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Sunday, November 29, 2009

Expensive bathroom reading

Good morning bookies!

It's cloudy, wet and cool here in West Tennessee. One would think it's November or something.

Bathroom reading...when one thinks of reading in the lavatory, one thinks of joke books, The Guinness Book of World Records, the newspaper, perhaps a magazine. Rarely does one think 'hmmm...what to read while taking care of business? Oh, I know! I'll read that first edition The Origin of Species I've been meaning to get to." A family in southern England, however, seemed to think that was just the ticket.

Until they discovered its value, that is.

Christie's has auctioned off a copy of said classic, one of about 1,250 printed in 1859, for a cool $170,000. Now, I realize the dollar ain't what it used to be, but still, 170 grand will buy a nice dinner these days. One wonders whether the atmosphere in the loo devalued the book.

Darwin is finally let out of the bathroom

Friday, November 27, 2009

The Day After

Hiya bookies!

I hope everyone had a great Thanksgiving, the uniquely American holiday. Now, on to Christmas!

Today's blog centers on a historian who is noted for being the definitive English language authority on the Battle of Berlin in 1945. Yeah, I know. Another World War II book. Sorry to all you SFF and crime junkies.

Tony le Tissier was the last British commander of Spandau prison, a man who had the chance to get to know Berlin quite well during his posting there. After all, when the prison only has 1 inmate, and he's an old guy in his 80's or 90's, how hard can it be? (Rudolf Hess, by the way. Who had the last laugh. He hung himself when the guards weren't looking. Unless it was murder, as some suggest.) Already known for his trilogy on the battle, as well as the collection of stories With Our Backs to Berlin, le Tissier has now written the definitive field guide for those who want to visit Berlin's historic sites. Smart guy. Can you imagine how many copies he's going to sell?

I'm a little ashamed to admit that, as a buff of that battle, I have not read any of the man's work. Shameful. However, with 4 big volumes to scarf up all at once, I'll find them, devour them and make the winter go a little faster. As for you, dear bookie, when you visit Berlin next time, be sure to thank me for the head's up.

Tony le Tissier shows you where to go in Berlin

Monday, November 23, 2009

The tale of a sale

Hiya bookies!

I am often asked where I find the books that I sell. That's an easy one: under my bed. I go to sleep at night, wake up and presto! The Book Fairy has left all sorts of neat books under there. It's motivation to keep out the dust bunnies.

But on the rare occasions where the Book Fairy lets me down I have to go out and actually looks for the gems out there. How can you tell what is gold and what is dross? Experience and an eye for it, nothing else. Scanner people will tell you it's all in their nifty little whizz-bang electronic devices, which is why they so often overlook the good stuff.

For an example let's use a book I sold just today, one by historical novelist Dewey Lambdin. In September of 2006 I was rummaging through the Countrywood garage sale, a simultaneous weekend of 800-1000 homes all selling stuff on the same day. Harvesting from this sale is exhausting and rarely rewarding, but in the service of my fellow man I did my duty and went anyway. Late on Saturday morning I came to a house with stuff spread out all over their driveway. By that point I had been up for 7 hours and was reduced to staggering from one house to the next. The only thing I could say was "books", but it was enough. The equally worn out homeowner nodded to a big box under a table. I started rummaging. Paperbacks romance novels. Lots of them. Oh boy. I almost quit, it was a big box, but since I was already on one knee I decided to finish. There, at the very bottom, the only non-romance novel in the whole box, was a pristine Advance Reading Copy of Lambdin's Sea of Grey. Holy smokes, where did that come from?

I quickly paid the man and left, knowing that in mere weeks Lambdin would be in Memphis for the second (and last) visit of the Southern Festival of Books (which should rightfully be called the Nashville Festival of Books) to Memphis. When the day came I took the cherished find, which was at that time part of my personal collection, met Dewey, had him sign and date the book, and had a long chat with him about US military activities throughout the world. It was great.

But all collections will be sold eventually, and so the day came for me to let go of this treasure. I put it up for sale on May 29, 2009, and sold it on November 22nd of the same year. I hope the new owner loves it as much as I did. Books are very sensitive creatures, after all.

A Christmas List

Good morning bookies. Cloudy in West Tennessee today, high in the low 60's. I hate cold weather.

With Christmas coming I thought I might list my favorite crime series, the ones I absolutely must read when new entries come out. Maybe it will provide inspiration for some of you. Maybe some of you will decide you must avoid these at all costs.

In no particular order:

The Billy Boyle series by James Benn. My review of the 4th entry in this WW2 era crime series is up not at ILAM and I can truthfully say the books just keep getting better. If there is a WW2 buff in your life he/she could not help but love these. The details are all spot on and the writing is first rate.

SPQR by John Maddox Roberts. The ongoing saga of Decius Metellus, good citizen of the Roman Republic, soon to be the Roman Empire, is one of the funniest, most cleverly realized mystery series out there. Lindsey Davis gets a lot more press for her Roman series, and it's quite good, but Roberts is unbeatable for sheer readability.

