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Odes and Sonnets
Clark Ashton Smith
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R685
Discovery Miles 6 850
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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A selection of rare fantasy and horror stories by Clark Ashton
Smith. Included are "The White Sybil," "Chinoiserie," "The Raja and
the Tiger," "The Justice of the Elephant," "The Kiss of Zoraida,"
"The Ghoul," "Something New," "The Malay Krise," "The Ghost of
Mohammed Din," "The Mirror in the Hall of Ebony," "The Mahout,"
"The Primal City," "The Hunters from Beyond," "The Passing of
Aphrodite," "The Tale of Sir John Maundeville," and "The Light from
Beyond."
Clark Ashton Smith -- one of the "big three" classic authors from
the legendary pulp magazine Weird Tales (the others being H.P.
Lovecraft and Robert E. Howard) -- began writing early in the
twentieth century. By the 1920s, he became a regular poet and
author in Weird Tales magazine, helping to usher in its golden age.
"The Double Shadow" was originally published by the Auburn Journal
in 1933 in an oversized edition limited to only 1,000 copies. Smith
carefully signed and hand-corrected many typographical errors for
years to come. A collection of six stories ranging from
contemporary horror to weird alternate-world fantasy, it remains a
fascinating introduction and showcase to his decadently jeweled
prose.
Back in print in new trade paperback editions, the third of five
volumes collecting the complete stories of renowned "weird fiction"
author Clark Ashton Smith. "None strikes the note of cosmic horror
as well as Clark Ashton Smith. In sheer daemonic strangeness and
fertility of conception, Smith is perhaps unexcelled by any other
writer." H. P. Lovecraft Clark Ashton Smith, considered one of the
greatest contributors to seminal pulp magazines such as Weird
Tales, helped define and shape "weird fiction" in the early
twentieth century, alongside contemporaries H. P. Lovecraft and
Robert E. Howard, drawing upon his background in poetry to convey
an unparalleled richness of imagination and expression in his
stories of the bizarre and fantastical. The Collected Fantasies
series presents all of Smith's fiction chronologically. Authorized
by the author's estate and endorsed by Arkham House, the stories in
this series are accompanied by detailed background notes from
editors Scott Connors and Ron Hilger, who in preparation for this
collection meticulously compared original manuscripts, various
typescripts, published editions, and Smith's own notes and letters.
Their efforts have resulted in the most definitive and complete
collection of the author's work to date. A Vintage from Atlantis is
the third of five volumes collecting all of Clark Ashton Smith's
tales of fantasy, horror, and science fiction. It includes all of
his stories from "The Holiness of Azedarac" (1931) to "The God of
the Asteroid" (1932), as well as an introduction by Michael Dirda.
Skyhorse Publishing, under our Night Shade and Talos imprints, is
proud to publish a broad range of titles for readers interested in
science fiction (space opera, time travel, hard SF, alien invasion,
near-future dystopia), fantasy (grimdark, sword and sorcery,
contemporary urban fantasy, steampunk, alternative history), and
horror (zombies, vampires, and the occult and supernatural), and
much more. While not every title we publish becomes a New York
Times bestseller, a national bestseller, or a Hugo or Nebula
award-winner, we are committed to publishing quality books from a
diverse group of authors.
Clark Ashton Smith -- one of the "big three" classic authors from
the legendary pulp magazine Weird Tales (the others being H.P.
Lovecraft and Robert E. Howard) -- began writing early in the
twentieth century. By the 1920s, he became a regular poet and
author in Weird Tales magazine, helping to usher in its golden age.
"The Double Shadow" was originally published by the Auburn Journal
in 1933 in an oversized edition limited to only 1,000 copies. Smith
carefully signed and hand-corrected many typographical errors for
years to come. A collection of six stories ranging from
contemporary horror to weird alternate-world fantasy, it remains a
fascinating introduction and showcase to his decadently jeweled
prose.
Clark Ashton Smith was a prodigy, who wrote Arabian Nights novels
in his mid-teens and was heralded as a major voice in American
poetry by the time he was nineteen. In one frantic burst in the
middle 1930s, he wrote nearly a hundred strange, wondrous, and
grotesque stories, most of which were published in Weird Tales,
Strange Tales, Wonder Stories, and other pulps, but he was by no
means a conventional pulp writer. A direct heir to Edgar Allan Poe
and to the late Romantics and Decadents, a translator of
Baudelaire, Smith wrote in baroque, jeweled prose of distant times
and remote planets, of baleful magics and reanimated corpses, lost
lovers, eldritch gods, and inexorable fate. He is also a writer
whose works refuse to die, even after nearly a century. Think of
him as the sorcerer-poet, alone in his eyrie in the dry California
hills, dreaming his strange dreams and creating his unique
worlds-of Zothique, the Earth's haunted last conti- nent at the end
of time, Hyperborea, a prehistoric land, Posei- donis, the last
foundering isle of Atlantis, and Averoigne, an unhistoried province
of medieval France, thick with vampires. runes, transported from
the sorcerer's lair by in- describable genii or winged spirits. His
stories are altogether unlike anyone else's and quite wonderful,
among the treasures of fantastic literature. This fine collection
of Clark Ashton Smith's work reprints eight of his classic
fantasies, including two set in Hyperborea.
A much-awaited collection of prose and poetry from one of the great
cosmic masters of the supernatural
Not just any fantasy, horror, and science fiction author could
impress H. P. Lovecraft into calling him "unexcelled by any other
writer, dead or living" or compel Fritz Lieber to employ the worthy
term "sui generis." Clark Ashton Smith--autodidact, prolific poet,
amateur philosopher, bizarre sculptor, and unmatched
storyteller--simply wrote like no one else, before or since. This
new collection of his very best tales and poems is selected and
introduced by supernatural literature scholar S. T. Joshi and
allows readers to encounter Smith's visionary brand of fantastical,
phantasmagorical worlds, each one filled with invention, terror,
and a superlative sense of metaphysical wonder.
This new collection assembles some of the rarest fantasy and horror
stories from the pen of Clark Ashton Smith. Included are "The White
Sybil," "Chinoiserie," "The Raja and the Tiger," "The Justice of
the Elephant," "The Kiss of Zoraida," "The Ghoul," "Something New,"
"The Malay Krise," "The Ghost of Mohammed Din," "The Mirror in the
Hall of Ebony," "The Mahout," "The Primal City," "The Hunters from
Beyond," "The Passing of Aphrodite," "The Tale of Sir John
Maundeville," and "The Light from Beyond."
When H.P. Lovecraft first introduced his macabre universe in the pages of Weird Tales magazine, the response was electrifying. Gifted writers—among them his closest peers—added sinister new elements to the fear-drenched landscape. Here are some of the most famous original stories from the pulp era that played a pivotal role in reflecting the master’s dark vision.
FANE OF THE BLACK PHARAOH by Robert Bloch: A man obsessed with unearthing dark secrets succumbs to the lure of the forbidden. BELLS OF HORROR by Henry Kuttner: Infernal chimes ring the promise of dementia and mutilation. THE FIRE OF ASSURBANIPAL by Robert E. Howard: In the burning Afghan desert, a young American unleashes an ancient curse. THE ABYSS by Robert A. W. Lowndes: A hypnotized man finds himself in an alternate universe, trapped on a high wire between life and death.
AND SIXTEEN MORE TALES OF ICY TERROR
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