Monday, May 28, 2018

More New Releases

Some of these debuted at the Medievalist's Congress a few weeks ago, but took a while to wend their ways through other channels.  Ordering and format details are at the bottom of this post.

First up is Fingers of Fear, by J.U. Nicolson, originally published in 1937.  This comes from the original dust-wrapper blurb:

Good horror stories are among the great rarities of the publishing world. We are fortunate in having this thrilling narrative unfolded by J.U. Nicolson, whose rich imagination has produced such volumes of poetry as “The King of the Black Isles” and “Sonnets of a Minnesinger,” and whose already well developed ability to spin a tale was sharpened during the long years he spent on his monumental modern English version of Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales. It is with good reason, then, that we expect Fingers of Fear to take its place beside such great horror stories as Dracula and The Turn of the Screw.

 I introduced the 2001 Midnight House limited edition reprint of Fingers of Fear, and have updated my Introduction for this new edition. 

J(ohn) U(rban) Nicolson (1885-1944) was a Chicago warehouse manager with literary interests. Fingers of Fear (1937) was his only novel, a precursor to the melodramatic horror of the 1960s like the television show Dark Shadows.


Next up is Monk's Magic, originally published in 1931, a delightful precursor to Mervyn Wall's Fursey books. Monk’s Magic, by Alexander de Comeau,  tells the story of Brother Dismas, who works on behalf of his Abbott, stealthily studying the black arts (he has been absolved in advance for his sins), trying to discover the elixir of life. After many failures, Dismas ventures out into the world to find those previous and successful fellow-seekers who must surely still live. Dismas acquires some marvelous friends and grows up during his quest. The tale is Rabelaisian in the best sense, witty and well-written.




Formats and ordering details: 


Fingers of Fear, by J.U. Nicolson, Introduction by Douglas A. Anderson
Trade paperback edition ($16.00) sold via Amazon (and European affiliates) ISBN 9781987626629. Amazon.com at this link. Amazon.co.uk at this link.
Kindle edition, sold via Amazon and affiliates.

Monk’s Magic, by Alexander de Comeau
Trade paperback edition ($16.00) sold via Amazon (and European affiliates) ISBN 9781987508826. Amazon.com at this link.  Amazon.co.uk at this link.
Kindle edition, sold via Amazon and affiliates

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Three new books!

This is the first batch of new announcements, as the run-up to the annual Medievalist's Congress in May in Kalamazoo, Michigan, continues.

First, a compilation of my own Late Reviewsmy review column of older and odder books that I have done in the first thirty issues of Wormwood, plus additional "late reviews" (new and reprinted from other sources).  In many instances these entries have been revised, as I have learned new things since the original version was published.

“Doug Anderson’s regular ‘Late Reviews’ column in Wormwood is a treasury of information and commentary on some of the rarest, most obscure and strangest books in our field.  It is infused by Doug’s shrewd and unflinching assessments; bad books are named as such, overlooked achievements are justly celebrated.”  —Mark Valentine, editor of Wormwood 
“In his wonderful ‘Late Reviews’ Doug Anderson boldly goes where few readers have gone before.  Rather than write about the familiar classics of fantasy and supernatural literature, he explores the genre’s back alleys and waste lands, rediscovering dozens of strange and strangely appealing titles, most of them half forgotten, if remembered at all. Who else has read Guy Ridley’s The Word of Teregor and John William Harding’s A Conjuror of Phantoms and Erica Fay’s The Road to Fairyland or, it would seem, the complete works of Anthony Dyllington, author of The Unseen Thing? When Doug praised the wit of  Alexander de Comeau’s Monk’s Magic—and likened it to Mervyn Wall’s The Unfortunate Fursey—I immediately went searching for a copy.  Far more than just a collection of  essays, Douglas A. Anderson’s Late Reviews is a valuable reference, a guide for the curious reader and, not least, a source of rare literary entertainment.” —Michael Dirda, Pulitzer Prize-winning critic and author of Classics for Pleasure and On Conan Doyle

Formats and ordering details at bottom.