Nate Heller by Max Allan Collins. Yes, I know there hasn't been a new entry in this series since, like, 2001, but MAC promises that more volumes will be forthcoming. For those who don't know, Nate heller is a PI who treads a very fine line between the good guys and the bad while being directly involved in famous but mysterious cases from the 30's-60's, such as the Lindbergh kidnapping and the disappearance of Amelia Earhart. Compulsively readable, the early hardbacks are also quite collectible. Look for photos of them on this blog when I get the time.

Harry Bosch by Michael Connelly. The best crime series being printed in English at this moment in time. What more can I tell you?

Elvis Cole/Joe Pike by Robert Crais. A somewhat uneven series. The first 7 entries are very different from the rest. cole was, originally, a Vietnam vet like Harry Bosch, and the books were breezy and fast. Then came L.A. Requiem where the author wanted to step up his game, and did. Most of the time. Later entries range from brilliant to simply adequate, and Joe Pike is now evolving to have a series of his own. Oh, and Elvis has stopped aging, remaining in his mid 30's or so. I find that highly annoying. But at its best the series is still excellent, so I'll keep in here for the time being.

Earl Swagger and his son, Bob Lee, aka "Bob the Nailer" by Stephen Hunter. The newest entry, I, Sniper is waiting for me to read and review. I can't wait. Whether the protagonist is Earl or his son, this series never fails to lead somewhere new and exciting as aging sniper Bob Lee deals with bad guys of every sort and size. Hunter has a sense of the dramatic so often missing from the books of today.

Tana French. After only two books it's hard to say that French has a series I love, since those two really are only tangentially related to a Dublin police unit that, in real life, doesn't exist. But the two that she has written, In the Woods and The Likeness are so exceedingly ambitious and so hypnotic, I had to include them. But beware, this is not light reading, getting through them takes a real commitment, so be prepared.

Doc Ford by Randy Wayne White. Probably the second best series going right now, behind only Connelly. For those starting this series at the beginning, be aware that it took RWW 4 or 5 books to finally get the characters down pat, kind of like Crais with Cole/Pike. Book 3 in this series, The Man Who Invented Florida is borderline comedy, very unlike the later books. But any series that features Doc's running mate, Tomlinson, can only be considered a classic.

Two one-time favorites no longer on this list are James Lee Burke and James W. Hall. JLB is a graciously delightful man who writes the same book over and over again, regardless of the protagonist, but I'll say this for him: he writes it very well. The first five books in the Dave Robicheaux series were terrific, after that it becomes a question of how many times you want to read the same thing over and over again. Some people have a higher tolerance than me. As for Hall, parts of his later books about gadfly fishing guru and fly-tier par excellence Thorn are utterly brilliant, the first 50 pages of Blackwater Sound rival the best crime writing ever, by anyone. But as with so many great ones Just Jim started becoming preachy and nothing makes me quit a series faster than being preached at. Still, the writing is first rate and you may like someone bashing you over the head with their opinions.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

THE UNKNOWN WARRIORS by Nicholas Pringle

Good morning bookies!

Sunday here in West Tennessee is cloudy and cool, not so bad for late November. Today's missive concerns a new book by a young English writer who never intended to write the book he wrote. Nicholas Pringle was curious about what his grandmother and her generation did in World War II and wrote a number of people asking for their experiences. As a last question he innocently asked them how they felt about how England turned out, and whether their fellow patriots might feel about things today. Then he waited for the replies.

And boy, did he get replies.

Turns out the vast majority of those who responded, a very representative 150 or so, are hugely disappointed that their country has turned into a nation of 'yobs and drunks', that immigration is both out of control and destroying the infrastructure of British society, that the nation is going broke supply freebies to people who don't pay taxes, and that average citizens are now allowed to protest the wiping out of their culture.

Sounds like an epidemic across the globe, as those nations who won the war slowly defeat everything they worked for.

"This isn't the Britain we fought for"

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

WIZARD'S FIRST RULE by Terry Goodkind


Wizard's First Rule by Terry Goodkind. Tor Books, 1994. Quarto hardback in full black paper boards. First edition identified by the standard Tor number line ending in '1.'

Goodkind's first book is becoming a movie and its collectible value has skyrocketed in recent years. The book is well constructed even if no cloth was used on the spine. There are two signatures visible on the title page, the one simply simply 'Terry' is the one he said is the standard one he uses for signing books, while the full signature of Terry Goodkind is his normal signature that he rarely uses in books. He was impressed that I had a pristine copy of Wizard's First Rule.







Bad sex

Hiya bookies!

For those of you who think today's blog title isn't possible, au contraire. At least, in the world of 'literary' novels. (Allow me to digress a moment. What, exactly, is a 'literary' novel? One that nobody wants to read? One that nobody can read? I've always been fascinated by this term, since I strongly doubt that I have ever knowingly read such a book. Just the nomenclature sounds boring.)

Ahem. Sorry. Back to the bad sex. You see, it appears there is so much bad sex running rampant through literary fiction that an award system has been put in place to keep track of it all. Yikes! It sounds epidemic, doesn't it? Is all sex in literary novels bad? Is that a requirement of the genre?

