Another back cover of a tiny Hanuman dustjacket (this one from Max Beckmann's On My Painting). I own about eight in the series now, and this back cover is unique. The others look like this.
March 20, 2008
Hanuman Books, 2
Another back cover of a tiny Hanuman dustjacket (this one from Max Beckmann's On My Painting). I own about eight in the series now, and this back cover is unique. The others look like this.
March 19, 2008
March 2, 2008
Rene Crevel, Babylon
Labels:
avant-garde for the poor,
books,
covers,
crevel,
ernst,
french,
surrealists
Jean Ray, Malpertuis (and Presence du Futur)
I can't say much more than these two have said about Jean Ray's 20th century Gothic masterpiece Malpertuis: Giornale Nuovo and Michael Cisco.
In the intro to his 1998 translation of this 1943 novel, Iain White reports that: "In December of [1955, the year Ray died], due in large measure to the intervention of Raymond Queneau and Stragliati [Roland Stragliati, cineaste and writer], 'who have moved heaven and earth to rescue Malpertuis and indeed Jean Ray, from the obscurity of oblivion,' Malpertuis was republished in France by the leading firm Denoel, in their mass-market S. F. paperback series Presence du Futur."
Here's the cover of the Presence du Futur edition.

I just looked up the Presence du Futur series. Here are some of their covers (I stitched these together though they are not my scans):

João Guimarães Rosa
July 2008 update. See details of the Third Bank flaps here.
In their most recent print catalog, Archipelago announced a new translation of The Devil to Pay in the Backlands by João Guimarães Rosa (see my post about that book here). They will use the Portugese title, Grande Sertão. This is exciting news, especially because Archipelago works only with the finest translators (they haven't yet announced who will translate their edition). I'll update this post as more information becomes available.
I've scanned the other works by Rosa in English translation, both from Knopf. Check out the illustrated flaps from The Third Bank of the River.
July 2008 update. See details of the Third Bank flaps here.
If you are impatient to read Rosa, his story "My Uncle, The Jaguar" is contained in the anthology Masterworks of Latin American Fiction, along with stories by Marquez, Infante, Mutis, Carpentier, Cortazar, Felisberto Hernandez, and Ana Lydia Vega. It can be found for pennies (or rather, pennies plus shipping).
Raymond Roussel, Locus Solus
I finally found a hardcover edition of Locus Solus. It only took a decade.
June 25, 2008 update: One World came through and has announced publication in July 2008. It may take awhile for the books to reach US bookstores.
Atlas Anthology III
This early anthology from Atlas Press was edited by Alastair Brotchie and Malcolm Green and published in 1985 with the help of Carcanet. You can still find copies with a little effort and patience.
Get in touch if you can provide scans of (or actual copies of!) Atlas Anthology 1 & 2.
June 2008 update: Read two of the four Robert Walser pieces from this book here.
Atlas's editorial note:
"Thanks to the generous assistance of Carcanet Press, it has been possible to bring the third Atlas Anthology to a wider audience. Readers will decide for themselves whether there is a thread connecting these many differing texts. It seems to us they represent aspects of a shared outlook which has been manifested by numerous groups (European Romanticism, early Expressionism, Surrealism, 'Pataphysics, the OuLiPo, the Vienna Group) and many individuals. One thing is certain: their preoccupations have little connection with the bleak and conventional naturalism prevalent in Britain and the U.S., which seems to owe more to Mrs. Gaskell than the twentieth century. We know from past issues that we have at least a small yet effusive audience, and cannot say whether the wider reception will be that 'climate of warm indifference'* with which the English normally 'welcome' enthused writing.
"Just so long as it's not boring . . . "
"*Title of Martin Seymour-Smith's survey of insularity of English writing, published in Bananas (the last magazine attempting to publish interesting writing in the U.K.) in 1976."
