Search Results for: book club

Vintage Treasures: The Hugo Winners, Volumes 1, 2 and 3, edited by Isaac Asimov

The Hugo Winners, Volumes I & II and The Hugo Winners, Volume 3 (Doubleday, 1972 and 1977). Cover designs by F. & J. Silversmiths, Inc, and Robert Jay Silverman I’ve written 1,973 Vintage Treasures articles for Black Gate. (That seems like a lot. Is it a lot? If it were, the paperbacks waiting to be written up wouldn’t be threatening to topple over in a spine-crushing avalanche, right? Still seems like a lot, somehow.) My Vintage Treasures pieces aren’t reviews, sometimes…

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Vintage Treasures: The Arbor House Treasury of Horror and the Supernatural compiled by Bill Pronzini, Barry N. Malzberg, and Martin H. Greenberg

The Arbor House Treasury of Horror and the Supernatural (Arbor House, May 1981) Back in February I surveyed all ten Arbor House Treasuries, calling them a “Hearty Library of Genre Fiction.” I wanted to take a closer look at a few (and I did crack open The Arbor House Treasury of Great Science Fiction Short Novels, edited by Martin H. Greenberg and Robert Silverberg), and this long Memorial Day weekend I’m settling down with The Arbor House Treasury of Horror…

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New Treasures: The Best Science Fiction of the Year: Volume Six edited by Neil Clarke

The Best Science Fiction of the Year: Volume Six (Night Shade, January 25, 2022). Cover by Pascal Blanché It’s here at last! The sixth volume of Neil Clarke’s Best Science Fiction of the Year, long-delayed by supply chain disruptions, pandemic publishing panic, and maybe Pacific pirates — I honestly have no idea. But it’s here. And packed full of stories from the long-ago era of 2020, when the pandemic was fresh and new, everyone was ordering their first masks, and…

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“Deeply Weird”: Craig L. Gidney on The Darkangel by Meredith Ann Pierce

The Darkangel and A Gathering of Gargoyles (Tor Books, 1984 and 1985). Covers by Kinuko Y. Craft Facebook is a great place to discover vintage fantasy. I know, right? It’s not just old people and Bob Byrne talking about actors he recognizes. Earlier this month Craig L. Gidney (A Spectral Hue, Skin Deep Magic) caught my attention with this short post. Before there was Twilight, there was The Darkangel by Meredith Ann Pierce, the original teenage vampire romance novel. The…

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Vintage Treasures: Other Days, Other Eyes by Bob Shaw

Other Days, Other Eyes (Ace, 1972). Cover by J. H. Breslow Bob Shaw was a prolific science fiction writer from Northern Ireland who wrote over two dozen novels, including The Orbitsville trilogy, about the discovery of an intact Dyson sphere orbiting a far star, Medusa’s Children (1977), Who Goes Here? (1977), and perhaps his most popular book, the Hugo-nominated The Ragged Astronauts (1986), the tale of a technologically advanced civilization that builds spaceships out of wood. It wasn’t something you…

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New Treasures: The Body Scout by Lincoln Michel

The Body Scout (Orbit, September 2021). Cover by Lauren Panepinto I rejoined the Science Fiction Book Club over fifteen years ago, because it was the only way to get Jonathan Strahan’s fabulous Best Short Novels anthologies. After a corporate shake-up in 2007 led to the retirement of editor Ellen Asher — who’d been at the helm since 1973 — and Andrew Wheeler was laid off, the SFBC sadly stopped producing original anthologies and those delicious omnibus volumes. I miss them….

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Arthur C. Clarke: Omnibuses, Collections, and Remixes

Omnibuses: Across the Sea of Stars (Harcourt Brace World, 1959) From the Ocean, From the Stars (Harcourt Brace World, 1961) Prelude to Mars (Harcourt Brace World, 1965; book club edition shown) The Lion of Comarre and Against the Fall of Night (Harcourt Brace World, 1968; book club edition shown) Arthur C. Clarke was one of the major science fiction writers of the 1950s through the 1970s; his biggest claim to fame was as coauthor, along with filmmaker Stanley Kubrick, of…

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My Robert A. Heinlein Problem

Do you know someone — a friend, a coworker, a family member — whom you esteem for their many good qualities… and yet whose extreme and undeniable character flaws can sometimes make you want to banish them from your life forever? Of course you do. (Humility and the law of averages should also make you acknowledge that for someone else you know, there’s a good chance that you are that person.) For me, that problematic individual is Robert A. Heinlein….

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“Is There Anybody There?”: James Gunn’s The Listeners

The Listeners by James Gunn First Edition: Scribner’s, October 1972, Jacket design Jerry Thorp (Book Club edition shown) The Listeners by James Gunn Scribner’s (275 pages, $6.95, Hardcover, October 1972) Jacket design Jerry Thorp The late James Gunn, who died just last year, became an SFWA Grand Master in 2007 and was inducted into the SF Hall of Fame in 2015, both recognizing his achievements in science fiction. His individual awards include an Eaton Award for lifetime achievement as a…

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The Art of Things to Come, Part 3: 1961-1963

Science Fiction Book Club brochure (1961) As I related in the first two installments of this series (Part One: 1953-1957, and Part Two: 1958-1960), like tens of thousands of science fiction fans before and after me, I was at one time a member of the Science Fiction Book Club (or SFBC for short). I joined just as I entered my teen years, in the fall of 1976, shortly after I’d discovered their ads in the SF digests. The bulletin of…

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