Published by Ballantine Books, nEW yORK, 1973
Seller: Old Favorites Bookshop LTD (since 1954), Stouffville, ON, Canada
Mass Market Paperback. Condition: Very Good Condition. Cover Art by Gervasio Gallardo (illustrator). Novels by George Macdonald, Robert W. Chambers, Ernest Bramah and Eden Pillpotts. 248pp. Content clean, bright and sound with yellow fore edges.
Published by Nelson Doubleday, Garden City, NY, 1977
Seller: S. Howlett-West Books (Member ABAA), Modesto, CA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good+. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. Illustrated by Rick Bryant (illustrator). Book Club Edition. B&W Illustrations; This book is in Very Good+ condition and has a Very Good dust jacket. The book and its contents are in generally clean, bright condition. There is some light bumping and rubbing to the spine ends and corners. The text pages are clean and bright. The dust jacket is mostly clean and bright, but has spots of rubbing and color loss to the spine and flap joints. The contents include: The Bagful of Dreams by Jack Vance, The Tupilak by Poul Anderson, Storm in a Bottle by John Jakes, Swords Against the Marluk by Katherine Kurtz, and The Lands Beyond the World by Michael Moorcock.
softcover. Condition: Very good. first edition as stated. Paperback, 274 pages + 4 pages of publisher's ads. Cover art by Gervasio Gallardo. Crease on front cover corner, a couple of small scratches. Containing stories by H. P. Lovecraft, Frank Belknap Long, Clark Ashton Smith, Ambrose Bierce, Vincent Starrett and many others. The companion volume to H. P. Lovecraft: A Look Behind the Cthulhu Mythos by Lin Carter. 091625A.
Published by Ballantine Books, New York, 1972
Seller: ReadInk, ABAA/IOBA, Los Angeles, CA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Softcover. Condition: Near Fine. Illustrated by (cover) Gervasio Gallardo (illustrator). First Edition. [nice clean copy with minimal wear, spine slightly turned]. (Adult Fantasy) Series Mass Market PB The third (and seemingly most uncommon) of the four paperback collections of Smith's stories edited for Ballantine by Lin Carter, who describes them in his Introduction as "extraplanetary weird fantasies." Most were originally published in various pulp magazines in the early 1930s, and constituted, in Carter's words, "something quite new and different and exciting, something all his own." He lauds the tales for a prose style he calls "rich, bejeweled, exotic kind of writing [of] the sort we most often think of as being natural to the heroic fantasy tale of magic kingdoms and fabulous eras of the mysterious past.".