Deluxe Editions

I now have a section for leather-bound gilded-page deluxe volumes, most of which are the Barnes & Noble Collectable Editions. That is such a great thing, where they take a wide range of well-known books and re-publish them in a very deluxe manner.

The “War and Peace” and “Day of the Triffids” are Easton Press volumes, they are of even better quality, at a much higher price. I paid about forty bucks for Triffids used, as it is my favorite fiction book, and ten bucks for “War and Peace” at the thrift store. Someone must have passed away as there was a lot of these Easton books there. I refrained from buying any more than this as I haven’t much room, so I need to stick to things I actually plan to read. Although I wouldn’t mind having a big bookshelf of these high-end books.

Easton Press publishes the Horatio Hornblower series in its entirety, but at $600. That’s just over a hundred dollars per book. While I’d like to own those, that is probably never going to happen, which is a shame be cause nobody else seems to have reprinted those, leaving old, dated copies the only kind one can find, before the paperbacks.

The Classic Star Trek are the James Blish versions of the original series episodes, and I remember reading them back in the 1980s. When he wrote them a decade before that, there were no VHS tapes, only broadcast re-runs, so his versions of the show were the only way to enjoy them on one’s own schedule. I remember them as a very good read. This volume here collects about twelve or so paperbacks into one volume, that has been out of print for a while so I had to really hunt down an affordable copy that was in good shape.

I kept looking for the Barnes & Noble Ray Bradbury collection over the years, sure I’d seen such a thing at some point, but it was never in the stores. Turns out it has been out-of-print for years, so I found this well-read library copy and got the stickers to come off, leaving it in pretty good condition considering.

I’m a third of the way through The Count of Monte Cristo, which is one of my favorite movies (the early 2000s version gets better every time I watch it.) English was spoken and written much differently back then, but one gets used to it.

The “Jurassic Park” has both of the novels, a great way to go.

“H.G. Wells: Seven Novels” is simply something that should be standard in everybody’s library.

The “Han Solo Trilogy” isn’t the Han Solo Trilogy by Brian Daley that I’ve read many times since elementary school, I really wish they’d put together a volume of that. But this trilogy is by a renowned author of the genre, and is considered to be a worthy continuation of those stories, even referencing them at some point. So, hey. I have no plans on buying the Collector’s Editions of Boba Fett or Obi-Wan as I’m not that committed to Star Wars books.

The book on the U.S. Constitution and other writings is just a good thing to have around and look at once in a while. It should be standard reading in schools, but that would probably be too much to ask.

The John Wyndham omnibus isn’t a deluxe volume, but I paid as if it was. It was printed in 1980 and there aren’t many available. Triffids is my favorite that I’ve read many times, but some of his other works I have tried, but haven’t been able to get far in. The same thing happened to me with Jose Farmer’s “Riverworld” series, except all of his other books that I tried were awful. “Riverworld”, outstanding. Everything else? (I tried maybe three books, so that isn’t extensive) Not so much. But I wanted to have this Wyndham collection so I could give his other works another go without taking up too much extra space on my shelves.

I don’t have a big list of Barnes & Noble Collectors Editions that I’m looking to buy, I’m trying to be really selective. It would be a different thing if they reprinted a lot more different titles than they currently do. I’d really like to buy Easton Press’ “Band of Brothers”, which is $100, and maybe the Collectors Edition of “Dune”, which I’ve never read, but is supposed to be outstanding. I’m not in a big hurry to read it. I’m still getting over a deluxe copy of “Foundation” by Isaac Asimov, which is heralded as one of the best science fiction books ever… I got a hundred pages in, and it was SO BORING.

I used to have a very large selection of science fiction books, but most of them that I read, or tried to read, really weren’t that great, or even, they were awful. Despite great reviews and nice cover art. One really can’t judge a book by its cover! So, along with all of my political books (all depressing), I had a Stalinistic Great Purge about ten or fifteen years ago, to make room for more history books. I was still going to the annual library sales back then, hauling back boxes of books, so this bought me a lot of shelf space.

Now my science fiction section has twenty books, tops, if that. And two or three political books. I need more space again, but there is nothing to purge, as my shelves are full of great stuff!

Leave a comment