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 Friday, October 12, 2007
More on Book Collecting
Posted by maggie

I've been exploring exactly what it is that I found. For example, one place I look to find out what printing something is or what is being asked for a certain title is Bookfinder.

So I checked Isobel by James Oliver Curwood (New York: Grosset & Dunlap, May 1913), which I found, complete with the original dustjacket. And I actually can't find a copy listed (in four pages of listings) with the original jacket. So is it -- oooo! -- rare? But who's looking for it these days? Not many, I'd bet.

(And I'm re-posting this, because The Evil Glitch attacked my first attempt to post this, too. OK, last post of the evening then.)



10/12/2007 6:54:57 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
Photoplay Book Collecting
Posted by maggie

Another type of book collecting was brought to mind, as I went through what I bought last night. (Did I mention that the books cost 50 cents each?)

It's the books that were illustrated with photos from films based on them. I bought one deliberately to give to a photoplay book collector at work. But I discovered there were three other books that I'd bought for myself that were also photoplay books: Rafael Sabatini's The Sea-Hawk, Gene Stratton-Porter's Michael O'Halloran, and Booth Tarkington's The Turmoil. I wonder whether any of the three films has survived ...



10/12/2007 6:37:25 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
Hah, Nasty Blog Bug! I Have Defeated You!
Posted by maggie

I take my hat off to myself!

The Evil Blog Bug that likes to delete my posting has been thwarted again, thanks to my remembering to copy the posting before hitting "Post to Weblog."

Not that its loss would have bugged anyone but me. Nevertheless, my meanderings about what I bought last night have been preserved. Have atcha, Glitch!



10/12/2007 6:32:12 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
The Haul from the Book Sale
Posted by maggie

I've finally noted a list of the 73 books I bought last night. At one point, I thought of posting them here, but my guess is that anyone's interest but mine would quickly lag.

A few items come to mind, though.

For example, I bought:

Robert W. Chambers, The Common Law, New York, D. Appleton and Company, August 1911

-- and found later it contained many illustrations by Charles Dana Gibson. Moreover, it was dedicated to Gibson. Sweet!

Of most comics interest was probably a beat-up copy of:

Palmer Cox, The Brownies Kind Deed Stories and Sketches for Young Readers with Pictures Specially Designed to Please the Little Ones, Chicago: W. B. Conkey Company, 1903

I found it intriguing because there was work therein by other contributors in addition to Cox. (Visitors to the Geppi Entertainment Museum in Baltimore will know that Cox was a pioneer in the world of licensed pop culture, thanks to his Brownies.)



10/12/2007 6:29:05 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Thursday, October 11, 2007
Wow! I just looked at the Line Behind Me
Posted by maggie

It's a sign of how long it took my Super-Phone to log on that the line behind me now seems to be 30 or more long. It's out of sight behind the bookshelves, anyway. Memo for next year: It's a good idea to get here half an hour early. Woo hoo!



10/11/2007 6:21:07 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
Because I Don't Have Enough Books, Right?
Posted by maggie

So I'm standing in line at the Neenah Public Library. A dozen people are standing in front of me (and more are sitting), as we prepare to wait for 20 more minutes to pay $3 to take the first crack at the annual book sale here. A couple years ago I bought more than 100 Nick Carter dime novels for less than 75 cents each here (of which 8 were ones J. Randolph Cox didn't have -- till I sent them to him), so you never know what you'll find. Happy people are chatting with each other about favorite authors, building bookshelves, and what's in public domain. Nice.



10/11/2007 6:14:51 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
Tom Batiuk Is on NPR Right Now
Posted by maggie

On Talk of the Nation at the moment, he is discussing the death of Lisa. It'll be available shortly online, complete with comments from callers.



10/11/2007 2:59:09 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, October 10, 2007
A Golden Age Holiday Crossover
Posted by maggie

Speaking of the number of holidays to be found in Golden Age comics, how's this (from one of my favorite stories)?

It appeared in Santa Claus Funnies (Dell Four Color #175, Dec 47) and is oddly up to date. Seems that the Easter Bunny was getting ready to deliver eggs because he thought it was spring, thanks to warm weather and no snow. (Art and script was by Walt Kelly.)



10/10/2007 2:55:02 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
Storing Comics Stuff
Posted by maggie

In the course of clearing the way through bookshelves to the basement ashpit, I've found a bunch of odd items that are tricky to display. Have you found a good way to display things -- or have you, like me, just tossed them in a random box to deal with later?

For example, I found one of those bas-relief Dark Knight Frank Miller "posters." It consists of a plastic-formed Batman figure, teeth clenched, glued to a card backing. Seeing as how it was produced in the mid-1980s, the glue to the backing has dried to virtual uselessness -- but the piece is, nevertheless, in pretty good shape.

Is it highly collectible? Or just something to go back in a storage box?

(In the meantime, I smile to recall that someone -- Peter David, maybe? -- customized it by putting a tiny toothbrush in Batman's hand, so Batman appeared to be posing nobly to brush his teeth.)



10/10/2007 10:52:42 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [1]
More Holiday Comics
Posted by maggie

Brent gave me a hand with my home scanner yesterday, so I'm hoping it'll eventually mean more pictures on this text-heavy blog. I tried a scan with which I'm not satisfied (despite the fact that it was done on the same scanner that came up with the images below). More experimentation is due.

Much more experimentation.

In the meantime, though, here are two more holiday covers.







10/10/2007 10:47:57 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Tuesday, October 09, 2007
Mulling Holiday Comics
Posted by maggie

I'm going to discuss holiday comics in the next print installment of Beautiful Balloons, so yesterday I began a casual search for such comics -- both in my own collection and in information sources. While I think the greatest number of Christmas releases probably (logically?) occurred in Western's March of Comics title, I think it's also interesting that Christmas comics in general have almost disappeared.

Paul Dini's Jing notwithstanding, the vast majority of creators (and publishers) recently seem to have cut way back on Christmas, while increasing Halloween output.



And when was the last time an Easter comic book came out?




10/9/2007 10:38:37 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Monday, October 08, 2007
Barks eBay Auction Reveals Western Pay Deals
Posted by maggie

Man, we almost miss the news sometimes!

A casual saunter through some eBay categories I check now and then just turned up an auction ending in less than eight hours: Jerry Weist is auctioning some original "Request for Payment" slips from Uncle Scrooge creator Carl Barks. They take us behind the scenes of Golden Age comics creation -- including the creation of Uncle Scrooge, since one of those vouchers is for the first story in which Scrooge appeared.

Check it out!

P.S. And it sold for $2,557!



10/8/2007 12:23:57 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]