Showing posts with label reference ad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reference ad. Show all posts

Thursday, July 31, 2014

McKay's ads transcribed from the Edsel B. Grimshaw review


THE OLDEST WRITERS' SERVICE
Literary Agent, established 35 years. Manuscripts criticized, revised, typed, marketed. Special attention to Book manuscripts. Poetry. Catalogue on request.
AGNES M. REEVE,
Dept. B. Franklin, O.
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LAURENCE ROBERTS, LITERARY AGENT
STORIES, NOVELS, ARTICLES, BOOKS MARKETED.
Highly recommended for publication of fiction and non-fiction. Editorially recognized advice, recommendations, editing, for revision, sales, publication. Un-established writers assisted. Write for information before sending manuscripts.
3 West 42nd St., New York City
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LITERARY AGENTS 29 YEARS
We sell short stories, articles, books, radio scripts, plays. Verse also considered. Constructive criticism for new writers. Personal representation for established authors. Editing, revision. For information and references,
E. Madison Ave. at 4 St., New York, NY
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BOOKS LOCATED PROMPTLY
All subjects, out-of-print, rare, etc. Special items for collectors acquired. New books at publishers' prices postpaid.
19 Hopedale Street, ALLSTON 34(?), BOSTON, MASS.
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BOOKFINDERS
Unusual, hard-to-find, out-of-print books at reasonable prices. Send your wants. Institutional lists accepted. Fast thorough(?) service. No obligation.
Box 1884-H(?) LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA
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ATHEIST BOOKS
22-page catalogue free. SEEKER CO.,
8 Park Row, New York, N. Y.
No. :--UNUSUAL LITERARY ITEMS
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WE PUBLISH
-print and distribute your manuscript in pamphlet or book form. Send for free folder.
PAMPHLET DISTRIBUTING CO., 11(?) W. 5 St., N.Y.
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Just the book for Lenten Reading

THE LIGHT
by
STEFAN TATE
At all bookstores......$3.95
Two Shoes Publishing
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OUT-OF-PRINT and HARD-TO-FIND
books supplied: also genealogies; Incomplete sets completed: magazine back numbers supplied, etc. All subjects, all languages. Send us your list of book-wants ---no obligation. We report quickly. Lowest prices.
LIBRARY SERVICE
17 WEST 48th(?) Street, Dept. H., New York, N.Y.
P.S. We also BUY old books and magazines.
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Daring, vivid, exciting!
MOONLIGHT
By JOSHUA LEE
Thrilling intrigue in the remaining “nights” of the war. Enemies change allegiances in the guise of darkness. A diabolical tale of about the worse in men before the dawn of a new world order.
“...a story about the war within a war.”
-MICHAEL GRUBE, Sentient.
“A must read in moonlight or daylight.”
-BENJAMIN JAMES, Examine.
At all bookstores MACMILLAN
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“WHO ARE THE MASTERS OF POWER?'
ANDREW SILVER authority on the changing social-political geography of our post-war world, identifies 15 persons who cradle the specter of power that will dictate unwritten rules and boundaries. He foresees an arms race between East and West. A cold war fought under the guise of regional, post-colonial conflicts. A chilling question arises. Will preventing the end of the world mean sacrificing the lives of thousands?
THE POWER 15
ROSE & BLATT
Publishing
at bookstores $3.50
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Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Monkey's Marginalia, No. 3

1.  I am going through the book again as some of the avenues I want to follow are on hold until the books come.  I did notice in the forward that Caldeira lists SOT as Straka's twentieth novel; but there are only 19 that we know of.   So there is a hidden Straka novel?   I apologize if this has been touched on somewhere else.
(7/31/14 edited to note, there is NO 20th Straka novel. I misread a passage in the Forward of SOT in January.) 

2.  I also found the place in one of the postcards included in S.; it's an old photograph of the Botanical Gardens in Rio de Janeiro. (image courtesy of the SFiles22)

3.  Here is the image taken from Google Maps street view for comparison.  


4.  As I posted on twitter a couple of days ago, I found another reference ad for the Grimshaw review posted on twitter by Doug Dorst.   This one also comes from The Saturday Review (October 15, 1949).  


5. And an unrelated bit of minutiae, I did find a Scottish author, Helen MacInnes who wrote spy novels.  



Thursday, January 9, 2014

Lenten Reading, a Wagtail?



It's official. Doug Dorst may be having a bit of fun with us.  I was unable to find the original reference ad for The Light by Stefan Tate that was part of the review that Dorst tweeted on December 19, 2013.  (Note: In the fictional world of Straka, this review was probably published sometime before February 22, Ash Wednesday in 1950.)

All I did find was a current publisher, Two Shoes Publishing started by author Audrey Mckay to distribute her books which are contemporary Christian fiction. (Just a reminder, McKay's was the name of magazine in which the review appeared.)

Stefan Tate appears as characters in two books.  Embrace of the Sun: In Shadows, by Daimon Price is another work of Christian fiction, this time with vampires.

Schoolfrenz, by Ray Crowther also features a character by the name of Stefan Tate, but as far as I can tell, this is straight fiction without religious affiliation.

(7/31/14, edited for grammar and tags added)


Saturday, January 4, 2014

Daring, Vivid, Exciting! and another T.S. Eliot reference

Edit: I have a cold today and it's muddled my head.  I listed the wrong magazine as the source of the original reference ad.  The magazine that should have been listed is The Saturday Review and has been corrected in the text below as well.

On December 19, 2013 Doug Dorst uploaded two pictures of the Ship of Theseus review by Edsel B. Grimshaw. Geekyzen and Mystimus both written excellent blog posts about the review. 

I was intrigued by the ad next to the review (2nd page) for the fictional book Moonlight.   on twitter found links to additional ads and posted them on twitter and in the comments of the SFiles22 blog.

Here is the ad as it appears in the review: 



Asking the google, I was able to find the original ad that was adapted for use in the review.  It comes from the August 26, 1950 edition of The Saturday Review.




"German general kidnapped from Crete by Englishmen and partisan guerillas..."

It's interesting in that the ad gives another us another link to Greece (Santorini Man) and the author also wrote a book titled Bats with Baby Faces which is reference taken from T.S. Eliot's The Waste Land.  I was unable to find any additional information on the book other than it was published by Harlequin Books (1951) and appears to be pulp fiction.  I welcome any additional information that readers may have to offer. 

(Fair use under U.S. Copyright law allows for the use of copyrighted works for non-commercial educational purposes)

(7/31/14, tags added and edited for grammar)