The Top 85 Sci-Fi & Fantasy Books I Bought Yesterday

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  • Опубліковано 28 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 151

  • @Bookpilled
    @Bookpilled  Рік тому +9

    The Whatnot auction page (starts Saturday the 14th at 12pm Pacific time):
    www.whatnot.com/live/e85740d2-d333-4f6a-9c77-8a8b679a7bcf

  • @uncannyvalleywoods7248
    @uncannyvalleywoods7248 Рік тому +4

    Not to further inflate his ego, but Dawkins coined the word meme. It's a neologism with a Greek origin. *insert aKtUaLlY meme* Sorry. :-)

  • @TheWRYYYYYYY
    @TheWRYYYYYYY Рік тому +6

    Thomas Mann's one of my favorite authors of all time. The Magic Mountain remains one of the best novels I've ever read, and I read Joseph and His Brothers not too long ago, a true epic!

  • @scottjones6860
    @scottjones6860 Рік тому +1

    So many cool books. Quite the haul. It was neat seeing a lot of both new covers (to me) and covers that I haven't seen since a kid.

  • @maxungar516
    @maxungar516 Рік тому +16

    cixin liu (2:55) wrote the three body problem, one of the best scifi series ever imo. read it

    • @salty-walt
      @salty-walt Рік тому +2

      Wow. I bet he's never heard of it & never been told that.

    • @outlawbookselleroriginal
      @outlawbookselleroriginal Рік тому +2

      @@salty-walt Irresistible irony.

    • @salty-walt
      @salty-walt Рік тому +2

      @@outlawbookselleroriginal Thanks Steve! My" secret t-shirt phrase" by the way is " Magnetic Irony" so, pretty close. . . ;)

    • @maxungar516
      @maxungar516 Рік тому +3

      @@salty-walt i already commented it on one of his other videos, but mentioned it here because the author's name came up and i actually think it is that good. he also seemed unfamiliar with the name, although chinese pronunciation is a bit inscrutable to the unintroduced westerner. i also haven't heard him mention the author in any of his other vids, and since i think it deserves to be considered as part of the Great Scifi Canon, it's worth repeat mentionings to all parties involved.

    • @myoldchannel0690
      @myoldchannel0690 Рік тому

      It's my favorite. Hey Fit 2B read! Haha
      . seems I run into you everywhere lol

  • @vdr3846
    @vdr3846 Рік тому +2

    Ray Bradbury's picture gives off perfect Grandpa vibes.

    • @Cl0ckcl0ck
      @Cl0ckcl0ck Рік тому

      Good wishes on you. Do beter at school next year and you get 'beter wishes'. Get accepted into a proper university and you might get 'best wishes'. X grandpa. :P

  • @statuscheck5861
    @statuscheck5861 Рік тому +1

    I can relate to adding to a collection. I want to keep everything. To not become a hoarder, I’ve gotten into listing everything and keep until they sell…space pending of course.

  • @adamrichter9599
    @adamrichter9599 Рік тому

    You have the best hauls, I learn a lot from the background you give on the books you've found. I'm currently reading "Breakfast of Champions," having just finished a collection of Robert E. Howard short stories & novellas. I always look forward to seeing what you find in the wild; that signed Bradbury was quite a catch.

  • @chrispernasky9619
    @chrispernasky9619 Рік тому +1

    Your "Outlaw of Gor" is a first edition from December 1967 in what appears to be very good condition. This is a collectors item and I hope you get what it's worth.

  • @MrWeezer55
    @MrWeezer55 Рік тому +2

    I really liked Robinson's Mars trilogy. He sets up a clever device that really delivers the narrative. Most books or series that involve a multi-generational span kinda lose their thrust. In this the main characters have some kind of life-prolonging meds that keep them in the entire length of the story.

