Bound in the tête-bêche style with Bad Man’s Return by William Colt MacDonald. |
Bound in the tête-bêche style with The Hanging Hills by Brad Ward. |
Subtitled “Leaves from the Life of an Immortal”. |
Reprint (??? 1762) fast-paced historical romance of medieval menace and high excitement. |
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Translated from the Polish Cyberiada (Wydawnictwo Literackie, 1965). |
These stories were originally part of the Polish edition of The Star Diaries (Dzienniki gwiazdowe, Czytelnik, 1971). |
Translated from the Polish by Louis Iribarne, Magdalena Majcherczyk & Michael Kandel. |
Translated from the Polish. |
Subtitled “Perfect Reviews of Nonexistent Books” on the cover. Translated from the Polish (Doskonała próżnia, Czytelnik, 1971) with an additional story from Bezsenność (Wydawnictwo Literackie, 1971). |
On title page: “Translated from the Polish by Michael Kandel” and “with line drawings by Lem”. |
Translated from the Polish Opowieści o Pilocie Pirxie (Wydawnictwo Literackie, 1968). |
Translated from the French (En marge des vieux livres). The French edition was issued in 2 series, the first written in collaboration with Godefroy Cavaignac. |
Details taken from online listing. |
Small press anthology of mostly original stories, produced in magazine format, not unlike Etchings & Odysseys. |
Reissue (Tauchnitz 1867) reprint of the first half of Leyton Hall and Other Tales (Hurst and Blackett, 1867). Vol. 889 in the “Collection of British Authors”. Details supplied by Endre Zsoldos. |
Reissue (Tauchnitz 1867) reprint of the second half of Leyton Hall and Other Tales (Hurst and Blackett, 1867). Vol. 890 in the “Collection of British Authors”. Details supplied by Endre Zsoldos. |
Contents from Amazon.com. |
Selections mostly from previous WWA volumes. |
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Reprint (Doubleday 1951) mystery novel. Bound in the tête-bêche style with Counterspy Express by A. S. Fleischman. |
Collection of nine stories, two new. |
Original SF anthology of 10 stories. Authors include Stephen Baxter and Jeanne Cavelos. |
Details taken from Table of Contents. |
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SF novel of a Chinese invasion of Europe, originally serialized 1891-92. Translated/adapted from the French La Bataille de Strasbourg (L. Boulanger 1895) by Brian Stableford, who provides an introduction on the novel and its place in early French SF. |
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SF novel, translated/adapted from the French La Conspiration des milliardaires (Guyot 1899) by Brian M. Stableford, who provides an introduction on the series’ history, and notes. Volume one in “The Dominion of the World”. |
SF novel, translated/adapted by Brian M. Stableford from the French Le Regiment des hypnotiseurs (Guyot 1900). Volume three in “The Dominion of the World”. |
SF novel, translated/adapted from the French A Coups de milliards (Guyot 1899) by Brian M. Stableford, who provides an introduction and notes. Volume two in “The Dominion of the World”. |
SF planetary romance novel/omnibus. A young engineer is transported to Mars by Hindu psychics and discovers a once-powerful civilization of vampires. Originally published in French in two volumes as Le prisonnier de la planete Mars (1908) and La guerre des vampires (1909). Translated and adapted by Brian Stableford, who provides an introduction and notes. |
SF novel, the fourth and final in the series. Translated/adapted by Brian M. Stableford from the French La Revanche du vieux monde (Guyot 1900). Volume four in “The Dominion of the World”. |
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Collection of stories edited and introduced by Peter Haining. |
Reprint (Bobbs-Merrill 1911) horror novel, translated from the French (Le Fantôme de l’Opéra, Pierre Lafitte et Cie, 1910). Volume 34 in the series. |
Reprint of The Gaston Leroux Bedside Companion (Gollancz, 1980) expanded by the addition of “The Haunted Chair” (Weird Tales, December 1931), edited and introduced by Peter Haining. |
SF novel, translated/adapted (with an introduction) by Brian M. Stableford from the French Rouletabille chez Krupp (Pierre Lafitte 1920), the sixth book in the Rouletabille series, and the only one with significant SF elements. |
reprinted Dell (pb), 1993. |
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Collection of 16 stories (three original, two previously published electronically) and seven poems (one original), most horror. Leslie is a pen name for Mark Leslie Lefebvre. |
Details taken from online listing. |