Friday, August 30, 2024

The Book Forger

In the early Eighties I published a poetry and punk music zine called the incurable. The first two issues were duplicated booklets, and later ones were single double-sided ‘beat sheets.’ In between these, the third consisted of half a dozen A4 side-stapled sheets and featured just two young poets, Davyd Mills and Michael Maguire.

About twenty years later or more, a friend sent me a link to an online auction that had just ended. A copy of the incurable 3, folded in half and a bit scruffy, had sold for over £100. Not because of any discerning collector of my work, since my name was nowhere mentioned in the description, nor was the incurable much known. No: the high bidding was no doubt because there are very keen collectors of any punk zines, few of which survive (the same is true for Sixties underground magazines).

Well, I said to myself, I’ll just pop to the copy shop (to paraphrase ‘Roadrunner’) and get a few more run off. I didn’t, of course, but I am sure it would have been quite possible to, ahem, “discover” some in the attic. And since punk zines were not comprehensively documented at the time, you could even, with sufficient ingenuity and application, invent and recreate some previously unknown titles: throw a few collages onto the page, reconstruct a few gig reviews of likely-sounding far-flung bands. Zines often listed other zines, so you could mention more, and then make them too. And so on. A nice little industry.

The story told in Joseph Hone’s The Book Forger: the true story of a literary crime that fooled the world (Penguin, 2024) is in one sense similar to this sort of wheeze: a distinguished bookseller faked previously unknown private pamphlet editions by famous Victorian poets, and sold them for fat prices. Some years later, in the interwar period, two contrasting characters, a corduroy-clad Communist and a languid man-about-town, became suspicious, investigated these together, and revealed the deception. It is a well-known, notorious episode in bibliographical and bookselling circles.

Hone gives us the background, which originated in the first edition craze (still very much a fad today) and recounts the origins of the scheme, run by Thomas Wise, an alert and audacious chancer. He explains how he began with legitimate and overt “facsimile” editions of well-known rarities and then hit upon his more profitable plot. He would find a relatively obscure piece by a well-known poet (Browning, Tennyson, Swinburne), for example from a fugitive periodical, and then spread the idea that a few copies were also printed for the poet’s private use. These he would then concoct, thus making a ‘newly discovered’ first edition. He went to some pains to perfect the incidental details of the supposed publication, using knowledge of each poet’s life and work, and to get the right paper, type and design. His work convinced eager collectors, but it was not quite precise enough to fool a really forensic examination, as the detecting duo were much later to find.

It is indeed a fascinating story, particularly for book-lovers. Hone alternates scenes from Wise’s career with the interwar investigation, an approach which works quite well. Hone, or his publisher, or both, have been clever in positioning this as a sort of Art Deco mystery in the vogue of Lord Peter Wimsey, who is evoked: they have seen that the Thirties milieu might appear more glamorous than the late-Victorian skullduggery. Hone has used the relatively few direct sources shrewdly and colourfully and quite endears us to his investigators. In fact, I thought that a series of fictional sequels featuring this literary duo might be rather fun.

I don’t think there was quite enough material for the story to comprise a full-length study (other than perhaps a technical bibliographic one) and so there’s a certain amount of imaginative reconstruction of the duo’s meetings and discussions, together with general background on earlier literary forgers, and also a diversion on the interesting but largely irrelevant fact (in this context) that the earnest Communist was in fact spying for British Intelligence.

Also, this being an awkward real-life mystery, not a yarn, there’s a sort of fading-away at the end: things were debated, denied, smoothed over, deferred, managed-away, and then the clouds of war and many more pressing concerns. But the book certainly kept me reading and I enjoyed its Golden Age detective style approach. 

(Mark Valentine)

Wednesday, August 28, 2024

The Dragon of Hay-on-Wye

The Life in Hay blog is always informative and interesting about events in the famous bookshop town. If you want to know about bookshops and other shops opening and closing, markets, concerts, local characters, this is the place to consult. It is run by writer 'Eigon', who also works in the Cinema Bookshop, the largest bookshop in the town, and the best for vintage fiction too, where I have had many unusual finds.

Eigon reports that the town has a dramatic new statue at the top of the car park, by sculptor Danny Thomas: the Hay Dragon. That should deter errant motorists from dodging the charges! 

Naturally, as can be seen, the heraldic beast is a keen book-collector and is guarding, like most of us do, a tottering pile of volumes still to be read .  . .

(Mark Valentine)

Image: Life in Hay.

Saturday, August 24, 2024

Two Uncollected Stories by Cormac McCarthy

Withnail Books of Penrith, publishers of rare literature in highly limited editions, have just announced their latest titles. These are two booklets offering uncollected and largely forgotten early stories by Cormac McCarthy, 'Wake for Susan' and 'A Drowning Incident'. 

They were published, the announcement explains, 'in October 1959 and March 1960 respectively, in the literary magazine of his alma mater, the University of Tennessee. The stories were his first published fiction, and provide a vivid glimpse of what was to come...'

The booklets are in a hand-numbered edition strictly limited to 150 copies. Each booklet includes a tipped-in frontispiece. Withnail Books' publications are always well-designed and well-produced and there is sure to be lively interest in these elusive pieces.

Update: sold out on the day of issue. 

(Mark Valentine)

Dreamt in Fire: The Dreadful Ecstacy of Athur Machen

In 2021, a first edition of this compilation, limited to small number of copies*, was published as a kind of exemplar to accompany a lecture introducing Machen by the compiler, Christopher Tompkins, to the audience at the seventh annual Inklings Oktoberfest in Kansas. Now a much expanded second edition has appeared in trade paperback (with a small number of hardcovers), serving not as a typical anthology of Machen but more as a sampler of texts beyond Machen’s most familiar writings. It comprises some five main sections, not counting the introductions and the bibliography at the end.