  • @sethball2475
    @sethball2475 Рік тому +2

    Whoever ends up with the A. Merritt books is going to have a fine time relaxing with some early Fantasy adventures; actually, The Ship of Ishtar - my favourite of the two - is more along the lines of a rousing sea adventure, while The Moon Pool is the moodier, creepier tale. Just depends whether one is ready for a Sinbad-type excursion (Ship of Ishtar), or more of a Lovecraft/Bram Stoker mash-up (Moon Pool). Or both! I think my fave Merritt so far is Burn, Witch Burn!, then Ishtar.
    Looking forward to the next 5-book round-up. Thanks for the quick progress report.

  • @Cl0ckcl0ck
    @Cl0ckcl0ck Рік тому +1

    Got a Children of Time today in my local 'kringloop' (like a thrift store but without a profit goal and subsidized by local government), €2.50. Good as new and unread. Score!

  • @ajaxplunkett5115
    @ajaxplunkett5115 Рік тому +1

    the slipcase hardcover of Satyricon is no joke. Very important work and Proto-Fantasy influence on genre.
    ---- Also those two Gor books have excellent covers ( not that Boris V's covers aren't good ) and the first 3 books are the ones that are old fashion adventure tales in the ER Burroughs tradition without the S&M bondage stuff in later books.

  • @Jared-rn4cy
    @Jared-rn4cy Рік тому +3

    "Could be wrong...on...everything in my life" 😂

  • @thekeywitness
    @thekeywitness Рік тому

    Skull-face is a fun collection of pulpy Sax Rohmer-type “yellow peril” mystery-horror yarns. Keep it. The photo on the back of Death in Venice is the young actor from the movie adaptation.

  • @joseelacasse3189
    @joseelacasse3189 Рік тому +2

    I keep acting as the French pronunciation police on the tube, but c'est la vie, I guess? J.-K. Huysmans' name is pronounced wheess + mahn. Killer haul, my friend

  • @StegoKing
    @StegoKing 6 місяців тому +1

    The word 'Meme' first appeared in The Selfish Gene by Richard Dawkins in 1976.

  • @sidclark1953
    @sidclark1953 Рік тому +1

    William Bartram's travels in Georgia and Florida in the 1770s and his interactions with the native Americans is really great. He describes some slave-holding Indians being "active, bold and clamorous" while their slaves (subjugated Indians) are the opposite. I read a selection of his writings that was intro'ed by James Dickey. Admittedly the lists of botanical species does get a little tiresome.

  • @SirStuckey
    @SirStuckey Рік тому

    I found a Casca #1 recently. It was in great shape but not long after buying it the cover came off because it was very brittle near the binding. Almost like it was perforated.
    I got it for a good price and I actually want to read it so I'm not too mad about it but it did bum me out.

  • @jbellamy1371
    @jbellamy1371 Рік тому

    I was under the impression that bookclub editions weren't worth anything. And even if "first edition" they are just cheap reprints often of paperback originals. To me, the first edition paperback would be worth way more. I don't even buy bookclub editions when I see them. Should I change my ways?

  • @brandond2005
    @brandond2005 Місяць тому +1

    i've really been enjoying your videos since discovering your channel. What do you use for tracking your collection?

    • @Bookpilled
      @Bookpilled  Місяць тому +1

      My fuzzy mental recall

  • @joelcarson9514
    @joelcarson9514 Рік тому +1

    You keep showing books that I still had, (Before a catastrophic house fire a few years back.) and it's a little jarring. Keep it up.

  • @christophergreenDP
    @christophergreenDP Рік тому +1

    Many Thanks, as always, for the memory tour! Speaking of Vonnegut, have you run across Kilgore Trout’s (aka P. H. Farmer) Venus on the Half-Shell yet?
    Thanks for showing the Wind and The Willows-I just found my old fave, Make Way for Ducklings!
    You just jogged my memory of Watership Down btw-that (and especially the animated movie-1978 ish) was pretty horrific for Children‘s Lit by today’s standards. Ahhh, the Seventies ;) Anyway, Cheers!

