Two-part query
Jun. 2nd, 2005 08:39 amSo, if an American SF geek was to find herself in London:
1) Where should she go to buy British SF novels? It doesn't have to be a genre-specialty bookstore -- I just don't want to walk into the equivalent of an airport bookshop and say, "Oh, look, they've got a quarter of the Terry Pratchett we've got at home and some Dan freaking Brown novels," and walk out again.
2) What's out in the UK but not (or not yet) in the US that she should look for? (Speculative fiction in particular, but other genres welcome with some kind of description of what, exactly, it is I'd be dealing with. Er, she'd be dealing with.)
1) Where should she go to buy British SF novels? It doesn't have to be a genre-specialty bookstore -- I just don't want to walk into the equivalent of an airport bookshop and say, "Oh, look, they've got a quarter of the Terry Pratchett we've got at home and some Dan freaking Brown novels," and walk out again.
2) What's out in the UK but not (or not yet) in the US that she should look for? (Speculative fiction in particular, but other genres welcome with some kind of description of what, exactly, it is I'd be dealing with. Er, she'd be dealing with.)
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Date: 2005-06-02 01:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-06-02 01:54 pm (UTC)I'll toss out River of Gods as a suggestion.
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Date: 2005-06-02 02:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-06-02 02:46 pm (UTC)Ian McDonald. I believe Desolation Road had a reprint within the past couple of years, so you may well be able to get hold of a copy. Do so. Also, you need to read Sacrifice of Fools.
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Date: 2005-06-02 04:22 pm (UTC)Juliet Marillier's latest is already out in the UK, K. J. Parker has a new one out, Ken MacLeod's latest will be out in August. The first five of Steven Erikson's Malazan series are all out in paperback. I think Jasper Fforde has achieved simultaneous publication now. Robin Hobb's new one will be out in July, but to my mind it probably isn't worth putting up with the lower quality of British hardbacks for the sake of a couple of months. Hardcover prices are about the same as here, or used to be before the exchange rate went crazy, but there don't seem to be many hardcovers printed and the large-format paperback often comes out at the same time; paperbacks are expensive. Expect to pay trade-paper prices for what looks like mass-market (but technically isn't; no rip-and-return system, and the paper's usually a bit better.)
Also, you might want to look for cheap editions of out-of-copyright C19 classics, some of which are hard to find here, and not-so-cheap editions of obscure Wilkie Collins, if that interests you at all, and the Gollancz Sf and Fantasy Masterworks series.
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Date: 2005-06-02 04:54 pm (UTC)I've enjoyed stuff by Ian Watson but don't know what he has out right now.
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Date: 2005-06-02 05:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-06-02 07:07 pm (UTC)I can't get The Algebraist from Amazon at the moment, though.
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Date: 2005-06-02 08:00 pm (UTC)There's also a Waterstones inside Harrods... should you wish to mix a slightly more modest range with a peek at the food halls and some pretty things (plus the pet department is nearby and there can be kitties and puppies and rabbits errr yes halfway through coping with the crowds and people I tend to like standing and looking at rats and kitties sleeping ::grins::) Selfridges (Oxford Street across from the Bond Street station IIRC) also has a general book department - though for some reason I find Selfridges hard to navigate, and there was still a Book's Etc across the road and an HMV (but again I've had shops vanish one month to the next, and it's been a while longer since I *did* the Oxford Street book tour start to finish) But they'll almost all be better than the nearest WHSmiths (also on Oxford Street but in what I guess would be a mini-mini mall of shops and fast food places).
Should it be of interest the big Virgin and HMV stores were also the Tottenham Court Road end of Oxford Street - though the prices and those of the electronics will likely not be attractive unless they're not things available in the US. (Yes, I have seen your prices ::envies:: and the exchange rate just makes it worse :o) )
For what's out here but not there - it might not just be new you might want to think on - I was surprised to find frex that Robin Hobb's publishing here as Megan Lindholm and those books don't seem to have made it back across to the US at all. It just gets tricky to know if some of those, and some of the rereleased golden age stuff is available where you are :o)
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Date: 2005-06-02 08:21 pm (UTC)Most of what I'm looking for when I'm there are the proper editions of Pratchett; most of the other folks I read are getting simultaneous or nearly so US editions that I'm not trying to match against an existing shelf-full....
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Date: 2005-06-02 08:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-06-03 02:27 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-06-03 02:27 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-06-03 02:28 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-06-03 02:31 am (UTC)I confirm your suspicions.
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Date: 2005-06-03 02:34 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-06-03 02:36 am (UTC)Waitwaitwait. There are realio trulio Megan Lindholm books over there that aren't over here?
Ooooooh.
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Date: 2005-06-03 02:57 am (UTC)http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/search-handle-form/026-4046277-4959634
The Reindeer People/Wolf's Brother duology might be of interest, if you haven't come across it before.
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Date: 2005-06-03 02:59 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-06-03 03:39 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-06-03 03:48 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-06-12 12:27 am (UTC)Ditto everyone on Charing Cross Road and the downstairs of Forbidden Planet, though. I picked up the next two Steven Erikson novels when I was there, though I looked at the Tiste (thingie) one and decided I really didn't need to start on a new story arc set in that world.
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Date: 2005-06-12 02:36 am (UTC)