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  • autumn 2008

    11:48 AM PST, 9/10/2008

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    the edition

    ...classics post free..e               <

    This issue << Cult Speak>>

    +       Regular Features and Reviews

     

    IMPORTANT

    <<navigation>>

    pages may not all load together straight away   -----

    to view all pages go to Blog Archives and repeat click Month

    Recognise the month's cover fragment? All is revealed in Cover Story, p14 

  • 01 contents

    11:45 AM PST, 9/10/2008

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    <in this issue>

    <in this issue>

    02 <foreword>

    03 <book worm>

    04 <thematic>

    05 <briefing: book trends>

    06 <feature story>

    07 <fiver>

    08 <biblio-key>

    09 <gift wrap service>

    10 <rule of thumb>

    11 <rule of thumb>

    12 <guide to grades>

    13 <bespoke wrapping>

    14 <cover story>

    15 <browser endnotes>

    <<navigation>>

    to view all pages go to Blog Archives and repeat click Month

  • 02 foreword

    11:44 AM PST, 9/10/2008

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     <foreword>

     

    Now we are one …

     

    After one year of trading on the online auction house, <the edition> is now an eBay shop.  Reasons to be cheerful, if only since there will be no more exhausting rotation of stock every 10 days.  Let’s be honest though – it may not be September 25th yet, but there’s no disguising the reality behind the change.  September 25th … are you ready?  You better be, for this isn’t merely a price restructuring exercise, it’s a paradigm shift - from auction house to high street retail - and the hostile media response won't change anything (see <thematic>).

     

    Talking of negative feedback, it’s time to fess up that two customers have been dissatisfied enough to leave some at this door.  The ‘negs’ complained about postal charges and descriptions.  In both cases, the criticisms seemed a little unfair to me.  But so what ... it isn’t my perception that matters.

     

    P+P charges are just a plain nuisance to sellers of inexpensive items, as the majority of books are.  You don’t expect handling charges from a ‘real’ bookstore.  Why can’t a virtual bookstore get real? - that’s the question on my mind.  So, in a small test of the practicality of waiving p+p charges, the theme this month is ‘freepost classics’ (to UK customers).  But the issue of post and packing charges isn’t a straightforward one.  Online booksellers balance these charges against the stated price of the book (some charge 1p a book and then hike up the p+p).  There are difficulties, but it would be nice to have that real bookstore feeling, so September 25th will usher in another change for <the edition>.  Why not pay a visit and see for yourself!

     

    The other grievance was about the condition of a vintage first edition.  I don’t actually think there is much wrong here with the actual description of books, and this is reflected in the very positive feedback generally in this area.  However, it does strike me that there <the edition> grading guide is slightly technical and targets book collectors rather than casual readers.  So, over the next couple of months (to allow all existing listings to be altered gradually) there will be a phased overhaul with a much simplified grading system introduced.  This will be based on everyday language rather than jargon. 

     

    Not all change is negative, and sometimes negatives can bring about positives.  Only time will tell if the changes coming our way are ones we'll be glad to embrace.

     

    Happy Reading,

    dene october

    .get classics post free.

    • FREEPOST to UK only (overseas customers: see below) 
    • ADDITIONAL savings UK customers: order more freepost classics at £1 off each additional book (in same transaction only) 
    • UK CUSTOMERS buying a freepost classic may buy any other book in the shop also at freepost (must be at Buy it Now price and within same transaction) 
    • OVERSEAS CUSTOMERS: buy 2 freepost classics, pay just 1 post+packing charge 0R buy 1 freepost classic and any other book in the shop, pay the higher p+p charge only
    • OFFERS END September 30th 2008

     .see the freepost classics listings.

  • 03 book worm

    11:43 AM PST, 9/10/2008

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    <book worm> booker vs bookmakers

     

    Midnight’s Children may be best Booker ever, but Salman Rushdie’s latest novel has not made it to this year’s shortlist.