    • @Bookpilled
      @Bookpilled  Рік тому +2

      I saw a copy of Venus yesterday, actually. They had it priced at $30.

    • @christophergreenDP
      @christophergreenDP Рік тому +1

      @@Bookpilled Nice! I’m glad it‘s still around…

    • @eyeroll-encore
      @eyeroll-encore Рік тому +2

      I have a copy of Venus in excellent condition than I snagged for a couple bucks from a used bookstore that obviously didn't know what they had.

  • @andykuhn9798
    @andykuhn9798 Рік тому

    NICE! First book up is Midworld, with a sweet Rich Corben cover! :)

  • @jonsheik3060
    @jonsheik3060 Рік тому +1

    Oh this was a fun haul!

  • @TheNSidwell
    @TheNSidwell Рік тому +1

    Love your videos and analysis. However, fyi Richard Dawkins coined the term meme as a replicating entity within a culture, like a gene in biology in his book "The Selfish Gene" 1976

  • @unstopitable
    @unstopitable Рік тому +1

    Just when I saw the thumbnail my jaw dropped.

  • @nunyabizness6595
    @nunyabizness6595 Рік тому +1

    Awesome haul. Dunno about Gor. Isn't that really just Conan ripoff type stuff?

  • @emsleywyatt3400
    @emsleywyatt3400 Рік тому +1

    Give "We" a try. Influential and probably written at risk to the author.

  • @donaldb1
    @donaldb1 Рік тому +2

    SF Masterworks is a great series, with a lot of terrible covers.

  • @shellymarstersdon6268
    @shellymarstersdon6268 Рік тому +1

    Feels like everyone and their mother have science fiction episodes on UA-cam today. Is there some big event going on or something?

  • @danjameson1572
    @danjameson1572 8 місяців тому +1

    Delany and Hacker were married at that time

  • @bobcratchitt.
    @bobcratchitt. Рік тому +13

    The word "meme" was coined by Richard Dawkins.

    • @JackMyersPhotography
      @JackMyersPhotography Рік тому +1

      I know that Dawkins gets the credit for the biological understanding and creation of what a meme is, but who the hell invented dancing baby?

    • @stefandebruijn2654
      @stefandebruijn2654 Рік тому +2

      Came here to say the same. From "The Selfish Gene". I'm still annoyed sometimes by the current use of meme for pictures with a text.

    • @helpfulcommenter
      @helpfulcommenter Рік тому +2

      @@stefandebruijn2654 Me too but that battle was lost a long time ago lol

    • @mike-williams
      @mike-williams Рік тому

      @@JackMyersPhotography Meme doesn't have a biological understanding - it was coined explicitly to parallel gene as a conceptual unit

  • @joannatrefethen1197
    @joannatrefethen1197 Рік тому +6

    Anthologies contain stories by multiple authors. Collections contain stories by a single author. That's the code.

  • @ernestschultz5065
    @ernestschultz5065 Рік тому +14

    I have heard the word 'meme' attributed Richard Dawkins. It says he coined the word in his 1976 book THE SELFISH GENE. And I have also heard it attributed to Norman Mailer of all people.

    • @timhowe2968
      @timhowe2968 Рік тому +1

      Came here to say this.

    • @ByronLina
      @ByronLina Рік тому

      Me too

    • @theoldman2821
      @theoldman2821 Рік тому +4

      It absolutely from Richard Dawkins and I read that book when it first came out. The word sat around for decades until, like an improbable meme, it took off again about 15 years ago. That's memes for you.

  • @ericw4377
    @ericw4377 Рік тому +5

    The word "meme" actually comes from evolutionary biology, first coined by Richard Dawkins in the book, "The Selfish Gene." They are put forth as being an analogue to genes whereby they serve to transmit from person to person various cultural ideas, principles, symbols, etc. An entire field of study, called memetics, arose in the 90s to study the impact of memes in relation to evolution. For bettter or worse, it was hijacked by popular culture to also apply to internet clips and such. Perhaps that phase was initiated by Rushkoff.

