Saturday, March 9, 2013

Jared (my brother) Strikes again.

  
So Jared contacted me on facebook and took a new picture of his Executioner/Mac Bolan collection and shot it to me. I think he just got a few more so this is not entirely accurate, but you get the idea. A few first editions that are actually very valuable are peppered in there for good measure. We got to bullshitting and he had some patches for his leather working company that he said he needed rendered but really had no way to pay me. As a great brother who is awesome and loves to help out, I told him not to worry about it and got down to designing it one afternoon.
 

  
     He was sending me messages when I was working on it insisting that he procure some sort of payment, but I told him all i would take is obscure Zardoz pictures not found on Google Images.


    So.. watch what you ask for I guess.

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Mcgregor Garage Sale Saturday


     Last Saturday I agreed to work to trade a day off during the week, on the way back down Mcgregor blvd where I live I spotted a few crappy looking late garage sales. For those who are not familiar with this part of Southwest Florida (I'm assuming you don't live here) Thomas Edison and Henry Ford lived on this street, which means rich people feel they also need to live here as well for at least six months out of the year.

     I walked right in to this persons side storage of their house, and saw tons of ancient romance books. 40's,50's and 60's. I did some quick eBay searching as i walked around and really saw no value unless i could buy them all and sell them as a huge lot. Being a lazy bastard, I cherry picked the bags and boxes and picked out a few that I was willing to spend at least fifty cents on.


     I picked up a few more books but had already given them away to someone who wanted them more than me. You can see what I got here.. no fantasy or sci-fi really. I just felt compelled to grab something to make it worth my time. An early Alice in Wonderland caught my eye, so had to toss that in. Ebay sellers are getting around $15 for similar copy. The other books I can get around $5 a piece for. Not bad on my $2.00 investment! I don't think I'll sell them just yet, but i like to put a value on things.

     This one stood out for me. What the hell is it? I guide to not having sex? Could of used something like this in high school. Let's check it out real quick.

     It's exactly as I said. Some bunch of Catholics in the 40's came up with this to keep young men and women on the right side of god concerning sexual desires. Ironic that I found this book wedged in between some really old nasty smut books. Barbara likes it roughly in the barn, but she conducts herself in a way that agrees with. Right. Obviously the creators of this book never thought i would be making fun of their passages in a public forum. I wonder if in 1940 the word "Boner" was used to describe erections yet? I'll ask my dad.

     In closing, I did pretty good and hit around ten yard sales finding nothing. God's no-sex manual was the biggest score of the day, netting me around $20.00 on eBay. Who would buy it? It doesn't even have pictures.

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Incoming Rare Shit! (1960's IF)


     The last picture on the bottom right looks like a gold 'Future Penis". I wish to be known as the only person with a blog to use the phrase "Future Penis" to describe something.

     My mother the author, (Check out her website) happens upon some cool stuff, and sent me these pictures on Facebook, with a short message saying she mailed them out along with some other old books she found I would like.  God love her, and her sense of literature. I'll ad these to my ever growing weird 60's/70's short story magazine collection I have going.
     Side note, I hit up some garage sales last weekend and took some pictures of my finds out in the wild so I'll try and get that stuff tomorrow. I gave away two books already to a friend who also collects: An Alfred Hitchcock serial paperback first edition, and one of those star maps from the 50's. Nothing really of value, but worth mentioning when they are missing from the post.
     Also.. a shout out to Tim Miller for writing in and saying something positive, and for mentioning Sean Connery. The picture below, that can not be described by any means, is for Tim and his twin brother.



Sunday, March 3, 2013

What is your favorite book? Mine is..

  
    It's strange to some people, but The Club Dumas is my go-to book. I have read it no more than fifty times, and every time I have found something that I did not fully understand or was important to later events. It's not valuable, or rare, but just one of the best books I have ever read.

     I'll give you a quick time line; Before the movie The 9th Gate came, I saw the preview and loved what I saw. At the end of the trailer there was a blurb about it being based on the book. So, I went and got the book, read it, and read it again. I watched the movie five or six times. Since that fabled moment I have owned five copies of the book and given them all away only to buy another one a week later. I vowed if anyone asked about the book I would give it to them just so everyone could read it and hopefully like it as much as I did.

