Valancourt Books discussion
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Books That Should Go Back in Print
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David
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Aug 02, 2020 03:21AM

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But seeing any of Bloch’s books come back into print would be great. The Scarf, Firebug (which includes a first chapter written by Harlan Ellison), American Gothic...perhaps a newly curated “Best Of” collection?

https://thebedlamfiles.com/fiction/th...
but it's scarce and usually very expensive.

http://wormwoodiana.blogspot.com/2021...

"."In the midst of the gay philandering by movie men and their mannequins comes the grisly hand of sinister crime and the weirdest of all phantoms. "
It seems to be an early example of African-American crime writing, mixed with some sort of supernatural elements, written in 1926.
Thanks. I may end up forking over some major dollars for this one, but I thought I might mention it just in case.

Have you heard about the Burried Books group on here ? Some interesting finds to be had there, if you're looking for some inspiration ^^

Thank you!!
It looks like A Haunting Hand comes out of copyright in January. I expect there will be a few editions pop up for sale. I was going to offer to send you a scan of this one but I think the binding will break if I put it on the scanner.
Justin wrote: "How do you know when a book isn't in print?"
You can check to see if it's listed as "in stock" on Amazon and cross check with the publisher's website. That doesn't mean it's out of print but it's a start.
You can check to see if it's listed as "in stock" on Amazon and cross check with the publisher's website. That doesn't mean it's out of print but it's a start.
David wrote: "Valancourt Books wrote: "My university has both of those so I requested them from storage to take a look at. Thanks! - R"
Have you heard about the Burried Books group on here ? Some interesting fi..."
Thanks, I joined it.
Have you heard about the Burried Books group on here ? Some interesting fi..."
Thanks, I joined it.

Well, thanks for thinking of me anyway -- very much appreciated! I'll keep checking around.

Kym Allyson - Gay Circus (1970)
The extensive scholarly research on gay pulp by Drewey Wayne Gunn has added many titles to my wish-list, but most of these books are impossible to find now, or very expensive when they are available. I have a scan of Gay Circus if you want to take a look.

It would be wonderful to see this republished!!
Thank you for sharing that.

The first is NEITHER THE SEA NOR THE SAND (1969), in which (so it says) a woman's dead lover comes back to life. The other, DRAGON UNDER THE HILL (1972), seems to be, according to the Goodreads entry, about a family which uncovers a Viking grave with a treasure and subsequently becomes haunted, if I'm reading it right. They sound like slow burns in the classic style.
We looked into reprinting both but the agent appears to not be interested in us reprinting them. They are very much Valancourtesque. If that's a thing. :)

That's a crying shame. I mean, who else is going to give those books the time of day now? It's great to hear that they're Valancourt material, of course. I'd suggest giving them another try, but maybe that would come across as pestering them and would drive them away further.

Here's the blurb I found from the last reprint:
A monastic shocker of sex and slaughter, The Abbess is a tale about the unspeakable agonies of medieval torture perpetrated in dank, subterranean burial chambers. Maddalena Rosa and Marcello Porta fight against the dark schemes and direful machinations of secret enemies and menacing parents in tale of love and passion, where nothing is as it seems. And amid the hungry rats and the well-used racks, amid the restraining chain and shackle poles, amid the thumb screws and branding irons is the sadistic and sexually-insatiable architect of this house of horrors- Vittoria Bracciano, otherwise known as The Abbess!!! Zittaw's edition includes a preface by the Gothic Novel specialist Benjamin F. Fisher and an introduction and notes by W.H. Ireland scholar Jeffrey Kahan, who suggests that Ireland's first Gothic was in many ways an extension of his Shakespeare forgeries.

1. 'The Dark Green Circle by Edward Shanks,
2. Murder in the Lady Chapel by Stanley Toye and
3. The headless hound, by Ralph H. Mottram.
thank you.

I haven’t read any of the stories. Abe Books has copies going for $50 and up. I recently learned about the writer from reading a history of Weird Tales magazine.
Arkham House originally published the book though, and they are copyright zealots in my opinion.