The first section, “Fiction”, contains nine stories, plus the whole of the slim 1924 collection Ornaments in Jade. It begins with “The Inmost Light” (1894) and ends, chronologically speaking, with “Change” and “N” (both 1936). The second section comprises ten essays, ranging from “Cidermass” (1889) through “A Note on Poetry” (1943).

Section three, “Journalism”, contains five items from 1913-1917; while section four, “Apologetics”, contains only one item, “War and the Christian Faith” (1918); and the final section, “Memoirs”, has extracts from Machen’s three volumes of autobiography, Far-Off Things (1922), Things Near and Far (1923), and The London Adventure (1924)

The full contents plus ordering and other information can be found at the catalog page at the Darkly Bright website, here. (You have to scroll down a bit to get to the trade paperback edition.)

* The first edition was limited to 50 numbered copies: the first 10 were hardcover and the remaining 40 were softcover. That edition is out of print.The second edition hardcover is limited to 25 numbered copies. The softcover is "unlimited."

Thursday, August 15, 2024

A Leonard Wolf Gallery

Well before Leonard Wolf died in March 2019 at the age of 96, I was planning to write up a Lesser-Known Writer entry on him. I piled his books where I could access them easily, but for various reasons I never finished the entry. So now, before I reshelve his books back to where they belong, I thought I'd post a gallery of the covers of his various weird-related genre work. 

His first such book was A Dream of Dracula: In Search of the Living Dead (1972), which the author himself described twenty-five years later as "a strange book"--a very personal book of its times with social commentary. Nonetheless it led to him doing The Annotated Dracula (1975) and The Annotated Frankenstein (1977). Both annotated editions were revamped as The Essential Dracula (1993) and The Essential Frankenstein (1993). Wolf did other such volumes like The Essential Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1995) and The Essential Phantom of the Opera (1996). Wolf also edited some worthwhile anthologies, including the bumper-sized Wolf's Complete Book of Terror (1979), which was significantly abridged, but with a few additional stories, under the same title in 1994. Other anthologies include Doubles, Dummies and Dolls (1995) and Blood Thirst: 100 Years of Vampire Fiction (1997). Carmilla and 12 Other Classic Tales of Mystery (1996), by Le Fanu, was edited and introduced by Wolf as a mass market original from Signet Classics. The reference book Horror: A Connoisseur's Guide to Literature and Film (1989) is selective and not comprehensive. Wolf also published two novels, The False Messiah (1984) and The Glass Mountain (1993). 

Here follows a chronological cover gallery of most of these books. 


















Saturday, August 10, 2024

Traces in a Landscape: Herefordshire

Earlier in this blog, in ‘Through the Golden Valley to the Dark Tower’, I recounted a book-collecting expedition in the Welsh/English Marcher country with two friends, staying in Abbey Dore and journeying via Francis Brett Young country at Urishay to Hay-on-Wye. 

Delving further  into this numinous realm, I consulted A Definitive History of Dore Abbey edited by Ron Shoesmith & Ruth Richardson (1997). The abbey is one of those where the church itself (though not the other abbey buildings) survived ruination because it was kept on for use by the parish. It is thus rather a grand edifice for this remote little village.

The dissolution here was carried out relatively peaceably. The Abbott accepted a pension and retired, as did other clergy. It was formally suppressed on 1 March (St David’s Day), 1537, when there were about 9 monks and 16 or so lay servants. A sale of goods was held the same day and records of this survive that give a picture of the Abbey’s material possessions. 

Most were bought (cheaply) by the agent of the dissolution, the Crown Receiver, John Scudamore. The abbey steward, Thomas Baskerville, also bought some items. The vestments included five chasubles, four tunicles, and three copes: the last abbot, John Redbourne, bought a cope of ‘blue silk with angels’, a chasuble and two tunicles. He was later accused of concealing from the Visitation “a little relic cross” of gold, and a “gospel book plated with silver”. The editors suggest he “only wished to protect that which was holy”.

All the gold plate was delivered to London, but some plate of lesser monetary value remained, in particular a “parcel-gilt chalice” which was kept, as the contemporary account records, “because of the clamour made about it by the parishioners”. What is parcel-gilt? A thin layer of gold leaf applied to parts of an object in sections or ‘parcels.’ There are other examples of parcel gilt chalices where the stem is gilded and ornate and the silver bowl is plain. 

This brief remark set me wondering. Why the clamour, of sufficient force to deter even the King’s rapacious agent? Why was this vessel particularly important to the local people? Was it linked to some especial veneration or legend, such as those of Celtic healing cups and the Grail evoked by Evelyn Underhill, Arthur Machen, Charles Williams and others? And what became of it? Where is the Chalice of Dore now? Could it still be preserved and concealed in some oaken aumbry?

It is one of those brief historical vignettes that opens out possibilities. And if ever its story were to be accompanied by a soundtrack, there would be no need to look far. For, in a nice synchronicity, at the same time as I was reading the book, I was delighted to hear that Mike Simmons, a composer of electronic music, had recently released an evocative album inspired by this same region. Traces in a Landscape: Herefordshire includes pieces devoted to Dore Abbey and to other local antiquities, including Arthur’s Stone, Kilpeck, The Rose Garden, and Wigmore Castle. Mike also provides short notes about these historic and legendary places.

I’ve been following Mike's ‘Music from the Mountains’ for some years and greatly enjoy his reflective, wistful work. Admirers of Mike Oldfield, Tangerine Dream, The Third Ear Band, Harold Budd and Virginia Astley will find much to appreciate here. Mike, a veteran of Sixties rock bands, also has available CDs of his other fine albums, including Dreams of Avalon, Portmeirion, A Green Lane to Ledbury and one following the River Wye. 
 
(Mark Valentine)