The second new title is the first reprint in 115 years of Ferelith, by Lord Kilmarnock (1876-1928), with a new introduction by Mark Valentine.  Fans of Ferelith include André Gide and Julian Green.

“This wonderful book made me forget some of my present worries. It is the story of a woman the father of whose child is a phantom—an admirable theme which is artistically treated. . . . It delights me.”  —Julian Green
“This much-needed first reprint offers connoisseurs of the dark fantastic a rare minor masterpiece, too long overlooked. Ferelith should now take its place as one of the strange great visions in the library of the Gothic.” —From the “Introduction” by Mark Valentine

Ordering details at bottom.

And the third title, for now, is Barry Pain's short fantasy novel, with a long subtitle: Going Home: Being the Fantastical Romance of the Girl with Angel Eyes and the Man Who Had Wings. Barry Pain (1864-1928) is remembered today primarily for his excellent short horror stories. Going Home was originally published in 1921. According to Pain himself, writing in 1924, it was well-received by critics but sold poorly (this fact is corroborated by the book’s rarity today). Yet Pain still cited it as his best book. And Pain’s friend and sometime collaborator, James Blythe, noted in his own copy: “In my opinion this is Barry’s best book up to the present.”

Going Home is Nodens Chapbooks No. 4. 





Ordering details:



Late Reviews, by Douglas A. Anderson  

Trade paperback edition ($25.00) sold via Amazon (and European affiliates) ISBN 9781987512564. Amazon.com at this link. Amazon.co.uk at this link

Kindle edition, sold via Amazon and affiliates.


Ferelith, by Lord Kilmarnock. Introduction by Mark Valentine.
 
Trade paperback edition ($16.00) sold via Amazon (and European affiliates) ISBN 9781987736700. Amazon.com at this link. Amazon.co.uk at this link
Kindle edition, sold via Amazon and affiliates

Going Home, by Barry Pain.

Trade paperback edition ($10.00) sold via Amazon (and European affiliates) ISBN 9781987571288.
Amazon.com at this link. Amazon.co.uk at this link.
Kindle edition, sold via Amazon and affiliates.



Monday, November 13, 2017

New: THE MAN WHO LIVED BACKWARDS AND OTHER STORIES by Charles F. Hall

Here's a recent publication that was delayed a bit for production issues, but is out now and available.

In my anthology Tales Before Narnia (2008), I included a story which partly inspired The Great Divorce by C.S. Lewis. That story was "The Man Who Lived Backwards" by Charles F. Hall.  Hall wrote two other short stories, making in total three stories, all in the style of H.G. Wells.  This booklet collects all three stories, the entire known output by the promising Charles F. Hall. Ordering details below.


Ordering details: 

The Man Who Lived Backwards and Other Stories, by Charles F. Hall
Trade paperback edition ($10.00) sold via Amazon (and European affiliates) ISBN 978-1976499418.
Amazon.com at this link.

Sunday, September 24, 2017

A New Book!

Nodens Books is pleased, at last, to announce a new publication is out! (More new books coming soon.)



Here is a long-overdue reprint of The Laughing Elf, by Ronald MacDonald, the only fairy story by Ronald in the style of his famous father, George MacDonald. On its original publication in 1922, Henry Savage called it:
“A work of genius, bringing with it what Walter Pater calls ‘a strange new beauty.’ . . . it is going to last, is this book of fairy tales strung on a string as it were. The author is Ronald MacDonald, a son of that George MacDonald whose name is one still to conjure with”



Order details and formats follow.

The Laughing Elf, by Ronald MacDonald
Trade paperback edition ($12.00) sold via Amazon (and European affiliates) ISBN 978-1976491627. 

Amazon.com at this link

Kindle edition, sold via Amazon and affiliates. Amazon.com at this link.


Thursday, May 11, 2017

Nodens Books Revival

Nodens Books was dormant for a while, but is reviving with several new projects in the works, ranging from Tolkien scholarship to weird fiction to classic fantasy. Join our blog-post email list (at right).