     

    Rushdie’s 1981 book had people appeal allowing the author beat off critics’ favourite, J. M. Coetzee’s Disgrace.  The Best of the Booker was voted for by ordinary readers around the world earlier this year.  However, a select committee of judges of the Man Booker Prize 2008 has already snubbed the news-worthy author.  His latest book The Enchantress of Florence was simply too ordinary. 

     

    The shortlist, confirmed on September 9th, does not include any of the big name early favourites. The Secret Scripture by Sebastian Barry is now tipped by bookmakers, since Barry was also shortlisted in 2005. But bookmakers will be nervous if Booker judges continue in their contrary mood.

     

    The Booker has always been more about critical kudos than prize money. Then again, when A.S. Byatt won in 1990 with her book Possession, she promised to build a swimming pool in Provence, rather than a literary reputation.

     

     

    The full shortlist: Aravind Adiga The White Tiger; Sebastian Barry The Secret Scripture; Amitav Ghosh Sea of Poppies; Linda Grant The Clothes on Their Backs; Philip Hensher The Northern Clemency; Steve Toltz A Fraction of the Whole. The winner will be announced on October 14th

     

     

     

  • 04 thematic: the month's theme

    11:41 AM PST, 9/10/2008

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    <thematic: the shape of things to come?>

     

    You’ve heard the story about the blind men and the elephant?  I wonder what these gentleman would make of eBay at the moment.

     

    EBay boasts about being all things to all people, from bedroom entrepreneur to large brand, bargain hunter to obsessive completionist.  But when the new eBay roles out in September, will we really be thinking global boot fair … as well as international shopping centre … as well as worldwide auction house?  Can you really be all things to all people and maintain a steady unique selling proposition?

     

    The big shake up of 9/25 comes after a year of many smaller changes which set the groundwork for the paradigm shift to follow.  The growing emphasis on Buy it Now, is one example.  EBay has also been keen to build consumer trust in the fallout of its high court thrashing by luxury goods giant Louis Vuitton.  Although the company denies this, September 25th sees a move away from the hustle and bustle of the auction floor to a more becalming shopping mall experience, one full of reassuring household brands, piped in muzak and the wafting scent of cappuccino and bagels (okay, the tech guys aren’t quite ready for that last bit, but just watch this space).

     

    In the past, eBayers have shown a distinct dislike for change, and the shock of the new may bring with it several unsettling aftershocks.  In February this year, Stateside eBay sellers staged a one week listings strike (in response to relatively minor feedback changes).  While the thought of lower listing fees may appease some sellers, even cheaper fees should attract heavyweight competition from high street chains which, for a brass penny, could upload their entire stock at the click of a mouse.

     

    Others be cynical about ‘lower seller fees’.  For newbies and start-ups, who don’t have an eBay shop, the so-called lower fees can actually be up to four times higher … and eBay wants a bigger cut from sales too.  True, you now get a listings image thrown in for free … er, whether you want it or not.

     

    According to eBay’s Clare Gilmartin, the changes reflect buying patterns over the last few years.  ‘Buyers increasingly want the convenience of shopping for great value items at a fixed price,’ she says.  Indeed, there has been a 60 percent increase in fixed price over auction format, while 43 percent of global sales are now through Buy it Now and Shop Inventory.

     

    All very well.  But, unlike a lot of the competition, part of the eBay USP is that it is a community where the buyers are also the sellers.  And if the sellers can’t compete evenly with the big ‘bricks and clicks’ players, the buying market may change fundamentally, forcing even more changes.

     

    If eBay is an elephant, surely it hasn’t forgotten the community at its core.  Probably it hasn’t, and possibly the shift in its mental image will work for the majority.  But some may close their eyes for a moment, and mistake the elephant for a snake.  It's a good idea to be sure where you stand, come September 25th.

     

  • 05 briefing: book trends

    11:41 AM PST, 9/10/2008

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    <briefing> threads

    More of a fashion statement than a statement about the latest in book trends ... but have you noticed how many boutiques are puffing themselves up with grand displays of antiquarian books?  Men in particular, if window and shelf dressers are to be credited, equate classic threads with leather spines.  It's about self branding, perhaps: a dedicated follower of fashion, not me -- I'm a one off.  But who knows, once these gentlemen suited and booted,  maybe they will tease out one of those fine books.