    • @helpfulcommenter
      @helpfulcommenter Рік тому +1

      Correct. Rushkoff was instrumental in popularizing it in a lot of his pop-sociology books from the 90s and aughts..... like Media Virus and Coercion, and his novel Ecstasy Club, about the early rave scene in the bay area (which I will admit to being way too into when I was younger lol)

  • @juanmorales9738
    @juanmorales9738 Рік тому +28

    The world can use more people that leave one copy behind rather than take all three. You did good.

    • @waltera13
      @waltera13 Рік тому

      S'truth.

    • @paulm.2515
      @paulm.2515 Рік тому +2

      Someone may find it, or it may sit on the shelf for years and years. At least if someone buys them all and sells them, someone who wants a copy can get it. Double edged sword

    • @juanmorales9738
      @juanmorales9738 Рік тому +3

      Paul M. I don’t think your reasoning is wrong, but I was thinking more of the heart of that person who is faced with that decision of whether to take all three or leave one behind.

    • @Cl0ckcl0ck
      @Cl0ckcl0ck Рік тому +1

      I pick up the first book of the Wheel of Time and a Song of Fire and Ice whenever I see one at my local goodwill shops. I do this to keep people from being tricked into the series. It also makes the later books go into discount for people who are too late to save.

  • @helpfulcommenter
    @helpfulcommenter Рік тому +2

    Hate to be that guy but Rushkoff didn't invent the word meme, that would be Dawkins. Richard Dawkins. In the book "The Selfish Gene" in the 1970s.
    Though Rushkoff was one of the popularizers of the term in the 90s into the aughts. I remember reading his book "Ecstasy Club" in college. which was about the early 90s rave scene in the Bay Area, and the "meme" concept plays heavily in the plot. He's got a new book out that's all about the billionaires building their bunkers to survive the apocalypse. Supposed to be great. I was also a big fan of his books in HS and college, in the sort of Y2K "Adbusters" era of independent media....

  • @civoreb
    @civoreb Рік тому +2

    For Butler, i only see new copies and have yet to come across a used one. Ridiculously rare to come across a used copy

  • @waltera13
    @waltera13 Рік тому +2

    A Bradbury autographed to ME?
    I mean, my birthday just passed, but it's really sweet that you tried, that you thought of me! I'm sorry though, it's probably inappropriate to accept gifts like this from you without ever having spoken to you in person. And I put a moratorium on buying books myself, so . . . although I appreciate it, I'll have to decline. I'm sorry.
    Thanks again.

  • @codenameidk206
    @codenameidk206 Рік тому +2

    Just bought Frankenstein or The Modern Prometheus by Mary Shelley (Penguin Classics one). Let's see if this book really lives up to it's name.

  • @jesserodriguez7680
    @jesserodriguez7680 Рік тому +2

    Don't know if any one as pedantic as me have answered yet, but an Anthology has numerous authors and a Collection is just one author.

  • @Veganrevwithzombies
    @Veganrevwithzombies Рік тому +2

    That Brunner Catch a Falling Star is a re-publish of his first Ace Double novel the 100th Millennium. Ace cut huge chucks out of the novel and in 1968 he restored and re-edited it thus the retitle.

  • @GypsyRoSesx
    @GypsyRoSesx Рік тому +3

    Woah!! Exciting stuff 🎉

  • @benriley6716
    @benriley6716 Рік тому +2

    Three copies of Casca #1 !?!?!?!?!

  • @monster6607
    @monster6607 Рік тому +2

    Have you heard of Marko Kloos - Terms of Enlistment? It's the first book in the series: Frontlines. It got me hooked in and wondered your thoughts on it.

  • @robertmalinowski6804
    @robertmalinowski6804 Рік тому +2

    You're videos are very informative in shedding light on various scifi books. Giving reviews, showing covers, and bits of info will encourage others to buy and read more scifi.

