A cross-section (Books on the floor)
So, I had to empty out the bookcases in the living room over the past few days, and stack them upstairs in my office, where they take up a good part of the floor. I did a rough estimation* and concluded there are about five hundred and twenty books here, give or take, temporarily arranged in twenty-eight stacks. Which book wound up uppermost on each stack I decided gave a kind of snapshot cross-section of our hardcover fantasy, so I thought I'd share. Keep in mind that if the same author appears twice, that means he or she fills an entire row and then some:**
GHOSTS AND MORE GHOSTS -- Rbt Arthur
THE EMPTY HOUSE -- Blackwood
BORGES: A READER
SMITH --Ja. Branch Cabell
THE LAST APPRENTICE, Bk I -- Delaney
THE FOOD OF DEATH -- Dunsany
THE LAST BOOK OF JORKENS -- Dunsany
DON RODRIGUES -- Dunsany
PATCHES OF SUNLIGHT -- Dunsany
IN THE LAND OF TIME -- Dunsany***
THE TWILIGHT OF THE GODS -- Richard Garnett
THE GOLDEN AGE -- K. Grahame
OUT OF THE STORM -- Wm Hope Hodgson
THE BRIDGE OF BIRDS -- Hughart
TIGANA -- G. G. Kay
KINGDOM COME (graphic novel)
THE HAUNTED WOMAN -- Lindsay
THE HORROR IN THE MUSEUM -- ghostwritten Lovecraft
THE BLACK GOD'S SHADOW -- C. L. Moore
THE BOOK OF THREE DRAGONS -- K. Morris
THE SCIENCE OF DISCWORLD -- Pratchett
FEET OF CLAY -- Pratchett
LYRA'S OXFORD -- Pullman
TALES OF SCIENCE AND SORCERY -- Clark Ashton Smith
MISC. WRITINGS -- Clark Ashton Smith
THE THIRTEEN CLOCKS -- Thurber
THE COMPLETE FURSEY -- Mervyn Wall (autographed!)
ISLANDIA -- Austin Tappen Wright
A lot of books. And yet I keep coming across interesting-sounding ones I'd like to add, and a few among these that lose their place on the shelves from time to time, either going down to the box room, onto the read-and-decide-whether-to-keep pile, or (eventually) out the door.
--John R.
*roughly forty books per shelf, thirteen shelves on three bookcases somewhat taller than I am (the remaining two shelves being filled with old vinyl record albums. which I also had to move. those I haven't tried counting)
**excluding, of course, the less-interesting books which are downstairs in the Box Room, not having made the cut. And the paperbacks, which have a bookcase of their own in the Dining Room. And the Tolkien, which lives upstairs in my office. And all the other categories of books other than fantasy that have their own appropriate places and didn't have to be moved, this time.
***you might conclude I have a lot of Dunsany. you'd be right. I'm actually surprised Hodgson didn't turn up twice.
GHOSTS AND MORE GHOSTS -- Rbt Arthur
THE EMPTY HOUSE -- Blackwood
BORGES: A READER
SMITH --Ja. Branch Cabell
THE LAST APPRENTICE, Bk I -- Delaney
THE FOOD OF DEATH -- Dunsany
THE LAST BOOK OF JORKENS -- Dunsany
DON RODRIGUES -- Dunsany
PATCHES OF SUNLIGHT -- Dunsany
IN THE LAND OF TIME -- Dunsany***
THE TWILIGHT OF THE GODS -- Richard Garnett
THE GOLDEN AGE -- K. Grahame
OUT OF THE STORM -- Wm Hope Hodgson
THE BRIDGE OF BIRDS -- Hughart
TIGANA -- G. G. Kay
KINGDOM COME (graphic novel)
THE HAUNTED WOMAN -- Lindsay
THE HORROR IN THE MUSEUM -- ghostwritten Lovecraft
THE BLACK GOD'S SHADOW -- C. L. Moore
THE BOOK OF THREE DRAGONS -- K. Morris
THE SCIENCE OF DISCWORLD -- Pratchett
FEET OF CLAY -- Pratchett
LYRA'S OXFORD -- Pullman
TALES OF SCIENCE AND SORCERY -- Clark Ashton Smith
MISC. WRITINGS -- Clark Ashton Smith
THE THIRTEEN CLOCKS -- Thurber
THE COMPLETE FURSEY -- Mervyn Wall (autographed!)
ISLANDIA -- Austin Tappen Wright
A lot of books. And yet I keep coming across interesting-sounding ones I'd like to add, and a few among these that lose their place on the shelves from time to time, either going down to the box room, onto the read-and-decide-whether-to-keep pile, or (eventually) out the door.
--John R.
*roughly forty books per shelf, thirteen shelves on three bookcases somewhat taller than I am (the remaining two shelves being filled with old vinyl record albums. which I also had to move. those I haven't tried counting)
**excluding, of course, the less-interesting books which are downstairs in the Box Room, not having made the cut. And the paperbacks, which have a bookcase of their own in the Dining Room. And the Tolkien, which lives upstairs in my office. And all the other categories of books other than fantasy that have their own appropriate places and didn't have to be moved, this time.
***you might conclude I have a lot of Dunsany. you'd be right. I'm actually surprised Hodgson didn't turn up twice.
Published on August 06, 2013 21:05
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