Results
ASSIGNMENT TIGER DEVIL.
Greenwich, CT: Fawcett Gold Medal, 1977. Small octavo, pictorial wrappers. First edition. Paperback original. A Sam Durell adventure.
THE SPIRIT.
New York: Warren Publishing Co., 1974-1976. Octavo, 14 issues, pictorial wrappers. Comic magazine. The first fourteen issues of the Warren publication. Reprints of The Spirit.
THE SPIRIT, NO. 1 [GREAT CLASSIC NEWSPAPER COMIC STRIPS NO. 4].
[Ann Arbor, MI: Edwin Aprill, Jr., 1966]. Large octavo, pictorial wrappers, stapled. First edition. One of 300 copies printed. Collects THE SPIRIT daily newspaper strips numbers 1-93, 1941-42. Color cover with black and white interior.
DR. CYCLOPS.
New York: Phoenix Press, Publishers, [1940]. Octavo, pp. [1-8] 9-255 [256: blank], original red cloth, front and spine stamped in black. First edition. Novelization of the 1940 film starring Albert Dekker as the ruthless and sadistic mad scientist in the Peruvian jungle who uses radioactivity to miniaturize living things, including a group of human beings who are reduced to one fifth of their natural size. "Not only is Dr. Cyclops a literate horror/sci-fi film with good animation and special effects; it is also filmed in Technicolor, something unheard of for such a low-budget film at that time." - Parish & Pitts, The Great Science Fiction Pictures, pp. 104-105. The novel, often attributed to, but not by, Henry Kuttner, was perhaps written by Alexander Samalman. Kuttner did write a shorter magazine version from the film script which was published in THRILLING WONDER STORIES, June 1940.
DR. CYCLOPS.
New York: Phoenix Press, Publishers, [1940]. Octavo, pp. [1-8] 9-255 [256: blank], original red cloth, front and spine stamped in black. First edition. Novelization of the 1940 film starring Albert Dekker as the ruthless and sadistic mad scientist in the Peruvian jungle who uses radioactivity to miniaturize living things, including a group of human beings who are reduced to one fifth of their natural size. "Not only is Dr. Cyclops a literate horror/sci-fi film with good animation and special effects; it is also filmed in Technicolor, something unheard of for such a low-budget film at that time." - Parish & Pitts, The Great Science Fiction Pictures, pp. 104-105. The novel, often attributed to, but not by, Henry Kuttner, was perhaps written by Alexander Samalman. Kuttner did write a shorter magazine version from the film script which was published in THRILLING WONDER STORIES, June 1940.
DR. CYCLOPS.
New York: Phoenix Press, Publishers, [1940]. Octavo, pp. [1-8] 9-255 [256: blank], original red cloth, front and spine stamped in black. First edition. Novelization of the 1940 film starring Albert Dekker as the ruthless and sadistic mad scientist in the Peruvian jungle who uses radioactivity to miniaturize living things, including a group of human beings who are reduced to one fifth of their natural size. "Not only is Dr. Cyclops a literate horror/sci-fi film with good animation and special effects; it is also filmed in Technicolor, something unheard of for such a low-budget film at that time." - Parish & Pitts, The Great Science Fiction Pictures, pp. 104-105. The novel, often attributed to, but not by, Henry Kuttner, was perhaps written by Alexander Samalman. Kuttner did write a shorter magazine version from the film script which was published in THRILLING WONDER STORIES, June 1940.
DESTROY THE U. S. A.
Toronto, London, New York: A News Stand Library Pocket Edition, 1950. Octavo, pictorial wrappers. First Canadian edition. News Stand Library 141. Published in the U. S. as THE MURDER OF THE U.S.A. Atomic attack on the United States. "A surprisingly far-sighted presentation of the theory of deterrence and a system of underground bunkers called "burrows" from which ICBMs and SPAMs ("Self-Propelled Atomic Missiles") are launched."- Brians: Nuclear Holocausts: Atomic War in Fiction, 1895-1984, p. 227.
THE MURDER OF THE U.S.A.
[New York: Quinn Publishing Company, Inc., 1947]. Small octavo, pictorial wrappers. First paperback edition. Atomic attack on the U.S.-who is responsible?
DOC SAVAGE: REFLECTIONS IN BRONZE.
Greenwood, MA: Odyssey Publications, Inc., 1978. Octavo, pictorial wrappers, stapled. First edition. Booklet which reprints two articles by Will Murray, "Reflections In a Flake-Gold Eye" and "The Girl Who Loved Doc Savage." Both were originally published in the mimeographed fanzine THE DOC SAVAGE READER prior to 1975, which is an uncommon fanzine. Both articles are revised for this publication and are one of the earliest examinations of the character.
DOC SAVAGE: THE JADE OGRE.
New York: Bantam Books, 1992. Octavo, pictorial wrappers. First edition. Paperback original.
SEETEE SHOCK.
New York: Simon and Schuster, 1950. Octavo, boards. First edition. Sequel to Seetee Ship. Anatomy of Wonder (1995) 3-195.
SEETEE SHOCK.
New York: Simon and Schuster, 1950. Octavo, boards. First edition. Sequel to Seetee Ship. Anatomy of Wonder (1995) 3-195.
SEETEE SHOCK.
New York: Simon and Schuster, 1950. Octavo, boards. First edition. Inscribed and signed by Williamson as Will Stewart/Jack Williamson to a well known early fan. Sequel to Seetee Ship. Anatomy of Wonder (2004) II-1261.