  • @bookfantastic
    @bookfantastic Рік тому +1

    Italian pronunciation quirks became regionalized here in the US with immigration; I am told they are not recognized/understood by Italians from Italy. The pronunciation "BOTCH-a GAL-oop" (my ex girlfriend) is the New Jersey version. The other version is probably also correct. Here in NJ they pronounce prosciutto - "pra-ZHOOT." But New Jersey has the biggest concentration of Italians in the US (I am not one of them), so maybe they carry some weight. Eastern NJ is the only US region where the primary nationality background is Italian.
    The Gor books you show might be first editions. Only later volumes (and not as good, I am told) were DAWs.
    One of my friends is the illustrator of the Goosebumps covers (among other cool stuff). We both agree that the state of TPB book covers these days (lots of graphics versus actual illustration) is deplorable.
    This week, I picked up two original Mickey Spillane paperbacks; Swords and Sorcery edited by DeCamp (1963); and The Girl with the Hungry Eyes (Avon 1949). Yeah, I like old stuff.
    I love a good book haul video. Thanks.

  • @maxturgeon89
    @maxturgeon89 Рік тому +3

    The SF Masterworks are also quite common in Canada, if you ever get north of the border

  • @nlhpens
    @nlhpens Рік тому +1

    I have all (I think) four volumes of Quark; I bought all four together in the mid-1970's. There are later unrelated magazines with the same name. This is the first time I've ever seen another copy of any of this series.

  • @luiznogueira1579
    @luiznogueira1579 Рік тому +1

    Darn! I gave all my Casca books to a friend a few years ago, including N.1. Never thought they'd be worth money...

  • @brucemckay7828
    @brucemckay7828 Рік тому +1

    Hi. I enjoy your channel. I require your help. I'm looking for a sci-fi book I read around 45 years ago.
    I guy, working for a corporation, crashed on a planet.
    The planet was silicone and crystal based. Animal and environment. His space suit gets ripped to shreds, by the "rocks" and "ground ". The only way to survive is to build a suit from the environment.
    There's of course, more, but it's been a long time.
    I'm hoping you or any of your subscribers may have an idea. Thank you.

  • @mike-williams
    @mike-williams Рік тому +1

    I have a signed First ed of Integral Trees somewhere. I walked into my local SF specialist one day and found Larry Niven, Frank Herbert, Ann McCaffrey and Jack Chalker signing !

  • @buyahhhhrooo4418
    @buyahhhhrooo4418 Рік тому +1

    I didn't realize Rushkoff developed the modern iteration of memetics, which branched off Richard Dawkins creation of the word (same thing, just much broader)

  • @TheDrewbe3
    @TheDrewbe3 Рік тому +2

    I’m fairly new to the science fiction world, but why do older sci-fi covers seem so much more inspired than modern ones? Modern cover art seems to be bland a lot of the times, whereas I look at classic sci-fi covers and instantly think, damn, that looks interesting…I wonder what it’s about? They really catch your eye.

  • @PaulJWells
    @PaulJWells Рік тому +1

    Normally I'm a big fan of Kim Stanley Robinson, and I'm no climate-denier but I found "Ministry of the Future" to be too much of a political manifesto. One of the few SF books I was not able to finish.

  • @ByronLina
    @ByronLina Рік тому +1

    The Gor books were a joke back at the SF society at Birmingham University. Universally panned! Are they due a reappraisal?

  • @selwynr
    @selwynr Рік тому +1

    Richard Dawkins 'invented' the world 'meme', in 'The Selfish Gene'.

  • @palebluewave
    @palebluewave Рік тому +1

    great haul. what camera do you use? Your vids are CRISP!

  • @maitlandbowen5969
    @maitlandbowen5969 Рік тому +2

    Thanks. Loved when you said ‘Cliff Simak, my close personal friend’ and you smiled. He is an author that fascinates me. I’d love to have meet him, but sure I’d mess up any conversation I tried to have with him! I’m on a quest to learn much more about him.