  • 06 feature story

    11:40 AM PST, 9/10/2008

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    <an a to z of cult speak>

    Androcentric: cult fiction has tended to be guy-centred partly as a response to shrinking masculine space in real life.  Think Iron John (Robert Bly) for men beating their chests deep in the woods.  Back in the 1950s gender space was clearly demarcated – the cellar, for example, the location where Scott Carey, diminished in size, fought and defeated the feminine other embodied by the inch tall Black Widow spider (Richard Matheson, The Shrinking Man) Ballardian (adjective, named after the author) is the mental awareness of something very sinister lurking beneath the veneer of consumer (and often suburban) normality Cut Up: borrowing from the Surrealist painter, Bryon Gysin, William S Burroughs used random combinations of text found in newspapers and books to bring new texts into being.  Musician and artist, David Bowie, borrowed the technique from Burroughs, using it to give voice to his pop character Ziggy Stardust (see BBC Omnibus programme Cracked Actor)Die Young and attain cult immortality, if you believe the many populist books on ‘the ones that burn’ (Malcolm Lowry).  Yukio Mishima was impelled towards death, despite a paradoxical attitude to body cult. Thomas Chatterton, the boy poet, was immortalised by the painter Henry Wallace as a suicidal loner. Death by your own hand isn’t a fool proof formula though. The rising young America writer, Weldon Kees, disappeared on the Golden Gate Bridge, never to be heard of again … or about, for that matter. Ecotopia ‘was the first attempt to portray a sustainable society,’ insists Ernest Callenbach, the author of the 1975 novel.  ‘This more than its modest literary merit, explains its durability,’ he confesses.   It’s certainly the case that there is no shortage of eco cults today.  Even Terry Nation’s cult 1970s TV show Survivors – a green-tinted view of post apocalyptic Britain – is being remade by the BBC. Falling is a recurring motif of cult fiction: in the Walter Tevis novel The Man Who Fell to Earth, Thomas Newton is the Icarus character, an alien whose human transubstantiation is a metaphor of corporate corruption as well as the fallibility of the human condition.   No need to wait for the last judgement … according to The Fall (Albert Camus) it ‘takes place every day’. Genre Blending is the pomo prerogative of cult writers like Stephen King, ostensibly a horror supremo but with more interest in reflecting everyday American life.  Not always proud of the tag Schlock Meister, King has publicly regretted the casual death of so many characters, comparing literary bloodshed to pornography.  Truly transgressive writers like Dennis Cooper provoke category crisis … gay fiction? … how very dare you.  Cooper’s five novel George Miles Cycle tests the boundaries of fiction as characters memorialise their sex-murders of young boys … or do they only fantasise it?   The ‘last true literary outlaw’ (Bret Easton Ellis), Cooper leaves the reader to face up to the dubious pleasure of the text. Hybridity is a popular theme with the integrity of body and identity challenged by the idea of the cyborg.  Notions of pure Japanese national identity are, for example, undermined by the clash of tradition and modernity manifest in Japanese anime (such as the Tomie books by Junji Ito) and manga.   Jefferey Eugenides’ Middlesex, meanwhile, tells the story of a genetic mutation and intersex metamorphosis.  The book itself is a hybrid: according to the author it is ‘part immigrant saga, part psychological novel, part comic epic, part medical mystery’. Imitation is the greatest flattery? Cult books, by definition, draw a small amount of followers.  A very small amount of these see the book less as a work of fiction and more of a template for real life.   Holden Caulfield (J.D. Salinger, The Catcher in the Rye) was the trigger for Mark Chapman to kill pop icon John Lennon.  Chuck Palahniuk’s Fight Club is behind the formation of many bare knuckle clubs.  Director Stanley Kubrick went so far as to withdraw his film of the Anthony Burgess novel A Clockwork Orange when it apparently led to a spate of copycat crimes. Junkies … alcoholics … sex addicts … such are the characters who people the real-to-life landscapes of William S Burroughs, Charles Bukowski and Chuck Palahniuk. Why? ‘Drugs or overeating or alcohol or sex, it is all just another way to find peace’ (Chuck Palahniuk Survivor).  Kipple is also junk, the emotional and material kind that Deckard is forced to sweep away in Philip K Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep.  I have written and sold 23 novels, and all are terrible except one,’ Dick once modestly remarked.  So which, in his opinion, was not kipple?  ‘I am not sure which one,’ he admitted. Linearity … In Stop-Time (Frank Conroy), chronological time is illusory and life memories cannot be trusted.  Arthur Dent concurs: ‘Time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so’ (Douglas Adams The Hitchhikers Guide To The Galaxy). Metropolitan Metamorphosis is the unnamed psychological malaise whose victims succumb to identity fatigue having become alienated or inept in the ways of modern life: in Metamorphosis (Albert Camus) the protagonist wakes up as a beetle while the protagonist of Hunger (Knut Hamsun) recognises how his whole being was undergoing a change, ‘as if something had slid aside in my inner self, or as if a curtain or tissue of my brain was rent in two’. Nobrow: cult fiction is no longer considered low-brow and John Seabrook’s book Nobrow may answer why.  