Discount Book Store - Rbookshop.comOnline Book StoreBusiness BooksComputer BooksEngineering BooksMathematics BooksScience BooksView All Categoriesnavmap
arrow Search for books at ARC Spider:
arrow Search for books at Powells:
arrow
Buy a Book from Amazon.com
bar
How to buy books at Rbookshop - A step-by-step guide

Book Categories


Bibliographies and Indexes in Sociology, #36: Strange Shadows: The Uncollected Fiction and...

Buy Bibliographies and Indexes in Sociology, #36: Strange Shadows: The Uncollected Fiction and... here, one of many rare and collectible Science Fiction books offered for sale at great prices. We greatly appreciate your patronage at Rbookshop and look forward to offering you rare books, manuscripts and related items now and in the future.
You Are Here:  Home > Rare & Collectible Books > Rare Science Fiction Books > Bibliographies and Indexes in Sociology, #36: Strange Shadows: The Uncollected Fiction and...

View Previous Product in our Science Fiction Store      View Next Product in our Science Fiction Store

Click here to buy Bibliographies and Indexes in Sociology, #36: Strange Shadows: The Uncollected Fiction and... by Clark Ashton Smith. Bibliographies and Indexes in Sociology, #36: Strange Shadows: The Uncollected Fiction and...
by Clark Ashton Smith
0.0 out of 5 stars
$85.00
At Powells Books
on 8-6-2008.
Buy Bibliographies and Indexes in Sociology, #36: Strange Shadows: The Uncollected Fiction and... now! Get Info on Bibliographies and Indexes in Sociology, #36: Strange Shadows: The Uncollected Fiction and...
Features
ISBN Number:
9780313266119
Subtitle: The Uncollected Fiction and Essays of Clark Ashton Smith
Editor: Behrends, Steve
Author: Smith, Clark Ashton
Author: Behrends, Steve
Editor: Behrends, Steve
Publisher: Greenwood Press
Location: New York :
Subject: Science fiction
Subject: Science Fiction & Fantasy
Subject: Fantasy fiction, American
Copyright: 1989
Series: Bibliographies and Indexes in Sociology,
Series Volume: 36
Publication Date: April 1989
Cover Type: Hardcover
Grade Level: Professional and scholarly
Written in: English
Number of Pages: 295
Book Size: 1.40 in.
Notes:

Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1989.
First edition, no dustjacket, as issued.
285pp., teal cloth, with white lettering on front board and spine.
VG-: Slight bowing to front board, tail is bumped. Spine is straight, pages tight. No markings to text. The uncollected fiction and essays of Clark Ashton Smith, edited by Steve Behrends, with Donald Sidney-Fryer and Rah Hoffman. Includes extensive notes and three appendices.mjh


Strange Shadows opens a window into the dark, visionary worlds of Clark Ashton Smith, whose "verbal black magic" was a significant force in the American science fiction and fantasy movement of the 1930s. This annotated collection of his previously unpublished works provides a unique opportunity to savor the full range of Smith's literary contribution. Featuring fantasies and ironic short stories, prose-poems, plays, unfinished stories, and more than 100 story synopses, it offers valuable documentation and commentary on the work of one of the most distinctive and consistently interesting modern masters of the fantasy genre. An introduction by Robert Bloch (the author of Psycho) examines Smith's work and places it in historical perspective. Among the highlights of the collection are the satirical title story; variant drafts of two of Smith's most famous stories--The Coming of the White Worm and The Beast of Averoigne--and a play entitled The Dead Will Cuckold You, which has been hailed as a masterpiece. The editor's annotations include extensive quotations from Smith's correspondence to H. P. Lovecraft, August Derleth, and other important fantasy authors, together with textual commentary and discussion of connections between published and unpublished works. Information on lost writings and lists of published story titles, characters, and place names are supplied. An important resource for fantasy readers and scholars, this book will appeal to those with an interest in "dark" fantasy, science fiction, and the history of American science fiction.

Review:

Perhaps the hardest review to write is the one, where the reader is confronted with a near-perfect book. I suppose if I wanted to quibble with type-styles and binding I might be able to find something to criticise in Strange Shadows, but otherwise I find nothing wrong with this book; it's everything I would expect Clark Ashton Smith's last prose collection to be, and more. I say last because this volume collects the remainder of Smith's fiction, story synopses, unfinished tales, essays, and plays known to exist. And for this task, the editors--in particular Steve Behrends--deserve our thanks. Behrends has done more for the revival of Smith's reputation than any one individual, and all in a very short period of time. . . . Strange Shadow is one of the first true scholarly editions of an author's work of weird fiction, something which hasn't even been done with Lovecraft's work yet. Considering this, Strange Shadows becomes more and more important on each level we look at it. Of course, though, for those who aren't interested in variants, these additions can be passed over easily, making the volume enjoyable at all levels. . . . Extensive notes are offered, as well as three interesting appendices: "The Lost Worlds of Clark Ashton Smith" by Steve Behrends looks at the non-extent works by Smith that we know were completed; "Nemesis of the Unfinished" is the outline by Don Carter which was the basis of the story co-authored by the two; and "The Black Book: Addenda" includes material not used in the Arkham House edition of Smith's The Black Book (1979). If the sheer bulk of material featured in Strange Shadows doesn't intrigue you, then the diversity and quality should. For most readers, I am sure the high point will be the lengthy story fragment `The Infernal Star,' which some will readily classify as a `Lovecraft Mythos' tale and is replete with mentions of The Necronomicon. Whether you are a Smith fan or a scholar of weird fiction, this volume has something for everyone. And while the high price of the volume is the only aspect of it I can quarrel with, the $39.95 will be well spent; how many of us have spent more than that on some out-of-print volume that we really didn't need?. . . Strange Shadows is a necessity, and worth the price many times over. Strange Shadows is a recessity, and worth the price many times over.Studies in Weird Fiction

Synopsis:

Strange Shadows opens a window into the dark, visionary worlds of Clark Ashton Smith, whose "verbal black magic" was a significant force in the American science fiction and fantasy movement of the 1930s. This annotated collection of his previously unpublished works provides a unique opportunity to savor the full range of Smith's literary contribution. Featuring fantasies and ironic short stories, prose-poems, plays, unfinished stories, and more than 100 story synopses, it offers valuable documentation and commentary on the work of one of the most distinctive and consistently interesting modern masters of the fantasy genre.




Back To Top
Bibliographies and Indexes in Sociology, #36: Strange Shadows: The Uncollected Fiction and...
Available from Powells Books
Price: $85.00
Updated on 8-6-2008.
Buy Bibliographies and Indexes in Sociology, #36: Strange Shadows: The Uncollected Fiction and... now! Get Info on Bibliographies and Indexes in Sociology, #36: Strange Shadows: The Uncollected Fiction and...




NOTICE: All prices, availability, and specifications
are subject to verification by their respective retailers.




We offer Bibliographies and Indexes in Sociology, #36: Strange Shadows: The Uncollected Fiction and... and other related Rare Science Fiction Books here at Rbookshop.com. To view more Science Fiction please use the previous and next links above.