Or, in soap opera parlance: Can a Frankenstein's monster find love with a mad scientist's beautiful daughter? This was first published in 1913, and alas, it shows.THE
MONSTER
MENNumber Thirteen was what they called him--the latest and best of Dr. Von Horn's attempts to make life from lifeless chemicals. He found himself an almost-human on Von Horn's hideaway jungle island off the coast of Borneo. He saw the monsters that preceded him and grew used to those hideous mockeries of humanity.Not until Number Thirteen met the American girl who was Von Horn's unwilling prisoner did he realize how different he was from the others.Because, monster or not, he turned against his master and threw in his lot with the girl and his friends--in a desperate attempt to escape the island of terror.
Sunday, December 4, 2016
The Monster Men by Edgar Rice Burroughs (Ace, 1972)
Lifeline was having a pre-Christmas mini-bookfair, and I found this one one of the tables:
Wednesday, November 30, 2016
The Mysterious Affair at Styles by Agatha Christie (Pan, 1959)
And here is the Great Detective's introduction to the world:HERCULE POIROT...today the most popular detective in fiction since Sherlock Holmes, made his bow to the world in this book.No one had heard the name AGATHA CHRISTIE when she shyly sent the MS. to a London publisher. He rejected it! So did others. Then one more far-seeing accepted the new author's work. It became famous--and Christie fans place it among the very best Poirot tales.Intriguing clues marked the murder at Styles Court--crushed fragments of a coffee cup, few few threads of fabric, a scrap of half charred paper, an old envelope with these words on it:posessedI am posessedHe is possessedI am possessedpossessed
If Agatha Christie had know she would be writing about this character for over fifty years, I suspect she wouldn't have made his quite so eccentric, nor would she have made him already elderly on his first outing in print!Poirot was an extraordinary-looking little man. He was hardly more than five feet four inches, but he carried himself with great dignity. His head was exactly the shape of an egg, and he always perched it a little on one side. His moustache was very stiff and military. The neatness of his attire was almost incredible; I believe a speck of dust would have caused him more pain than a bullet wound. Yet this quaint dandified little man who, I was sorry to see, now limped badly, had been in his time one of the most celebrated members of the Belgian police.
[Chapter II]
Friday, November 18, 2016
The Mind Brothers by Peter Heath (Magnum Books, 1967)
This book is the weird love child of the 1960s spy craze and science fiction. A time traveller comes from the far future to prevent the world being taken over by AI... and tags along on an adventure involving secret weapons, beautiful double agents, underground cults in the back-streets of Delhi and Communist mad scientists working from hidden bases in Tibet. In other words, this book has everything but the kitchen sink (and if a kitchen sink had been included you could bet on it being some kind of Bondian espionage device!) And at the end of it all, I still couldn't figure out the action related to the dystopian future our time traveller was trying to prevent.Crossroads in TimeThe future of life on Earth is at stake ... now. A few days, hours, or minutes ago civilization took the wrong turn. Can the fatal mistake be corrected? Can the future be changed?Jason Starr, genius, found himself the focal point of a complex Communist plot against America...and as a thoroughly discredited scientist, there seemed nothing he could do about it.Not until he was joined by Adam Cyber, that is. Adam Cyber: last man--or superman--to survive in that bleak future; and Jason Starr's Mind Brother. Cyber returned through millenia to try to change Earth's course. And when the Mind Brothers met, computers went crazy, all predictions were worthless--and a new kind of spy was born!
Monday, November 14, 2016
Five Go Down to the Sea by Enid Blyton (Hodder & Stoughton, 1955)
Now here's a book I really did love as a child--in fact I pinched and saved to buy all twenty-one books in the Famous Five series! In Five Go Down to the Sea Julian, Dick, George, Anne and Timmy the dog explore secret tunnels and thwart a gang of drug smugglers between consuming mountains of buns and sandwiches and drinking lashings of ginger beer. What more could a child want in an adventure?TheFamous FiveJulian, Dick, George, Anne and Timmy the Dogin their
twelfth exciting adventureSummer at Tremannon Farm, the mystery of the deserted tower by the sea, the forgotten secret of the Wreckers' Way
(This copy predates me by several years. My own copy as a child was one of the paperback Knight editions published in the 1970s. The Famous Five adventure stories are still in print, though when I flicked through one in my local library recently it saddened me to see that an editor had "updated" the text to make it more accessible. There are also now some very tongue-in-cheek Famous Five adventures available for "grown-ups" with titles like Five on Brexit Island and Five Go Gluten Free. Clearly I'm not the only adult who remembers the series with affection!)
