List price: $10.95 (that's 20% off!)
The Time Machine, A Story of Days to Come, and When the Sleeper Wakes.
List price: $23.95 (that's 30% off!)
I have just started "The Amber Witch" (plenty of gothic witch-burning and occult horror for you) and it looks like this one will be just as good.
This Dover edition comes with an informative introduction by an expert on supernatural literature, Everett Bleiler, and has some illustrations (those wonderful old-style Victorian illustrations with a caption at the bottom culled from the text on the facing page)and has a very attractive cover--a picture of a ghostly castle or turret with bats flying around it.
If you like the ghost stories of M.R. James, Edgar Allan Poe or J.S. Le Fanu you will more than likely enjoy these tales immensely. They are all relatively short novellas, averaging 80-90 pages in length each.
Moreover, the last article, "Intoxication and Immortality," by Suzanne Stetkeyvych, is absolutely fascinating, especially when read in conjunction with footnote number 85 to James Monroe's article, "Abu Bakr's Naughty Son." What was so fascinating?
The vast resonance of the term "saqi" in our own civilization, from the Assyrians onwards. I first came across this term while studying Arabic poetry, and learned that it meant "wine-bearer," and, more specifically, the handsome ephebe who poured out your wine for you.
Now, let's take the idea that wine = immortality (not such a new idea for Christians, where wine = the blood of Christ = immortal God!) and then add on the fact that the Assyrians called the "saqi" "rob shaqe" (lord of cupbearers). The term has cognates in all the Semitic languages including Hebrew and shows up in the Old Testament. So we have a very old idea here.
More excitingly, we have an "archetype." The archetype is a banquet, where a beautiful adolescent male hands out the wine of immortality, and implicit in this archetype is the possibility that the handsome young male also offers physical love.
Now, is this a powerful archetype, or not? It is the very image of the Greek symposium (as described by Plato and many others). It's right there in the myth of Zeus and Ganymede, where Ganymede offers "ambrosia" (immortality) to Zeus. It is such a powerful archetype that it made its way into the Koran, where Muhammad promised beauteous boys serving wine to his followers in Paradise. It is superabundant in Arabic poetry from virtually all eras, and it is a very visible theme of Persian poetry as well.
At any rate, I found this an extremely valuable idea, one which made my whole day. And ANY book which can do that for me is definitely worth owning!
Recommended!!
With recipes from the 1930's to the 1960's you are sure to find your favorite diner meals here. Alabama Sweet Potatoes, Monte Cristo Sandwich, Butterscotch Pie, you'll find recipes here that you won't find anywhere else. But don't look for any shortcuts here; these are the original recipes, which means the recipes don't start with a plain cake mix but with flour, eggs, and salt.
The book can be confusing at times like where step seven of Dixie Diner's Blueberry Pancakes say to "bake in your waffle iron", which would make it a waffle and not a pancake, or the Chipped Beef recipe that does not include toast or biscuits in the ingredients list but does state to serve it over toast or biscuits, a bit of an annoyance if you are done preparing it and then find out that you have no bread. Things like this are the only reason this did not receive a full five star rating.
Still, even with the small annoyances, the book is a pleasure to read. To add to the enjoyment of the book, it is filled with illustrations, advertising, and photographs from the appropriate years. For those who would like to travel back to a time of simple pleasures the book is a wonderful nostalgic trip and the recipes sure to delight.