Although the distinction between high and low has blurred, Seabrook argues that ‘culture’ is market-led.  Consumerism confers the knack of appearing high-brow – we can buy culture and be sniffy about ‘commercialism’ in general.  Very bohemian bourgeoisie. Outside: the outsider finds a home in cult fiction.  H. P. Lovecraft’s protagonist wakes utterly alone (The Outsider).  Meursault, the figure in Albert Camus’ The Outsider (aka The Stranger) is morally on the fringes.  Colin Wilson provides a study of outsider-dom in (you guessed) The Outsider, itself a cult classic as a result of divided critical response.  Many cult writers have themselves felt outsiders: J.D. Salinger, Thomas Pynchon and Emily Dickinson all shunned the limelightPriest or profit?  One route to cultdom is to literally start a religion.  L Ron Hubbard’s Dianetics is a case in point.  The founder of Scientology is rumoured to have said that religion was the best way to make money (Stern magazine).  There have also been rumours of contributions to Dianetics by Robert Heinlein, but no proof.  In the latter’s Stranger in a Strange Land, the Martian Smith ‘groks’ that everyone and everything is god, even the humble caterpillar.  Heinlein once told a fan that he would never dream of passing himself as a prophet: ‘anyone who takes that book as answers is cheating himself.  It is an invitation to think – not to believe’. Queercore is more than hardcore gay fiction.  Jean Genet’s imaginative appropriation of banal artefacts, such as a tube of Vaseline, amounts to both a magical use of an everyday object (bricolage, see Levi Strauss, Raw and Cooked) and a symbolic up yours to ‘straight’ policing (see Dick Hebdige, Subculture).   Road to nowhere … never mind destinations, just roll with life, scribble it down as it happens, then type it all up feverishly onto one roll of teletype paper … oh, but first organise the notes obsessively and then revise ‘the roll’ meticulously to make the novel publishable (Jack Kerouac On the Road) … and if all that seems a little too laborious and purposeful, take the fast lane riding low with the Hell’s Angels (Hunter S Thompson).  Steppenwolf is a book by Herman Hesse, a name stolen by a rock group.  Soft Machine …. William Burroughs.   Swann’s Way … Marcel Proust.  Actually the list of rock monikers goes on through the rest of the alphabet.  But back with Hesse, and S, Steppenwolf is about an outsider who considers himself better than those about him.  His punishment? -- to ‘listen to the radio music of life’.  Too true? in Joseph Heller’s Catch 22, there is no single point-of-view that can reveal truth while, in Invisible Man (Ralph Ellison) speaking the truth is to risk social invisibility: ‘I've never been more loved and appreciated than … when I've tried to give my friends the incorrect, absurd answers they wished to hear’  Ultra Violence  is the hyperreal aggressiveness  performed by Alex and his droogs in  A Clockwork Orange.  Anthony Burgess was inspired by British youth subcultures lashing out against consumer-led class change.  Virtual Reality  it’s getting hard to tell reality from what you viddy at the sinnies (Anthony Burgess, A Clockwork Orange); memories aren’t to be relied upon (Philip K Dick Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?) and some lives are better lived virually by far (such as Piers Anthony’s paralysed cop character in Killobyte). Way out of War: there are few classic heroes in cult fiction, most characters, like Billy Pilgrim in Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse Five struggle to make sense of their lives.  The same is true about villains – people aren’t evil, it’s the absurd human conditions they find themselves in.  Such as war.  In Michael Herr’s Despatches, drugs offer a way out.  Billy Pilgrim deals with war by simultaneously inhabiting a better mental world.   Insanity seems the only way out for John Yossarian in Joseph Heller’s Catch 22, except, of course, there isn’t a way out … not even desertion.  Generation X is the lost generation who followed on the heels of the baby boomers (born, therefore, between 1961-1971).  The term was introduced by Charles Hamblett and Jane Deverson in their book of the same name as a way of describing Mod subcultural identity and behaviour.  The vox pop style of the book, much imitated by music and style magazines, gave the youngsters an opportunity to tell their own stories.  In Douglas Coupland’s novel Generation X : Tales for an Accelerated Culture, the characters tell each other stories to deal with ‘mid-twenties breakdown’, ‘boomer-envy’ and  anomie. Yaqui: Carlos Castaneda’s account of shamanic teaching (The Teachings of Don Juan: a Yaqui Way of Knowledge) turns out to have been a sham … or maybe all that peyote resulted in him hallucinating the Mexican’s mystical messages. ZigZag: to zig zag is to take a sidestep from the logical and normal.  ZigZag is the character in Landon J. Napoleon’s eponymous novel whose lightning fast mental detours allow him fresh perspectives on life.  In The Curious Incident of the Dog at Night Time Mark Haddon’s child detective, Christopher Boone, has Asperger Syndrome –he lacks empathy but he’s hot on patterns and truth. 

