I think I have a copy of this somewhere. If I find it, it’s yours.
A few. All of which have disappeared from any library list.
Birchism Was My Business by Gerald Schomp
Impolite Interviews by Paul Krassner
Medical Mafia by Guy something
Soul Hustlers by Rene Noorbergen.
By normal standards, that’s very faint hope. By Ellison standards, it takes a quantum leap to the next level. That still make it very faint hope, however. God knows how many of the authors have gotten their first-publication rights back at this point.
looks at his bookshelf
How much is it worth to you?
Just kidding! I do have one but I’m not interested in letting it out of my possession…it’s already a replacement copy.
tease.
The book is The World’s Largest Cheese: an indulgence, a collection of humor pieces by Chrisopher Cerf. “See the Merino…” is one piece in the book. It was originally in the Harvard Lampoon but the book is a general collection of Cerf’s work up to that time.
It’s a great book and not terribly expensive.
If that doesn’t work out, make an offer on my copy. Perfect condition. I have it as a reference book but can part with it easily enough for a friend.
Mock me for my pedestrianism, but Kirith Kirin by Jim Grimsley. There’s currently a copy going for $37 on abebooks, which is very tempting, but I am still wary about paying that much for a book by an author I’ve never read. I’ve paid good money for later books from a series that are out of print, but never blindly.
But seeing as that’s the cheapest I’ve seen it in…oh…years, and the closest library that has it isn’t even in this province, I might just take the chance!
The best website for find used out-of-print books for sale (provided the book is in English, French, German, Spanish, Italian, or Dutch) is www.bookfinder.com I’ve found all kinds of books there that I had almost given up on finding.
The best website to find a library near you that has a hard-to-find book is www.worldcat.org Inter-library loan is your friend.
I can’t think of any books I can’t find now at any price, except a couple whose titles and authors I can’t remember. That makes searching hard.
-
a book that reproduces all known medieval documents about the Norse voyages to Greenland and Vinland in the original languages (Old Norse, Latin, German and maybe others) together with translations in modern Danish, possibly in 2 volumes. When I looked years ago the cheapest copy was over $50, too expensive for me then, but a price I would gladly pay today if only I could remember the title.
-
a book that is supposed to be similar to Mackay’s Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds. Mackay’s is often said to be the first book in English that takes a skeptical look at various strange beliefs (supernatural or otherwise), but years ago I came across a reference to a title that was published earlier. I looked and couldn’t find it at any price. Now of course I don’t remember the author or title.
Thanks for this.
Here’s one with a happy ending: I was looking for a copy of The Stress of Her Regard, by Tim Powers, for YEARS, but it had been out of print since the early '90s. I never saw it in used book stores. Once it became easy to find secondhand books online I was able to track down several copies, but all were very expensive – sometimes upwards of $100 for a paperback!
For quite some time I believe The Stress of Her Regard was the only Powers novel not in print, but in 2008 a new edition finally came out. Now anyone can own their own copy for $10-15. They managed to come up with a less cheesy looking cover too, although I note that the mountain shown is obviously the Matterhorn while it is actually the Jungfrau that is significant in the book.
-
Is it Carl Christian Rafn’s Antiquitates Americanæ?
-
I couldn’t find anything like this except for the “Report of the Commissioners Charged by the King to Examine Animal Magnetism”, or the “Franklin Report”, which doesn’t really seem similar enough to your description, but possible…
Also: the worldcat link brought up a few libraries in the states that had a copy of the book I was looking for, but I want one (and the bookfinder link didn’t bring up anything). Oh well.
Wombat, are you in Tasmania? The UTAS library site has a copy of the English translation by Baldwin.
It is shown as currently on the shelf in the Morris Miller Library, call number PA 4013 .H35 A23 1983.
I’ll keep that in mind… It’s on my “To Get At Some Point” list, but it’s not an urgent acquisition.
Thanks Louise! I’ve been avoiding uni, so I didn’t even think of that…but I’m denying myself a wealth of good stuff by not keeping up with the library, at least. I should brave it.
OK, just for kicks, I looked them up. (I get my kicks really cheaply, apparently.)
The third one - Guylaine Lanctot? Medical Mafia - AbeBooks
I spent an inordinate amount of time, a year or so back, searching for a book to identify feathers.
I only ever found one and it was prohibitively expensive and came from England.
Sorry, I can’t even remember the name now.
Here are two I could find: my guess is that you found the book in the second link, but the first one also has information.
Bird Tracks & Sign : A Guide to North American Species
Feathers: Identification for Bird Conservation
http://www.alibris.com/booksearch.detail?invId=9442381112&siteID=hi3Lv4qpBig-agvRJwKVjx0HwjR4k3bquA
Funny coincidence! I just scored a copy of the Philogelos via my university’s ILL for a series of classroom lectures I’m writing, but if you would like your own copy, you could try Amazon.co.uk
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Jests-Hierocles-Philagrius/dp/1437169554/ref=wl_it_dp_o?ie=UTF8&coliid=I2T2WT4TL3Y99M&colid=3LOLI2WXAPEE5
(I read through this thread rather quickly, so if someone else has posted this link, my apologies.) It’s only 11GBP, so it’s reasonably priced.
If you like those sorts of jokes and anecdotes, you might enjoy Philip Matyszak’s new book, The Classical Compendium (which quotes from many authors including the Philogelos.)
What’s difficult to get is the *Athenaze *Teacher’s Guide for Volume two (both editions, as I use the UK and US versions) – OUP pulled the book ages ago, so it ranges from $100 to $350 second hand; it retailed for about $14! Fortunately, colleagues have come to the rescue while I convince Oxford that I’m an instructor, and not a student looking for the answer book! It’s very difficult to pry a copy out of them without a professional reference, on letterhead, written by Homer himself.
AweSOME! I’m gettin’ one. Thank you! (This will be the first new book I’ve bought in months.)