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Showing 1 - 19 of
19 matches in All Departments
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The Pale Brown Thing (Paperback)
Fritz Leiber; Introduction by Donald Sidney-Fryer; Afterword by John Howard
bundle available
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R482
Discovery Miles 4 820
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Zothique - The Final Cycle (Paperback)
Clark Ashton Smith; Edited by Ronald S. Hilger; Foreword by Donald Sidney-Fryer
bundle available
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R569
Discovery Miles 5 690
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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These poems are of an unearthly beauty. They celebrate love,
beauty, and humanity; and yet throughout many of them is a
consciousness of impending apocalypse. The imagery, lush, exotic,
full of colors and magic names, is a welcome relief from the
sterile, prosaic poetry of today. If you enjoy tripping on
language, this book is for you. Whether the poems really are from
the Atlantean or whether they are the creations of poet
Sidney-Fryer, they deserve to be read and experienced. -- Charles
K. Wolfe Sidney-Fryer is, in a very strong sense, a traditionalist;
his creations, superlatively original as they are, yet give us a
powerful feeling of continuity with our own past and culture; they
make us see ... the ideals that moved us when we were less "secure"
and more human: adventure, love of life, and above all, the
intricate beauty of a world long vanished - yet not vanished, if
only we had eyes to see. -- Richard L. Tierney Sidney-Fryer has
created, in his fictional Atlantis, an entire civilization and a
body of absorbing literature. The book should appeal to lovers of
poetry, to devotees of science fiction, and to those who admire
writers who can fashion a realistic world from the materials of
mythology and speculation. -- Earl J. Dias Mr. Fryer is a profound
student of Clark Ashton Smith, and the influence shows, but he is
very much his own poet, and he structures and plays with a surety
and deftness which is remarkable. -- Gahan Wilson A delightful book
of verse - purportedly fragments of poetry from the lost Empire of
Atlantis - that is very much in the tradition of Spenser's Faerie
Queene. A work that reflects a glittering imagination and no mean
talent. -- James Gorski
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The Crimson Tome (Paperback)
K a Opperman; Foreword by W. C. Farmer; Introduction by Donald Sidney-Fryer
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R407
Discovery Miles 4 070
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Born, raised, and intellectually and culturally formed in New
Bedford, Massachusetts, the whaling capital of the world in the
1800's, Donald Sidney-Fryer came to the Golden State when he turned
twenty-one. During 1956 through 1960 and the summer of 1964, he
studied Theatre Arts, French, and Spanish at U.C.L.A., and received
his B.A. in French language and literature in September of 1964.
His discovery of the prose fictions and poetry of Clark Ashton
Smith led to Sidney-Fryer's investigation of that group of poets
and fictioneers to which Smith belonged, now known (thanks to
Sidney-Fryer) as the California Romantics. This fantastic pride of
scriveners includes Ambrose Bierce, George Sterling, Nora May
French, and others. In the five decades since 1961, the year of
Smith's death, Sidney-Fryer has written at length on these writers,
their lives, and their over-all achievements, as well as editing
significant collections of their writings, when otherwise they
remained almost totally neglected and unheralded. Apart from the
two dozen books and booklets he has compiled, written, and/or
edited, Sidney-Fryer has done more than pioneer in scholarship
concerning Ashton Smith and his fellow poets. Summoned by his first
and extended reading of Edmund Spenser's epic The Faerie Queene to
his own vocation as a poet (during the winter and spring of 1961),
Sidney- Fryer has in particular continued the traditions of the
California Romantics in an innovative and radical manner. He has
also given innumerable recitals not just of his own works but of
those by his chosen predecessors, including Spenser along with many
others. This volume gathers together for the first time the essays
and reviews of this pioneer of phantastick literature, mostly long
out of print and reprinted here for the first time.
Nora May French (1881-1907) is an enigmatic and ethereal figure in
American poetry and in the poetry of California. Born in Aurora,
New York, she came to Los Angeles with her family when she was a
little girl, and in the course of her brief and tragic life she
lived and wrote more intensely than many who live a full span of
years. Her poetry possesses its own kind of cosmic consciousness,
aligning it with the work of Clark Ashton Smith and her friend
George Sterling. Its delicacy and pathos render it an imperishable
monument to the throbbing emotions and aesthetic sensitivity of the
woman who, although beloved by all in Sterling's Bohemian circle,
suffered keenly from her own love affairs and committed suicide in
November 1907. Now, more than a hundred years after her passing,
her poems have been gathered in this volume for the first time. The
book includes an extensive biographical and critical introduction
by Donald Sidney-Fryer, tributes to French by her contemporaries
and by later admirers, and a selection of reviews. Nora May French
published no books in her lifetime, but her poems were assembled in
1910 by George Sterling and others. That volume, however, was
incomplete, and many fugitive poems have been added by Donald
Sidney-Fryer and Alan Gullette, two of the leading authorities on
California poetry and the poetry of fantasy and terror.
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