  • @j.elizabeth4621
    @j.elizabeth4621 Рік тому +1

    I’m a screenwriter and love sci-fi. Recently I was told my feature is too high budget to sell on its own and it was recommended I write it as a novel first to get fan backing. I love the sci-fi they’re adapting, but I also wish sci-fi could have its own movie space where audiences don’t know what’s going to happen. Using a script to write a novel (or adapting your idea into a script and then writing it as a novel) is great for pacing and action, especially in the sci-fi thriller space. But good lord do I wish people could experience the world without preconceptions.
    I’ve also seen what happens when books are adapted and it’s usually pretty awful.

    • @spectionion1141
      @spectionion1141 Рік тому

      No one could argue with your view about the awfulness of most novel adaptations, of course. However, there are a (relatively small) number of film adaptations that drastically improve on the source texts! For example, after watching Christopher Nolan's film "The Prestige" (one of my all-time favorites), it led me to seek out the eponymous novel by Christopher Priest. I very strongly recommend against bothering to read it! It's utter garbage (my opinion, of course), and it took considerable self-control to slog my way to the end, but I strive not to compare two works of art without seeing them in their entirety. I even corresponded with Priest after I read his vicious attacks on the film, trying to determine if there was anything substantive to his complaints. There was not -- it was mere jealousy. How sad.
      A pair of examples are the two film adaptation of Stanislaw Lem's "Solaris". Lem gets a great deal of praise for his novels, particularly "Solaris". But n contrast to the other Lem novels I've read ("Return from the Stars" and "His Master's Voice"), in my view "Solaris" pales severely. It was badly diminished by technological and practical oversights, for one criticism. So in comparison, both film adaptations, by Tarkovsky (1972) and Soderbergh (2002), excel over Lem's novel.
      But Tarkovsky's film desperately needed something approaching an hour cut from the extremely dull and turgid waste of good celluloid (insomniacs take note). Consider just how much time he wasted showing us seemingly mile upon mile of freeways seen from a car. The conversations en route were of little value and could have been compressed into the space between two off-ramps. Whereas Soderbergh's work is, again in just my view, a great treasure. I would say that it vastly transcends both the novel and the earlier film.
      I'd list other examples, but this is far too long already. The point of all that chatter is that the commonly held notion that film adaptations are always (or nearly always) unworthy of the source novel is simply unjustified.

  • @PaulJWells
    @PaulJWells Рік тому +1

    Neal Asher is Iain M Banks on steroids. Entertaining stuff, but some of the violence gets so extreme that it's ridiculous.

  • @johnrobinson4445
    @johnrobinson4445 Рік тому +1

    "The World Inside" (also, "A Happy Day in blah blah"): best read at age 14 or so.

  • @TY1979KA
    @TY1979KA Рік тому +1

    Some of the gore books were forbidden in germany up until the end of the 90s, due to a huge idealization of slaving and violence

  • @GypsyRoSesx
    @GypsyRoSesx Рік тому +4

    That boy on the back of the Thomas Mann book is the actor who played the object of affection in Visconti’s film adaptation of Death In Venice

  • @Scottlp2
    @Scottlp2 Рік тому +3

    Don’t know that book but Alan Dean Foster wrote a number of fun SF books.

  • @emsleywyatt3400
    @emsleywyatt3400 Рік тому +1

    That copy of "Antimony" by Robinson is, I think, super rare.

  • @sonic31century1
    @sonic31century1 Рік тому +1

    The first 8 Gor books were published by Ballentine Books and the rest were published by DAW Books. The first few books actually have some good world building.

  • @outlawbookselleroriginal
    @outlawbookselleroriginal Рік тому +2

    I've read Petronius -'The Satyricon' is often described as the oldest novel in the world- it's good, but fragmentary and episodic as some of the text is lost. The Fellini film of it is a blast. I've read 'Serotonin' too, but then I like MH's stuff- bracingly grim. Huysmans is the man. You should keep that 'Quark', Matt, as they are uncommon and important. M John Harrison is a genius and I think he'll resonate with you, great guy I've known for decades. Keep the Merrit and Cabell, too, I'd say- required reading. Good vid as ever!

