I loved these books as a kid. Strangely enough, someone alluded to them in a post maybe six months ago. But I notice my public library has the series, so I think maybe I’ll recommend them to my kids.
And just so as to nominate something that’s not SF, how about New Grub Street by George Gissing. Or Oblomov by Ivan Goncharov. Or The Radetzky March, by Joseph Roth, which I was plugging in a recent thread.
Silverlock is in print through NESFA Press (New England Science Fiction Association). They also have lots of other obscure goodies, like the virtually complete works of Cordwainer Smith, William Tenn, and Hal Clement.
Oh my! Now I feel guilty for going after The Ideal Genuine Man by interlibrary loan! And Khadaji’s looking for Silverlock too…gee, I hope it was as good as I remember.
My high school drama teacher once mentioned that book, and just from his description I thought it sounded like a lot of fun. Now that you’ve reminded me and given me the author’s name, I’ll have to give it a look.
Searching for the title of Darkness at Noon draws 12 hits on the SDMB, and three are from me. This book made the Modern Library top 10, placing it with company like Catch-22 and Lolita, but I’d never even heard of it at the time.
Oooh, I have this one. I went on a 19th century realism kick a few years ago, read a bunch of Zola, bought several more authors but haven’t gotten to them yet. (Zola’s a tough act to follow.)
According to K. W. Jeter in “Horror: Another 100 Best Books”, New Grub Street is “at its heart a horror novel”, the horror being wasting one’s life.
He also says that Grub Street is “widely considered to be the best ever written about writers and the writing life.” Cool.
I LOVE that book! Especially the poor priest. I figured Searehad to be a pen name, but I never was sure whose it was.
I’ve started here before, my all time favorite is Ancient Lights by Davis Grubb (the same guy who wrote "The Night of the Hunter.) It was written when he knew he was dying from an incurable cancer. It’s religious, magical, blatantly pornographic in places, but in the end, full of hope.
Did you read it? Or are you getting it now? It’s out of print – all of Robertson is out of print – but there are tons of used copies in the usual places. You will want to own this book.
So you’re the one I can thank for recommending that book? I loved it too. How impossibly rich can language be? The only Grubb that’s been a disappointment for me is Barefoot Man. It went nowhere and I didn’t finish it.
I just traded Ancient Lights this week for some Christopher Fowler and Tim Powers – recommendations from another thread.
I hope not. I’d be interested in knowing Robertson’s status on library shelves. I don’t have access to a large library. If a book isn’t new or popular, my library doesn’t have it.
If you can’t get it, I’d be glad to send you one. Most of my Robertson titles are from a big fan who winnowed his paperbacks as he found hardcovers. Lucky me.
Ariel, by Steven R Boyett. Great fantasy novel about a world where all advanced technology including gasoline engines and firearms, stop working and magic STARTS working, and all sorts of magical creatures appear.
But it doesn’t take the fairy story mindset…it’s a grim, grimey, dirty world descended into tortuous anarchy. Which nicely offsets the otherwise cutey setup of a 20 year old virgin man and the unicorn that is bonded to him spiritually.
Very, very cool book. Sadly, Boyett was turned off of writing novels for years due to a bad experience with a series he was starting after Ariel came out.
I have a couple that I thought would have already been mentioned in this thread, but haven’t, so I’m throwing them out there…
Two from James Morrow, “Only Begotten Daughter”, and “Bible Stories for Adults”. The former is a telling of a modern day, um, virgin birth, and the later is a collection of short stories the standout being The Assemblage of Kristen. One of the best organ donation stories I’ve ever read.
Another is “Bangkok 8” by John Burdett. I picked this up in an airport, thinking it would be a good way to kill some time during a layover. I finished it halfway through my flight, and started again right then and there.
Hugh Laurie’s “The Gun Seller” is a good satire of the spy thriller, and “Making History” or “The Hippopotamus” by his longtime creative partner and this centuries Oscar Wilde, Stephen Fry are two of my favourite books.
Anything by George Saunders should have been a best seller, and I’ll end with “More than Human” by Theodore Sturgeon
I know it’s a cliche, but so many books…so little time!
Bah, I’ll name a whole writer: Michael Bishop. I read the collection One Winter in Eden & was struck by the range of stories. Some are clearly “fantasy,” whereas others are just … odd.
The Ideal Genuine Man is ready for me to pick up at the library! I know you weren’t waiting with bated breath or anything, but I thought I’d bump the thread.
Paradise Falls is excellent too. It takes place in the aftermath of the Civil War, in a small town in Ohio. Some of the same characters appear in his Civil War books.
It’s sort of an old-fashioned book, in that a lot of stuff happens to memorable characters. Robertson gives life to all of his people, even the minor ones. It reminded me of Our Town and Main Street, only richer.
CalMeacham that Steinbeck you mentioned was an unfinished work, don’t know if that has anything to do with its sinking back into obscurity.
Loved love lend to friends This Side of Brightness by Colum McCann, interweaving history of people’s lives over four generation in NY.
And The Good Fairies of New York which thanks to this thread I’ve just discovered is going to be re-printed. It’s an everyday story of a couple of Scottish thistle fairies in New York.