I don't know and, frankly, I doubt that I would care if it didn't make for such delicious blog fare. However, since the list of candidates for this epic distinction was just announced I would be remiss if I didn't make sure that my loyal bookies knew about it. To avoid it, if for no other reason.

Bad sex running rampant through the book world

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Secret Mussolini

Good morning bookies!

I realize this blog has become heavy with the historical reviews and such and I am working diligently to correct that for my crime fiction and SFF aficionados. Still, non-fiction books tend to get more in-depth reviews and so are easier to link to for this type of thing, plus the fact that it's my blog and I can do what I want within the rules established by the google gods.

Ahem. Well, today's entry concerns the publication of the diaries of Clara Petacci, mistress of Benito Mussolini. In and of herself Clara is not someone whose musings and scribblings would be published to world-wide acclaim some 60+ years after she was killed by Italian partisans and hung from a meat hook. Indeed, if she had not been the mistress of Il Duce there is very little chance she would have wound up hanging upsdie down in that Milano gas station. But she was and she did, and from 1932-1938 she kept a diary that now interests the world. Not only do they have interest for what they tell us about Mussolini, but also what she had to say about Hitler, Pope Pius and the world in general.

So we should all forgive Clara for being in love with the wrong man. Thanks, Clara, for keeping the diary. Sorry about the whole shooting you thing.

Secret Mussolini

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Stephen King-Peter Straub's TALISMAN coming to comics

The aging novel co-authored by horror icons Stephen King and Peter Straub, 1984's The Talisman, is being developed as a comic book by SFF publishing powerhouse Del Rey Books. Not bad for a 25 year old novel that most people had forgotten about. After a run of 24 issues it will then be released in a hardcover edition. Talk about cashing in.

But if that sounds snarky, I really should show more respect. Anything that helps good publishers stay afloat these days is fine with me and since I grew up reading comics I obviously have no problem with the format. So here's hoping Del Rey makes loads of money on the project so they may then publish some new but promising authors.

Peter Straub & Stephen King come to comics again

Friday, November 13, 2009

Masters of War

Good morning bookies. Sorry for the delay since the last posting.

*** The new iloveamysterynewsletter has posted everyone. My review of James Benn's new Billy Boyle mystery is on the front page, with a Black Diamond. Evil For Evil is every bit as good as the previous entries, if not better.

***It would be hard to argue that General George Patton and Field Marshals Rommel and Montgomery were not the most famous field commanders for their respective countries during World War II. And in the case for Patton and Rommel a case could be made they were also the best tacticians for their countries, although with Montgomery making that case would be a real stretch. Nevertheless, when the war ended he was easily the most powerful commander in the British Army, so in that respect he would also qualify for inclusion in this book, Patton, Montgomery, Rommel, Master of War by Terry Brighton.

The fatal flaw with so many British historians writing about Montgomery and Patton is the tendency for them to find Montgomery as some sort of demi-god who out-thought and out-fought Rommel to finally kick the Germans out of Africa, then excelled in the campaigns in Sicily, France and Germany. The truth, of course, is somewhat less shining. And it appears that in his new book Brighton does not fall into the trap of Montgomery adulation that so mars the many books that have previously tackled this subject.

Masters of War

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

DIE TRYING by Lee Child



Die Trying
by Lee Child. Putnam, 1998. First edition indicated by standard Putnam number line of the time, starting with a '1.' Quarto. Red quarter cloth and paper boards. Front cover has author initials and chevron from side to side.

The first Reacher novel, Killing Floor, was not a huge immediate success, so the second one, Die Trying, also wound up on the remainder table. Only later did prices escalate as the series took off. In person Child is a very nice man who impresses audiences, no doubt a key to his success. The construction of this book is typical of the era, reading leaves its mark but the jacket is somewhat more sturdy than usual and holds up fairly well.

As can be seen, Child's signature isn't the most elegant but does not change in person from that on tipped-in sheets.

Ken Follett's PAPER MONEY


Paper Money by Ken Follett. William Morrow, 1977. Octavo hardback. Maroon quarter cloth and white boards. Jacket price of $15.95.

In the days before Eye of the Needle and international publishing fame, Follett published this novel under a pseudonym, Zachary Stone. Once his fame was achieved it was brought to the US and published by Morrow. Note that Morrow used the standard First U.S. Edition slug and number line down to '1', whereas until 1973 their first editions were almost always identified by No Additional Printing. The jacket here is fairly sturdy with shelfwear being the most common defect.


Sunday, November 1, 2009

Things filled with hot air

Happy November, bookies!

Today's blog title is my gift to you, a straight line ready for endless jokes. Feel free.

Today we have yet another entry in the endless canon of World War II literature. Forgotten Weapon: U.S. Navy Airships and the U-boat War, by William F. Althoff, Naval Institute Press, 2009, 432 pages, $45.95. You might think this is a pretty obscure topic but in fact blimps played a pretty vital role in patrolling America's coasts for prowling U-Boats. Able to hover over an area longer than a conventional aircraft it was easier to spot submarines from a blimp, freeing up scarce air assets for other duties.

And no, this isn't exactly the Battle of Kursk in terms of violence and action. Still, recording an important piece of US Naval history for future generations is a more than worthy goal.

Blimps and U-Boats