I'm thinking of two in particular. The first - FUGUE FOR A DARKENING ISLAND (1972) - is, according to the Wikipedia page, a dystopian novel dealing with a civil war in England brought about by political division, of which foreign refugees play a major factor (man, this sounds too relevant to pass up); as far as I can tell, this was Priest's second novel and was highly well-received upon publication. The second is THE GLAMOUR (1984), a sci-fi/fantasy/horror mix which, from what I gather, concerns an amnesiac cameraman who gets caught up with a parallel twilight world (I think); it seems that it uses multiple narrators and perspective shifts to achieve its effects, and it notably made the list of David Pringle's 1988 compendium Modern Fantasy: The 100 Best Novels.
I realize that the current selection from Priest in your catalog may not have sold well enough to warrant further additions, but since these novels sound really interesting to me and haven't been available stateside for a considerable amount of time, perhaps they could be considered if the author was willing to work with you again.

I just finished this utterly forgotten book and I’m still shaking. “Shadows at Noon” deserves rediscovery!


It's ridiculously expensive whenever it comes up for sale. I haven't read it, so can't speak to its quality, but I've enjoyed all the other books I have read by Jane Gaskell.

We've been trying to contact Jane Gaskell for years. Her agent can't locate her and she's not responded to family members from what I understand. A couple of others in publishing have been trying too. :(
I think we looked at Jane Chambers a few years ago and it didn't work out but let me check again.

That makes me worried something might have legitimately happened to her.

We did look into POLYPHEMUS in 2017 but never heard back from anyone. I just sent a follow-up email today. Thanks for the reminder!
Our local public library had a copy of it at the time but they have since discarded it. Aargh!
Our local public library had a copy of it at the time but they have since discarded it. Aargh!

I have a copy of Polyphemus on the way through ILL.
Centipede is also doing Bob Leman. I would love to see an affordable paperback edition of Feesters in the Lake. One of the best books of short stories I've ever read (and reread!).

I would second the opinion about Bob Leman’s Feesters in the Lake . This was far and away the best book to come out of John Pelan’s now defunct Midnight House. It’s nice to see Centipede Press reviving Leman’s work, but given that we’re talking about Centipede, that probably means an über-expensive tome that only collectors can afford. I read somewhere a few years ago that Pelan and Jim Rockhill are working on the Centipede edition. It’s supposed to include a previously unpublished story and Leman’s unpublished and unfinished novel.

There's been a bunch of Shea collections in recent years (and the new novel) so there might be concerns about overlapping contents. When I actually look at all his short stories, (Nifft series aside) there aren't actually that many, all of them could fit into one book. If there was ever a complete works omnibus series of everything he's done it wouldn't be that many books.

John Pelan can be exceedingly slow where editing is concerned. I remember he took about 10 years getting The Century’s Best Horror Fiction into print for Cemetery Dance.


Centipede's book of Leman has been in the works for several years now. Has it been a decade?
John Pelan can be exceedingly slow where editing is concerned.
I have a feeling that certain events of the past year will have slowed him down even more.

Dang. I hadn’t heard that news. R.I.P.

Démoniana, ou, Nouveau choix: d'anecdotes surprenantes, de nouvelles prodigieuses, d'aventures bizarres, sur les revenans, les spectres, les fantômes, les démons, les loups-garous, les visions, etc., etc. by Gabrielle de Paban (1820) [Demoniana, or, New choice: surprising anecdotes, prodigious news, bizarre adventures, on revenants, specters, ghosts, demons, werewolves, visions, etc., etc. : a book designed to reassure timid imaginations, against superstitious fears]
Infernaliana ou anecdotes, petits romans nouvelles et contes sur les revenants, les spectres, les démons et les vampires by Charles Nodier (1822) [Infernaliana: or, Anecdotes, Short Romances, News Items and Stories, on Revenants, Specters, Demons and Vampires]


Maybe. I did see this evening that there's an English translation published as a Kindle-only book in 2012. First few stories are "The Bloody Nun," "The Vampire Arnold-Paul," and "A Young Flemish Woman Strangled by the Devil." No comments on Amazon as to the quality of the translation. There's still room for a printed translation with good formatting, scholarly introduction, etc.
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