     As for the movie, I did like the movie very much, but not enough to watch it fifty times.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Post Disney Book Hunt.. With added bonus!

 
     So I took my family to Disney World for the weekend, and stayed in one of the nice hotels in the park. My son, being a huge Disney fan and also being of that age where he can enjoy it, had a great time. My wife discovered Pin Trading, which is described here.
 


     I took this picture after I bought her some of the first pins, and later surprised her with more. My current hobby costs me about $10 a week, one day of Pin Trading cost me almost $70.


    So one of my favorite book hang outs of yore is closing it's doors for good. One for the Books of Cape Coral, which across the bridge from me has an aggressive rare and unique book collection spanning several centuries. As you all know, I look almost exclusively for Fantasy and Sci-Fi, and they also have a large selection of rare and out of prints to choose from. As they are closing, everything until the end of the week is 50% off. I took the opportunity to grab some things i normally would not buy. I'll also mention that they research almost every title that would be worth money, and already have those books separated from the bunch and individually priced. In short, they know what they have.

     This is their Fantasy/Sci-Fi Isle. The top shelves have the rare stuff, and some oddities. Each end cap has a good selection of golden age science fiction in plastic bags so you don't damage them. I personally don't keep my books in bags. Not sure why.

      An example of what i consider "top shelf" stuff. Early 70's Asimov magazines, and Galaxy mags. They were priced at $10.00 each, which is pretty high. At half off that's still $5.00 a piece. Out of my price range today. Having dropped close to a grand at Disney, I'm not eager to splurge any time soon.


     Sorry the picture is dark, the Florida sunshine was coming in through the window. Normally covered, they were taking things off the windows and walls. Old Starlog mags, comic book oddities and graphic novels. Nothing really special, but cool if you are a fan of a specific thing. There was also a small section of used Dungeon & Dragon's books.

    
     Right under the magazine shelf is all the Hard Covers. Great selection, but nothing I was too interested in. I have way too many Hard Covers to be buying more at this point unless it's pretty rare. Once upon a time i found some gems in this same spot.. maybe eight years ago. If there was anything valuable in here, it had been picked over because of the clearance.


     One of the aforementioned end caps with rare bagged books. I shopped from these racks for at least 15 minutes.. until the wife yelled at me that my time was up. I took my small stack of books up to the register, thanked the owner for years of cool selections and good finds and made my way out. He mentioned at the register the business was for sale for $25,000. If only I had the money to do such a thing..

Anyways. Here is what I took home with me:
 

     I'm not going to list the authors and titles like I normally do, you can see what they are. Click to enlarge if you have a problem seeing any details. I take all my pictures with my stupid camera on my iPhone as opposed to bringing a digital camera with me. In my previous adventures, people don't like it when you start snapping photos in their store. A few things stand out with the books here, one of which is ZARDOZ. Fucking Zardoz. I saw this in the bagged books for some reason. I asked the owner why it was mixed in with those, and he remarked that it was rare. Rare! He had $5.00 on it, which in my opinion is $5.00 too much.


     Yeah I bought it. How could I not? A quick Internet search proved it was slightly rare and only had two printings. Why did they ever decide to have a second printing? Who decided to include pictures of Sean Connery's chest hair in the movie tie-in? I do not know what I'm going to do with this book. I think it must be destroyed. My brother ate his words not too many posts ago..

     But not to ignore the cool Galaxy Mags, which they had many of scattered around. I grabbed the two that would be the most significant in terms of its contents. Love Asimov, so got that one out of habit. So... all in all I had a pretty good day. Spent a little more than I wanted to, but found some really cool golden age books. Maybe doubled the money I spend. Ironically, I think made out on Zardoz.
Thanks Sean Connery.
 

Sunday, January 20, 2013

I'm alive, Here's an update.


     It's been a minute and I'm sorry. I've been thrift shopping like crazy, but I hit a huge dry spell, but i think i have the cure for it. The cure is staying busy.

