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    Childhood Ends: The Earliest Writings of Arthur C. Clarke by Arthur C. Clarke (Portentous Press, 1996, 81pp, hc, co) [edited by David Aronovitz]
        Clarke juvenilia from The Huish Magazine limited to 85 slipcased, unnumbered, copies signed by the author. Clarke added brief, untitled comments to most pieces.
    • · Editor’s Foreword · David Aronovitz · fw
    • ix · Introduction · Arthur C. Clarke · in
    • 1 · Interviews with Celebrities VIII · Arthur C. Clarke · fa The Huish Magazine Autumn 1932, as by Clericus; purported interview with an “unspoiled rustic”.
    • 4 · Correspondence · Arthur C. Clarke · fa The Huish Magazine Autumn 1932, as by One-Time 6th Former; letter from a purported former student of the school.
    • 6 · Our Correspondence Column · Arthur C. Clarke · fa The Huish Magazine Spring 1933, as by A Real Old 6th Former; letter from a purported former student of the school.
    • 7 · News from the Torrid Zone · Arthur C. Clarke · fa The Huish Magazine Christmas 1933, as by Ex-Sixth Former; letter from a purported former student of the school.
    • 9 · Two Hours in a Lab · Arthur C. Clarke · pl The Huish Magazine Christmas 1933, as by Clericus; unproduced play, subtitled “A One-Act Drama with a Smashing Finale”.
    • 11 · The Jon Bloc Soc. · Arthur C. Clarke · fa The Huish Magazine Christmas 1933; farcical, fictionalized account of meeting of philosophy society.
    • 13 · Octogenarian Observations · Arthur C. Clarke · fa The Huish Magazine Christmas 1934, as by Clericus; purported interview with elderly former students.
    • 15 · Poor Piano! · Arthur C. Clarke · hu The Huish Magazine Summer 1934, as by ART; original tongue twisters.
    • 17 · Interviews with Celebrities VI · [uncredited] · fa (r)
    • 19 · Jule Gets His · Arthur C. Clarke · pl The Huish Magazine Summer 1934, as by Clericus; unproduced screenplay, subtitled “A New Super-Drama by a Well-Known Author”, also attributed to “W. Shakespeare”.
    • 22 · Answers to Correspondence · Arthur C. Clarke · fa The Huish Magazine Summer 1934, as by Clericus; answers by Clarke to purported letters.
    • 24 · French Without Tears · Arthur C. Clarke · fa The Huish Magazine Summer 1934, as by Clericus; farcical description of a purported new, numerical way to render French.
    • 26 · Letters to the Editor · Arthur C. Clarke · fa The Huish Magazine Autumn 1934, as by Batsin Belphry; farcical letter.
    • 27 · Musical Interlude · Arthur C. Clarke · fa The Huish Magazine Autumn 1934, as by Clericus; farcical recommendations for music to be played.
    • 29 · Peeps at Many Lands and Places, No. 3—The Technical Institute · Arthur C. Clarke · fa The Huish Magazine Autumn 1934, as by Clericus; farcical description of actual place.
    • 32 · Brendon House (Spring, 1935) · Arthur C. Clarke & R. W. Small · ms The Huish Magazine Spring 1935; this, and later items with the same title or simply entitled “Brendon,” are brief discussions of the athletic achievements of said dormitory.
    • 33 · The Fate of Fu-Manchu · Arthur C. Clarke · vi The Huish Magazine Spring 1935, as by Clericus
    • 37 · Letters to the Editor · Arthur C. Clarke · fa The Huish Magazine Spring 1935, as by A. Munchhausen; letter from a purported former student of the school.
    • 39 · Brendon House (Summer, 1935) · Arthur C. Clarke & R. W. Small · ms The Huish Magazine Summer 1935
    • 40 · Letters to the Editor · Arthur C. Clarke · fa The Huish Magazine Summer 1935, as by De Profundis; letter from a purported former student of the school.
    • 42 · Brendon House (Autumn, 1935) · Arthur C. Clarke & R. B. Canever · ms The Huish Magazine Autumn 1935
    • 43 · Huish and Hollywood · Arthur C. Clarke · ts The Huish Magazine Autumn 1935, as by Clericus; lightly fictionalized account of film society’s activities.
    • 46 · Our Noble Heritage · Arthur C. Clarke · ar The Huish Magazine Autumn 1935, as by ARCH
    • 46 · The Mystic Potion · DIL · pl The Huish Magazine Autumn 1935; unproduced play, written by unidentified Huish students, possibly including Clarke.
    • 57 · The Ciné Club · Arthur C. Clarke · ar The Huish Magazine Spring 1936
    • 58 · Brendon (Spring, 1936) · Arthur C. Clarke & R. B. Canever · ms The Huish Magazine Spring 1936
    • 67 · Further Exploits of Huish Films, Inc. · Arthur C. Clarke · fa The Huish Magazine Spring 1936, as by Clericus
    • 68 · Interviews with Notorieties—No. 1 · Arthur C. Clarke · fa The Huish Magazine Spring 1936, as by Ego; purported interview with “the Professor,” an inventor.
    • 71 · In Darkest Somerset · Arthur C. Clarke · fa The Huish Magazine Summer 1936, as by Clericus; fictionalized account of a journey to the part of England where Clarke grew up.
    • 73 · Into Space · Arthur C. Clarke · ar Checquer Board October 1937; probably reprinted from an unknown issue of The Huish Magazine.
    • 76 · The Greatest Adventure · Arthur C. Clarke · ar The Huish Magazine 1938
    • 81 · Letters to the Editor · Arthur C. Clarke · lt The Huish Magazine 1938, as by A Very Civil Servant; other than its fictional address in Bechuanaland, this reads like a letter actually written by Clarke, not a fictional persona.





    The Fantastic Muse by Arthur C. Clarke (Hilltop Press, July 1992, 0-905262-05-0, £1.00, 9pp, ph, nf)
        Collection of an article by Clarke on sf poetry and an sf poem, both reprinted from fanzines in the 1930’s.



    From the Ocean, from the Stars by Arthur C. Clarke (Harcourt, Brace & World, 1961, LC:62-8058, $4.50, 515pp, hc, om)
    • ix · Introduction · Arthur C. Clarke · in
    • 1 · The Deep Range · Arthur C. Clarke · n. Harcourt Brace, 1957
      expanded from “The Deep Range”, Star Science Fiction Stories #3, Frederik Pohl ed., Ballantine 1954.
    • 167 · The Other Side of the Sky · Arthur C. Clarke · co Harcourt Brace & World, 1958
    • 321 · The City and the Stars · Arthur C. Clarke · n. Harcourt Brace, 1956
      revised and expanded from Against the Fall of Night (Gnome 1953).



    How the World Was One: Beyond the Global Village by Arthur C. Clarke (Gollancz, June 25, 1992, 0-575-05226-0, £15.99, 289pp, hc, co, cover by Steven Hunt)
        Historical look at the development of transatlantic cables and satellite communications, based on the first 19 chapters of Voices Across the Sea (Harper 1958) and several other pieces, some previously uncollected. Simultaneous with the US (Bantam) edition.


    Into Space: A Young Person’s Guide to Space by Arthur C. Clarke & Robert Silverberg (Harper & Row, 1971, 06-021271-3, 129pp, hc, nf, cover by Ginger Giles)
        Non-fiction book about space for young people, revised (by Silverberg) from Clarke’s The Young Traveller in Space (Phoenix House, 1954).











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