Quick pause to say "I can't believe it's August already." OK, that's done... let's get on.
I attended my first Paperback & Pulp Book Fair in ages on Sunday and had a thoroughly enjoyable day, catching up with some old friends and meeting a few people I knew only through Facebook.
Maurice Flanagan & Rian Hughes |
Faced with trying to survive on writing alone again I made some decisions, one of which was that I'd scale back trips out that weren't paying for themselves. If I remember correctly, I was still getting sent quite a few review copies of books, so I would take those up to the book fairs to sell, and that would pay for my train fare, plus a little spending money. Over the next couple of years the review copies dried up, and the prices of the kind of books I went to the book fairs to buy began to soar as eBay brought in buyers from further afield—especially America. Now, American collectors generally demand high grade books, but they're happy to pay for quality. Unfortunately, seeing top dollar prices on eBay also drags up the price of what you might call reading copies that are rough around the edges; the kind of book that collectors buy as a filler but try to replace.
Steve Chibnall and Stephen James Walker |
I went to a few comic fairs in the mid- to late-2000s, often signing at the Book Palace table, but I don't recall attending anything since we moved to Wivenhoe thirteen years ago. So it's at least that long since I saw a lot of my book and comic collecting pals.
David Hyman & Martin Heaphy |
Thanks to David Hyman, Martin Heaphy, Bob Wardzinski, Jamie Sturgeon, Paul Duncan, Maurice Flanagan, Roger Robinson, and many others, the day seemed to fly by. The exciting news is that there seems to be a lot going on, with projects ranging from a collection of cartoons and illustrations by Arthur Ferrier to a new British comic-based magazine. Even after I left, I was walking down the road with Paul Duncan discussing two projects he has been working on—the John M. Burns' collections and a long-awaited biography of Gerald Kersh. Like I said, there's a lot going on.
Jamie Sturgeon |
Everyone seemed to have a great day, so I'm hoping that there will be another fair in 2024, by which time I'll have some of these long-promised projects of my own to show off.
Talking of which... I've had a fairly slow week, sorting out the final corrections on A Laverda Journey, George Coates' tale of his trip around the world by motor bike that I'm publishing as a companion to And the Wheels Went Round and starting to sort out all the scans I'm going to need for Beyond the Void: The Remarkable History of Badger Books, which will include features on some of the best of Badger's SF output — the A J Merak novels — and the very worst — a look at the astonishing stories of Barney Ward, which I'm very pleased to say will have a nice little bonus as I've found a third novel by Ward. I really wish I had a bigger collection of these old Fifties paperbacks as I'm sure I could i.d. many more authors. Unfortunately, the last collection that came up for grabs sold for something like £65,000. Not the sort of loose change I have... that's more like 65p and I'd need to check behind the cushions of the sofa to get that much.
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