    • @Bookpilled
      @Bookpilled  Рік тому +2

      Thanks, Stephen. I saw Pastel City crop up in one of your vids and have been hoping to run into it. Hope you're well.

    • @outlawbookselleroriginal
      @outlawbookselleroriginal Рік тому +1

      @@Bookpilled I'm fine thanks, Matt. Old and in the way but still rockin' it!

  • @DuaneJasper
    @DuaneJasper Рік тому +1

    Lols, you're going to have some fun with The Satyricon if you're going into it blind. I won't give anything away. Fascinating backstory about it too

  • @awldune
    @awldune Рік тому +2

    Integral Trees is fun

  • @outlawbookselleroriginal
    @outlawbookselleroriginal Рік тому +1

    ...and that Mann is a film tie-in cover, by the way.

  • @BubbaCoop
    @BubbaCoop Рік тому +1

    I just found a signed Bradbury for $1.25 today

  • @jonsheik3060
    @jonsheik3060 Рік тому +1

    I'll add that The Integral Trees is the only Niven I didn't like. :-)

  • @hypatia4754
    @hypatia4754 Рік тому +3

    I have that copy of Huysman's Against Nature from my university studies in the 80s. An amazing book, well worth reading. Didn't know it was rare. I also have a thrifted copy of Joanna Russ's The Adventures of Alyx which I bought maybe 30 years ago and still haven't read (it's The Women's Press SF edition). I have never ever heard anyone talk about it, or even about Joanna Russ. I think that's my next read. Thanks for an interesting haul!

  • @eyeroll-encore
    @eyeroll-encore Рік тому +1

    Nice. I need an ugly copy of A Case of Conscience. I travel with whatever I'm reading and my copy of CoC is a nice first book club edition which shan't leave the house.

  • @darrylldoucette6895
    @darrylldoucette6895 Рік тому +1

    That is quite the haul. What city is this guy in? I want to go there and be a book hound.

  • @ParthapratimsChannel
    @ParthapratimsChannel Рік тому +1

    Are you from another planet? Are these books from other planet?

  • @phillylifer
    @phillylifer Рік тому +1

    This was pretty cool. Thanks for sharing.

    • @Bookpilled
      @Bookpilled  Рік тому +1

      Thank you, Anonymous Troll Demon.

  • @myoldchannel0690
    @myoldchannel0690 Рік тому +1

    I thought Richard Dawkins came up with the meme.

  • @danjameson1572
    @danjameson1572 8 місяців тому +1

    wayland drew I believe is John Brunner

  • @raresaturn
    @raresaturn Рік тому +1

    Richard Dawkins invented the word Meme

  • @AssaultSpeed
    @AssaultSpeed Рік тому +1

    Did you get that book in Maxwell s house of books?

  • @Tetsujin-28
    @Tetsujin-28 Рік тому +2

    Always fun to view great content. A big haul with some wild books.

  • @NicholasTSilveira
    @NicholasTSilveira Рік тому +2

    Love that edition of The World Inside. It’s also one of the reasons I read so much science fiction now. From your recommendation actually, thanks

  • @rickkearn7100
    @rickkearn7100 Рік тому +1

    BP does that "Best of Isaac Asimov" 12 stories book contain a story titled "Victory Unintentional"? Great haul and, how goes the "Alliance"? I've got that "Tarnsman of Gor" edition, original Ballantine issue. It was good reading IMO, at the tender age of 17. Thanks for link to the auction. Great post as always! Cheers.

  • @OurRawHeart
    @OurRawHeart Рік тому +4

    What a treat. A double whammy of book hauls, from you and Moid!!!