     When you think about it, I'm in a pretty large area, i have a great knowledge of where all the thrift stores are, but i really only look for a few things when i go shopping:

1) Sci-Fi and Fantasy Books
2) Rare books
3) Video game stuff
4) rare electronics
5) Laserdisc, betamax players and movies

     In that order.. seriously that's pretty much everything i look for unless i happen to catch something out of the corner of my eyes. I check the suits and leather jackets sometimes.. you can luck out there and find something in your size. I go often, and know the people who stock the shelves in most cases. So i picked the market clean. Around April the snow birds go home and the local Goodwill's will be so full of stuff.. i really can't wait. Until then, I'm going to have to think of some original content.

     A friend wrote an essay in 10th grade about me, and i just found it for the first time in a long time. This one part interested me the most: "He looks up from his desk and sees the mountain of unsorted books. Wall to wall books, mostly Piers Anthony. Piles of VHS tapes are scattered around the room in piles. He smiles to himself." My buddy Gary wrote that.. and realistically i have not changed at all. My VHS obsession is all but out of the house when i hit several thousand movies.. I moved it into a friends storage shed where i have been selling them in his every-other-month garage sale.

     In other news my old blog that i no longer maintain, Unknown Hole in the Sky, hit a million views. One million unique visitors. I have had a website hit such a milestone, but not a blog that i no longer even look at. The images i used are being outsourced on google images, which keeps a continual stream of hits coming in. Google no longer allows me to monetize the site because i linked to sites that had movie torrents on them. Seriously. Out of a million hits I made $46.35 in ad revenue before they turned me off. That really sucks in the long way of things. So tell all your friends who want to make money on a blog, a million hits = about forty bucks. I can't even get the money out and if i did i would give it to a friend of mine of helped me write for it when i first started, Dustin Onash. He wrote a series of articles that i promoted the shit out of on Digg, when Digg was a site that was good for that. They became very successful articles on the interwebs (he wrote three) and helped the blog become popular. I promised him if i ever made any money on the blog i would split it with him, and of course i made nothing, so nothing to split. He got angered with me about a year later when the blog was successful and he was not getting paid.. so much so he asked me to remove his name and articles from the blog. He teaches, and that may have something to do with that. I will take some blame for him pulling out, i never tried to keep him or pay him something to have him stay.

     My mother sent me some very rare hard to find magazines from Marvel and DC from the early 80's. Some comics, deemed too mature for a young audience, get rejected from the regular comic print and pushed into the trade magazines the respected publishers put out. One is called Epic, and the other 1984-1994. To the right is a picture of the magazines on my floor this morning ---->

Not so bad looking for 30 years old. Maybe I'll read them, today being a lazy Sunday.



I'm going to use the next week of travel to do a little searching around town. My budget is limited, but i think i can find something to post about. In the absence of me not finding anything, i have some ideas for articles on certain things.

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Pictures of random valuable books I own. (Taken Today)








     I was looking for some Alan Dean Foster books to take pictures of to show them off to my brother who posts me things pretty regular lately, and only found a few on the first go around. Seeing things on the bottom of a pile I have not seen in years, I took some pictures of some pretty cool ones.. From left to right, top to bottom.

1) Clockwork Orange - Anthony Burgess 1st ed
2) The Naked Sun - Isaac Asimov 1st ed
3) Nine Tomorrows - Isaac Asimov 1st ed
4) The End of Eternity - Isaac Asimov 1st ed
5) Foundation - Isaac Asimov 1st ed (x2!)
6) Tanar of Puwesdfgsdfgrsdkfgdsjfsdfsidar - Borroughs (Pulp PB)
7) Stranger in a Strange Land - Robert Heinlein 1st ed
8) Caves of Steel - Isaac Asimov 1st ed

     I have had many offers for the Heinlein PB. Its the most beat up damaged book in my collection and near worthless. Has pages like money.

More Pictures from Jared





     See a theme? Alan Dean Foster.. movies, Outland. My brother sends me pictures almost constantly. I love seeing other collections and often take pictures of my friends' collections as well. Love it, keep them coming.

Friday, October 26, 2012

Jared Shares Some Pictures


 
    Huge fan of the "The Thing" movie , and the book is great as well. My brother Jared is crazy about the movie and is recreating a room full of period office equipment in his house. Alan Dean Foster had many movie novelizations in the 80's and 90's, and Outland was unfortunatly one of them. Our facebook conversation:
 
 
My first edition of 'Outland' by Alan Dean Foster. I think they only made the one edition.
Jared Place I stand corrected. F-ing Zardoz...