      

  • 07 fiver

    11:39 AM PST, 9/10/2008

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    <fiver> not so classic titles

     

    Here are five well known classic novels identified by their less familiar working titles.  The regular title is revealed in <endnotes> (page 15)

     

    5 The Sea Cook  |  Robert Louis Stevenson

    4 Something that Happened  |  John Steinbeck

    3 The Chronic Argonauts |  H. G. Wells

    2 All’s Well That Ends Well  |  Leo Tolstoy

    1 First Impressions  |  Jane Austen

     

     

    .get classics post free.

    • FREEPOST to UK only (overseas customers: see below) 
    • ADDITIONAL savings UK customers: order more freepost classics at £1 off each additional book (in same transaction only) 
    • UK CUSTOMERS buying a freepost classic may buy any other book in the shop also at freepost (must be at Buy it Now price and within same transaction) 
    • OVERSEAS CUSTOMERS: buy 2 freepost classics, pay just 1 post+packing charge 0R buy 1 freepost classic and any other book in the shop, pay the higher p+p charge only
    • OFFERS END September 30th 2008

     .see the freepost classics listings.

     

  • 08 biblio-key book collector glossary

    11:38 AM PST, 9/10/2008

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    under construction
  • 09 gift wrap service

    11:37 AM PST, 9/10/2008

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    <gift wrap service>

    Your book can be gift-wrapped (paper and ribbon), together with your message in a card.

    Simply request the service when paying, indicating the recipient, recipient address and 'your message'.

    Your book will then be gift-wrapped, placed in bubble-wrap and secured in a thick, corrugated card sleeve before being sent to the recipient address.

    The cost is £1.25. Please add this to the p&p box on your invoice.