Some books in preparation:

Fiction

Alexander de Comeau, Monk's Magic [classic fantasy]
Kenneth Morris, The Family of Pwyll [Comprising The Fates of the Princes of Dyfed, and the complete Book of the Three Dragons]  [classic fantasy]


Non-fiction

Richard C. West, On Tolkien's Interlace and Other Essays

And others! Watch for further announcements soon.

Sunday, July 22, 2012

New Release Earl H. Reed's THE GHOST IN THE TOWER

My main computer spent most of this past month in the repair shop, so I'm a bit late in announcing this new title. This is number two of our Chapbooks series. It's a little off-trail from my usual interests, but I particularly like the title story, which does indeed center on a ghost, though the use of the supernatural in it is more for historical and social commentary, rather than the atmospherics usually found in a ghost story.

The Ghost in the Tower: Sketches of Lost Jacobia, by Earl H. Reed. 

Earl H. Reed (1863-1931) was a Chicago area writer and artist who had a special passion for the dunes along the eastern and southern shores of Lake Michigan, authoring and illustrating several books like The Dune Country (1916), Sketches in Duneland (1918) and The Silver Arrow and Other Indian Romances of the Dune Country (1926).

Reed’s two small booklets on Jacobia, the estate of his friend Henry W. Jacobs in southwestern Michigan, were published privately as Sketches in Jacobia (1919) and The Ghost in the Tower: An Episode in Jacobia (1921). The former is a short descriptive narrative while the latter is an intriguing ghost story with particular resonances to modern culture. Both rare booklets are here reprinted for the first time, and represent the only literary artifacts concerning Jacobia, a small but intriguing chapter in the history of southwestern Michigan.

Introduction by Douglas A. Anderson.

The Ghost in the Tower: Sketches of Lost Jacobia  is available as a trade paperback.

To order via Amazon (US), click here.  

To order via Amazon UK, click here.    

Also available via other Amazon outlets, France, Germany, etc. 

Published by Nodens Books.
www.nodensbooks.com
ISBN 978-0615661452  [trade paperback]





Friday, June 15, 2012

New Release: Robert Nelson SABLE REVERY

Just published is the first of our series of Nodens Chapbookssmaller projects that don't make up full-sized books.

Sable Revery: Poems, Sketches and Letters
by Robert Nelson 

Robert Nelson (1912-1935) was a contributor of verse to Weird Tales magazine in the mid-1930s, and of verse and prose to fan magazines like The Fantasy Fan. He was also a correspondent of H.P. Lovecraft and Clark Ashton Smith.

This slim volume collects all of his published poems, prose-sketches and letters, which date from the last four years of his short life.

Also included are five letters by H.P. Lovecraft, four to Nelson and one to Nelson's mother after the young man's death.


"His promise in the field of literature seemed to me very considerable; for despite the marks of youthful construction—indefiniteness or overcolouring now and then—his work had a distinct imaginative richness and atmospheric power which was rapidly improving through criticism and self-discipline. I expected to see him develop like other youths whose careers I have watched—August W. Derleth, Donald Wandrei, Frank B. Long, etc.—who are now well-established figures in the world of weird writing."            
                                                                                                         H. P. Lovecraft on Robert Nelson



Sable Revery is available as a trade paperback.

To order via Amazon (US), click here

To order via Amazon UK, click here.
 

Also available via other Amazon outlets, France, Germany, etc.

Published by Nodens Books.
www.nodensbooks.com
ISBN 978-0615652252  [trade paperback]



Table of Contents:

Introduction  by  Douglas A. Anderson

I. Poems

“Below the Phosphor”
“The Unremembered Realm”
“Sable Revery”
“Fragment”
“Dream-Stair”
“Under the Tomb”
“Jorgas”
“Night of Unrest”

II. Sketches
“The Weird Tale (A Dialogue)”
“Lost Excerpts”
“Trilogy of Death”

III. Letters

Appendix. Letters by H.P. Lovecraft

Sources