape far more often than the Studio Pocket edition.
  8. Nice, I have a copy of this one on the way Not an upgrade, I just didn't have one
  9. Postman rang twice for me today. A killer upgrade of an early Ace Keene original with a Harry Barton cover Victor Olson painted the "maybe even better" flip side cover This one has everything - a tough Lionel White movie tie-in Signet with a wild Maguire bondage cover that is unfaded and pretty sharp.
  10. Sweet bunch of books Damonwad! I have some of the Thompson Lions but not that one. They're tough to put together these days with what they go for in nice shape. A big regret was selling a very nice copy of Killer Inside Me and a pristine copy of Sins of the Fathers, which is probably the rarest of all Thompson books, even though it's not a 1st Ed. I'll likely never get them in that condition again unless a fortuitous circumstance comes around because I just have a mental block paying many hundreds of dollars for books that used to go for $50 - $100 I know... I need to get over the past (and my inner cheapskate ) I've posted my copy of Farm Girl, she's a honey
  11. Nice books btw + I love this cover, not your usual Schomburg, has a little Dali going on there
  12. I'll take a muscle-bound man and put his face in the sand - "I'm Bad" LL Cool J
  13. "There Will Come Soft Rains" is the first one I remember reading and it's still haunting to this day. I love this 1st appearance of Fahrenheit 451
  14. Always quietly working on those Ace's. Opened up this pretty decent pair today... Nice early one with a Harry Barton cover Backed with a stormy woman with a gun A great uncredited hillbilly cover Backed with a Whittington pbo
  15. What's the story of the sketch, if you know? It's pretty cool!
  16. That is a great cover... I love the Lurking Fear, it's more of that otherworldly, Eldritch, thing, and Dunwich Horror is more of a human element of horrific surprise...
  17. I have the Dunwich Horror but not the Weird Shadow. I like the Dunwich Horror cover much more so went after it early... The two Bart Houses and this Avon are the only 3 with pictorial covers. The 4th early Lovecraft is the Armed Services Edition, which brings big dollars but I love covers. It does not do anything for me.
  18. I never did this but I definitely have done a couple of tape pull's... ouch!!!
  19. Another one rolled in from the backlog. I think this Avon is even harder to find uncreased than the Pop Lib "Overboard". I've pretty much given up on finding one so grabbed this respectable one at a reasonable price. It's my favorite early Lovecraft PB, (and a swipe from Finlays July 1939 Weird Tales cover). Here's the Weird Tales (not my copy)