Thursday, November 10, 2016
The Woodville Wench by Maureen Peters (Fontana, 1973)
Picked up at a local school fete:
In this case our heroine (who seems to have picked her dress up at Biba and who is sporting some very 1970s blue eyeshadow) is Elizabeth Woodville and the story the author is telling is the story of the War of the Roses.
The other giveaway for a "cleavage history" novel is the choice of adjectives on the back cover, which often includes words such as "passionate", "untamed" and "determined". The Woodville Wench may not be passionate and untamed, but by Jingo! she's determined.
This is an example of what I think of as "cleavage history", where the author takes a real woman from history and writes a wildly romantic fictionalised version of her life. You can usually spot these by the models on their front covers who generally wear some kind of pseudo-historical garb complete with a deeply plunging neckline.The King's Wife...Determined to rise above the poverty of her upbringing, Elizabeth Woodville uses her great beauty to win a place in the royal family.Edward Plantagenetthe handsome young King, risks everything to marry her.Cecily, of Yorkthe King's mother, welcomes her as a daughterRichard of GloucesterEdward's brother, offers her protection when his own life is in jeopardy.Considered an upstart by many, Elizabeth reigns supreme during the bitter years of the Wars of the Roses. But behind the brilliant mask is a cold and lonely woman, shivering in the chill of her husband's waning passion, fearful of what lies ahead...
In this case our heroine (who seems to have picked her dress up at Biba and who is sporting some very 1970s blue eyeshadow) is Elizabeth Woodville and the story the author is telling is the story of the War of the Roses.
The other giveaway for a "cleavage history" novel is the choice of adjectives on the back cover, which often includes words such as "passionate", "untamed" and "determined". The Woodville Wench may not be passionate and untamed, but by Jingo! she's determined.
Monday, November 7, 2016
The Sheep Look Up by John Brunner (Orbit, 1977)
From the Green Shed:
1970s science fiction had a tendency to be dystopian. This example is one of Brunner's best-regarded books, having been nominated for a Nebula Award as "Best Novel" in 1972.'AND NOW A POLICE FLASH,' said the radio. 'RUMOURS THAT THE SUN IS OUT AT SANTA YUEZ ARE WITHOUT FOUNDATION.'
Pollution--social, moral, political and industrial--is the key to the United States of the not too distant future. The seas are foul, the rivers choked, the land is poisoned by excessive use of insecticides, no one moves out of doors without a 'filter mask' and the sun is permanently obscured.
John Brunner chronicles a full year of this situation, following the lives of a diverse range of characters from all levels of society. Many are resigned, a few are seeking new ways for mankind to survive, but the one man whom millions believe has the solution cannot be found.
The Sheep Look Up is more than sf speculation, it is terrifyingly realistic. It is, indeed, 'a fascinating and brilliant profile of the utter technological hell we are working so hard to create' (Sunday Times).
Monday, October 17, 2016
Kay of Kingfishers by Constance M. White (Hutchinson, 1954)
I found this in the Green Shed, and bought it a) because the dust jacket was intact and b) because it looked like something I might have enjoyed when I was a child!
All right, get your mind out of the gutter. (Yes, you. You know who I'm talking about!) The "discovery" Kay stumbles upon is neither a drug smuggling ring nor a swingers' party, and absolutely nothing naughty is going on between the headmistress, the vicar and the archaeological student.To begin with, Kay missed half a term by being ill. Then, when she did return, it was to find that dear old Miss Benson--surely the nicest headmistress anyone could wish for--had been replaced by young and efficient Miss Oliver. And Judy, her dearest friend, seemed to have forsaken Kay for a fresh interest--the new Head's Girl Guide Company.Kay, rebellious and stubborn, turned to Stella Jason, and together they stumbled upon a discovery which involved not only Miss Oliver, but also an archaeological student, the local vicar, and a strange little girl called Bella.
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