  • @donaldb1
    @donaldb1 Рік тому +1

    _Ministry for the Future_ is very much in the mode of documentary fiction and to that extent possibly the most KSR book KSR has written so far. I think you would possible have to be _very interested_ in climate change to get a lot out of it. 2140 has a similar background, but a lot more of the traditional pleasures of character and story.

  • @ronaldwilliams2456
    @ronaldwilliams2456 Рік тому +1

    Pronounced HWEEZ-Man.

  • @chrisw6164
    @chrisw6164 Рік тому +2

    Send that Anne Mccaffrey set to Bob.

  • @OXyShow
    @OXyShow Рік тому +1

    This channel is a gem

  • @mael6834
    @mael6834 Рік тому +1

    MIdworld I read and reread that as a kid.

  • @supagremlin3274
    @supagremlin3274 Рік тому +1

    Tell your friend Cliff I enjoyed his little known book City I got from your auction after he gifted it to you.

  • @entwiner1
    @entwiner1 Рік тому +1

    "Against Nature" is also the "Yellow Book" referred to by Oscar Wilde as one of the immoral influences in "The Picture of Dorian Gray".

  • @ajaxplunkett5115
    @ajaxplunkett5115 Рік тому +2

    Someday I may plead with you to do a sharp , crisp 14 min video on how and why genre cover art was superior to modern genre art/ book design of today. It's at a point where finding sci fi / fantasy in the wild just for the covers is worth it!

    • @outlawbookselleroriginal
      @outlawbookselleroriginal Рік тому +2

      Not to pre-steal Matt's thunder, but I have a video coming up on this- plus I think Matt and I will have different but complimentary takes on this, being of different generations. But I'd like a clip on this from Matt too.

    • @waltera13
      @waltera13 Рік тому

      I'll agree with you on that!

    • @waltera13
      @waltera13 Рік тому +1

      @@outlawbookselleroriginal There's also the US/UK subjective taste issues to add to the complementary spice. ( Was that the one with the little spirals in her hair?) You know I've got long term issues surrounding airbrushed science fiction covers which in the States usually signaled a children's book from scholastic, or a knockoff of such, where in the UK it was a sign that the book might be off the standard path. At least we all agree that Chris Foss is boss.

    • @outlawbookselleroriginal
      @outlawbookselleroriginal Рік тому +1

      @@waltera13 -Yes, the transatlantic barroer aesthetic. Foss is bosss- well, after Jim Burns for me. You'll find my upcoming SF covers vid will have a spin you won't find elsewhere- have a great day, my friend!

  • @mefogus
    @mefogus Рік тому +2

    The Satyricon edition is lovely. An interesting aspect of that book is that it was what some consider the first (or at least a very early) example of decadent literature. Huysmans' main character in Against Nature talks about it quite a bit.

  • @thummumcrysanth
    @thummumcrysanth Рік тому +1

    I highly recommend Harry Turtledove's Videssos books--fantasy inspired by the Byzantine empire. It is a crime that the Misplaced Legion and Krispos series have not been reprinted in hardcover editions.

  • @leebronock887
    @leebronock887 Рік тому

    Somewhat of an origins issue. Dad read "Wind in the Willows" to me at bedtime when I was three. It was full steam ahead from there. Stay safe.

  • @boromirjonah5774
    @boromirjonah5774 Рік тому +1

    Nice Bradbury book. I read "earthmen and strangers" in about 3 sittings this past summer. Found it in a store near me called "The Great Escape" Vinyl, comics, etc. BTW totally off subject I have become aware that Greg Bear passed away in November. Just surprised I hadn't seen anything on youtube anywhere. His Blood Music is so great.

  • @TheEricthefruitbat
    @TheEricthefruitbat Рік тому +1

    It's good to see Titan appear on a book channel, even if briefly. I enjoyed Varley's Titan/Wizard/Demon series when I read it long ago, and I never see a reference to it (much like Alien Speedway). The series does get kind of weird as it goes on, though.
    The only book I have re-read more than The Andromeda Strain is The Foundation Trilogy.