Old Novels and the Women Who Owned Them
1 day ago
This blog is devoted to fantasy, supernatural and decadent literature. It was begun and is managed by Douglas A. Anderson, with contributions from Mark Valentine and other friends, to present relevant news and information.

Books published by Arkham House (founded 1939) have long
been collectible. In the first half of the 1970s, the small British publisher
Neville Spearman Limited reissued a number of Arkham titles in hardcover, in
their British first editions. Neville Spearman as a publisher was founded in
1955 by Neville Armstrong (1914-2008), who ran the firm until 1985, when he
sold it. Neville Spearman published between five and six hundred books,
many of which were very eclectic in subject matter. I have listed the twelve
Arkham reprints below, chronologically (noting the geographical movements of
the publisher at that time), and below that, alphabetically by author (which notes
the one title which went into a second Neville Spearman printing). The Neville
Spearman reprints aren’t nearly as rare as the Arkham House originals, but at
least they allow readers to access those titles at more reasonable prices. Neville Spearman published a number of other titles of interest to readers of supernatural literature, including James Dickie's anthology The Uncanny (1971), and the George Hay-edited spoof, The Necronomicon (1978).![]() |
| Cover art by David L. Fletcher |
I've been too busy to study deeply the latest issue of Le Visage Vert, even to the point of being remiss about calling attention to its publication some months ago. So here's a belated notice. Ordering details can be found here (scroll down), and a full table of the contents of this issue here. The lead story is by Perceval Landon, "Thurnley Abbey". Lafcadio Hearn is represented with an article (from 1875) on spirit photographs. François Ducos contributes a study of the occult detective in France, 1930-1960. There are some older materials by Kirby Draycott and Gustave Guitton, as well as contemporary stories by Jean-Pierre Chambon and Achillèas Kyriakìdis. All in all another fine issue.
Mike and Rita Tortorello run
Pegana Press from their home near Seattle, Washington. I have written about
their Dunsany publications before (here and here). I’m
pleased now to offer a brief Q&A with Mike about how they got started with
Pegana Press. I also recommend that you browse around their website, which has
lots of photos and text describing their operation and publications more
fully. (Click on the photos to enlarge them.)
That grew out of collecting
nice books and gradually growing more curious about how they were made. Knowing
about and reading William Morris had a lot to do with it because of his
printing at Kelmscott. That led me to a Roycroft edition of a Morris book and I
explored the printing career of Elbert Hubbard. I was also collecting Clark
Ashton Smith at the time and tracked down some of the letterpress chapbooks
that Roy Squires had printed in California
and that was a big eye opener as well. Strangely, I had talked with Squires
years before this and bought Kai Lung and Lord Dunsany first editions from him
as a bookseller without knowing that he was a well respected printer in the
Fantasy/Supernatural field.
I usually come at each book from a
different direction. I begin by choosing an author or work I'd like to have in
my library and that no one has else has done. Then I have to decide on the
design and physical structure of the book to determine what kinds of paper and
type will be used. One of the Clark Ashton Smith books we did utilized Golden
Rectangle proportions for everything and we used an ancient looking Lokta paper
from Nepal
as endpapers, I really wanted the book to feel prediluvian in nature and
magical as the stories are about Necromancers in Poseidonis. The Lovecraft
Edition was based on the proportions of a James Branch Cabell book I own that I
really like the look and feel of. I also do chapbooks that require less
structural decisions. After the design concept is clear in my mind, I start
thinking about art and how to get something cool for the book. The great thing
about the internet is it allows me to have worked with artists in Germany, Fiji
and France
to realize some of these books.