--THE EDITORS
Author included: Hans Carl Artmann, Pierre Albert-Birot, Wolfgang Bauer, Konrad Bayer, Pierre Bettencourt, Peter Blegvad, Andre Breton, Jean-Pierre Brisset, Gunter Brus, Rene Crevel, David Gascoyne, Alfred Jarry, James Kirkup, Karl Kraus, Jean Lorrain, Harry Mathews, Gustav Meyrink, Pasolini, Georges Perec, Benjamin Peret, Oskar Panizza, Raymond Queneau, Jacques Rigaut, Herbert Rosendorfer, Raymond Roussel, Paul Scheerbart, Mathew Phipps Shiel, Kurt Schwitters, Boris Vian, Austryn Wainhouse, Robert Walser, Unica Zurn, and more.
Labels:
atlas press,
austrian,
books,
expressionists,
german,
roussel,
surrealists,
swiss
What is 'Pataphysics?
Labels:
avant-garde for the poor,
books,
daumal,
french,
jarry,
oulipo,
pataphysics,
vian
February 10, 2008
Struwwelpeter, Dr. Heinrich Hoffmann
A Journey Round My Skull is now 50 Watts
http://50watts.com/
I'm importing the archives to the new site and posting new material daily.
Please visit and update your links. Thanks.
***
http://50watts.com/
I'm importing the archives to the new site and posting new material daily.
Please visit and update your links. Thanks.
***
Read some of Dr. Heinrich Hoffmann's Struwwelpeter at the Early Comics Archive. Check out Struwwelhitler too. (And Wilhelm Busch's The Virtuoso.)
I recently bought this undated edition from the new Philadelphia bookstore Brickbat.
Modern European Poetry
Modern European Poetry introduced me to 50 percent of the poets now on my bookshelves. Although it seems to no longer be in print, you can still find it for a few dollars in used bookstores around the country. The anthology includes generous selections of poetry from France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Russia, and Spain (and some Latin American poets). It was edited by Willis Barnstone, Patricia Terry, Arthur Wensinger, Kimon Friar, Sonia Raiziss & Alfredo de Palchi, George Reavey, and Angel Flores (Flores is also responsible for Patti Smith's favorite, The Anchor Anthology of French Poetry and my favorite). My copy is the sixth edition from 1978 (Bantam; first published 1966).
Prepare to discover, among many others: Apollinaire, Supervielle, Reverdy, Eluard, Aragon, Michaux, Prevert, Desnos, Char, Trakl, Benn, Celan, Bachmann, Ritsos, Sahtouris, Elytis, Saba, Campana, Ungaretti, Montale, Mandelshtam, Machado, Vallejo, Huidobro, Guillen.
Seymour Chwast covers
Since writing about Seymour Chwast's dustjacket for Moravagine, I started to notice his work on books in my collection. Here are two:
--Fancies and Goodnights by John Collier, now reprinted by New York Review of Books, but here in a Time Life edition from 1965.
--The Symbolist Movement in Literature by Arthur Symons, in a Dutton paperback edition from 1958. Seems to be in print only by crappy public-domain-only reprint houses (I refuse to buy books from these publishers; you know who they are if you spend time searching for out-of-print books).
Some covers by Alvin Lustig and Paul Rand posted by Will Kane of World of Kane. The images are from Jackets Required by Steven Heller & Seymour Chwast, 1995.
Jim Tully and S. J. Perelman
Here are two personal recommendations from Ian Nagoski. Check out some of the records he sells at the record store he co-owns in Baltimore, The True Vine. He's recently been traveling around talking about his collection of 78s, promoting his compilation on Dust-to-Digital, Black Mirror: Reflections in Global Music (see my post and learn more at the label's site). Ian also sells some books at his shop, as I clearly remember buying Harry Mathews' masturbation masterpiece Singular Pleasures there.
Ian has handed me various books and records in the ten years or so I've known him.
1. Circus Parade by Jim Tully (copyright 1927; this edition 1932 Continental Books Inc, with illustrations by William Gropper).
2. Crazy Like a Fox by S. J. Perelman.
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