Lost worlds and ports of call

Tag: DAW Books

A Snippet of SF History

A decade or two ago you still could buy class SF/Fantasy paperbacks at near-cover prices (or less!). These days, certain Sf/Fantasy paperbacks once published for less than $4 fetch $20 plus on eBay or other online sellers. This is especially true of the Ballantine series of fantasy books from writers such as Arthur Machen, Clark Ashton Smith, and others, published in the 1970s and 1980s. It’s also true for the DAW “Best Of” anthologies, from Fantasy, Horror, and SF.

It’s also true, as I recently learned, of the multi-volume series from DAW Books with the titles, “Isaac Asimov Presents the Greatest SF Stories.” These books were published from 1979 to 1992. Each volume collected the “best of” stories published in the years 1939 through 1963 (25 volumes in all). Although I have some of the books in DAWs other anthologies, I’d never come across Asimov’s series. This changed when I found volumes 10 and 11, both in near pristine condition, and each available for the shockingly low price of $3.99.

You might consider this a victory of significant proportions, given that some books are sold online for many times that amount. That is, until you look for the other 23 books in the series and realize that trying to collect them all would leave a massive dent in anyone’s wallet. Then again, I’m a haphazard collector; I simply shrugged when I saw those prices from online seller: if I come across any other of the volumes in this series, I might (or might not) buy them, but I’m not on the hunt for unknown conditions available only online.

Volume 10 was published in August 1983 and contained stories from 1948 by writers like Henry Kuttner, H. Beam Piper, A. E. van Vogt, Judith Merril, Ray Bradbury, John D. MacDonald, and others.

Volume 11 was published in March 1984 and contained stories from 1949 by writers like Isaac Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke, Clifford D. Simak, C. M. Kornbluth, Theodore Sturgeon, and others.

It’s strange, then, to look at the table of contents and see in each book the majory of authors listed are notable names, giants even in the field of science fiction. These were stories written almost a century ago. Fast forward to a amere handful of years prior to the present, and almost no authors in current anthologies are memorable writers. Whatever happened to the field of science fiction? Will any current writers in the SF/Fantasy field be relevant, or even remembered, 80-100 years from now?

Book added: Vance’s Star King

I bought my first Jack Vance book back in 1985, after hearing a recommendation for this author from Øyvind Myhre. Myhre’s a Norwegian SF and fantasy author, whom I read mostly between 1984 and 1988. In 1985 I was at a conference, and Myhre mentioned Vance as one of his favorite authors. When I returned home, I went straight away to a bookstore to look for books by Vance. I found one or two, and he quickly became my favorite author.

In 1987 I was in the US for three weeks. There I attended two week-long seminars, with a week in-between. That week, I crashed at someone’s house in New Jersey. While there, I took the bus and train into New York, and found some used book stores. I returned home with a stack of books, including many DAW editions of Jack Vance books. In 1988, I was back in the US, on a permanent basis. I found more Vance paperbacks. Once I began to widen my search, I started to acquire every Vance book I could find, mostly in hardback. I sought out every Underwood-Miller edition I could afford. At that time, some were bought for $15, which I thought was a great deal of money then. Now, some of these books are listed for ten times what I paid.

It’s been many years since I read all of Vance’s books. It’s also unusual these days to find any Vance book in paperback in the used bookstore (and even rarer in a bookstore that sells current books). Of the many Vance books I still have in paperback, 14 are DAW editions. (Most of my Vance books are in hardback now). I hardly ever look at the “V’ section while in used book stored in town.

However, I recently came across a pristine copy of the DAW edition of Vance’s Star King. This is the first of the five Demon Prince books. I own the Underwood-Miller books in hardcover, and only one of the DAW books in paperback—The Palace of Love. Other copies I’ve seen in book stores have been broken, mangled ones. This copy was in superb condition, and carried a sticker price of less than $4.

Yes, I deprived someone from discovering Jack Vance. Still, I wanted this book. Originally published in 1964, this DAW book was printed in September, 1978. I love the DAW covers, the yellow spines, the numbers listed on the covers, and even the smell of them. Finding any of the old DAW paperbacks in great shape these days is getting harder and harder, at least in my narrow locale. Perhaps if I went to other bigger cities I might have better luck.

In the past, I’ve tended to ignore some of the Vance paperbacks if I had them already in hardback. I’ve missed out on at least two DAW books in great shape for that reason (Nopalgarth and the Magnus Ridolph collection), and I still regret those decisions. Once, I had the Grafton (UK) editions of the Lyonesse trilogy, and I gave those away. That still gnaws at me.

My criteria these days? Be in good shape, and I’ll get it. After all, there is no other writer like Jack Vance. And, there never will be another writer like Vance.

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