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Nostalgia

We all get nostalgic at times.

Here’s a double dose, remembering a nice book from the Library of Janis Ian, now at the John Hay Library, Brown University: with the inscription above, George R. R. Martin presents a volume in his Game of Thrones series to Janis Ian and Pat Snyder, recalling their wedding at City Hall in Toronto on 27 August 2003, before same-sex marriage was legal in the United States. Martin was best man at the wedding, which was reported in the New York Times. It was Martin’s first appearance in the paper.

MARTIN, George R. R. A Dance with Dragons. Book Five of A Song of Ice and Fire. 8vo, New York: Bantam Books, [2011]. First edition. Boards. As new in dust jacket. Inscribed by the author on the half title. ¶¶ Inscribed by the author to Janis Ian: “To Janis & Pat who got me in The New York Times, Fly high, burn brightly, Love, George”.

A Conversation larger than the Universe

A Conversation larger than the Universe was an exhibition on view at The Grolier Club in New York City from 25 January through 10 March 2018. A Conversation larger than the Universe is a history of science fiction in seventy literary artefacts and a highly personal tour through the bookshelves of Henry Wessells. The books (many signed or inscribed by their authors), magazines, manuscripts, letters, and artwork date from the mid-eighteenth century to the present and explore the ideas and people that have defined the literatures of the fantastic, from Mary Shelley and H. G. Wells to Philip K. Dick, Joanna Russ, James Tiptree, Jr., and William Gibson, as well as works by W. H. Hudson, Richard Jefferies, and others not so widely known today. Beginning with the origins of science fiction in the Gothic, this ‘Conversation’ contemplates topics such as the End of the World (and After), Imaginary Voyages, Dystopia, Women Authors, Literary Innovation, Humor, the Sixties, Rock ’n’ Roll, Cyberpunk, Steampunk, and what’s happening in science fiction and the fantastic right now. The exhibition adopts a broad description of Science Fiction encompassing Fantasy and Horror as well as bibliography and scholarship in the field.

The EXHIBITION tab on this website presents a record of the books and other materials exhibited

The Grolier Club has posted photos of the exhibition installation here: https://www.flickr.com/photos/grolierclub/sets/72157668998324669

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A Conversation larger than the Universe. Readings in Science Fiction and the Fantastic 1762-2017 is an illustrated collection of essays to accompany the exhibition, including a descriptive checklist of the materials on view, published by The Grolier Club. The book includes ‘A Hatful of Adjectives’, an original Foreword by John Crowley. Book design by Jerry Kelly. Several sections of the book appeared in Wormwood, Foundation, and The New York Review of Science Fiction in advance of book publication.

Size : 6 x 9 inches, trade paperback, pictorial wrappers with french flaps. 288 pp. With more than 100 illustrations; index. ISBN 978-1-60583-074-2. Price: $35.00. ORDER A COPY.

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Subscriber Edition

A Conversation larger than the Universe. Readings in Science Fiction and the Fantastic 1762-2017
By Henry Wessells
Foreword by John Crowley
Issued with an original short short story, Reading in Public, by Michael Swanwick.

Published by Temporary Culture in an edition of 75 copies, signed by John Crowley and Henry Wessells.
6-1/8 x 9-1/2 inches, 288 pp. With more than 100 illustrations; index.
Hand bound in sand cloth with letterpress label.
With: Reading in Public (stitched in blue Hahnemühle wrappers with printed label, signed by Michael Swanwick).
Note: Reading in Public is original to this edition and does not form part of the trade edition.
ISBN 978-0-9961359-4-8. Price: $300.00. ORDER A COPY.

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Reviews & Related Publicity

“erudite and altogether fascinating . . . In the year of Frankenstein’s bicentennial, this is essential reading”
Publishers Weekly

‘a stunning exhibition’
Gary Wolfe reviewed the book in the January issue of Locus magazine.

Michael Dirda reviewed the book in the Washington Post on publication day (25 January 2018).

Mark Valentine conducted a two-part interview in the week prior to publication for Wormwoodiana, part one on 17 January and part two on 18 January.

Gil Roth interviewed Henry Wessells for the Virtual Memories podcast (show 255, 5 February 2018).

A British publication, Tank Magazine, also reviewed the exhibition. The Library of America published a short illustrated interview on Friday 2 March.

The Book Collector (for Spring 2018) called the Conversation “much more than a catalogue; it is an engaging illustrated history of a sometimes undervalued genre . . . a most enlightening assemblage.”

Andy Sawyer reviewed the book for issue 131 of the U.K.-based Foundation: the international review of science fiction and observed “[d]isguised as a catalogue, this is an extremely valuable book about what we think of the fantastic and why.”

Locus magazine included the book on its Recommended Reading List.

The Private Life of Books

The Private Life of Books

Temporary Culture is pleased to announce the publication of a new edition of The Private Life of Books, containing poems by Henry Wessells on reading, memory, and other topics. The photographs by Paul Schütze document the Berkeley Square shop of London booksellers Maggs Bros. (they have since moved to Bedford Square). The Private Life was originally published as an artist book in September 2014, and the title poem features as the concluding voiceover in D.W. Young’s documentary, The Booksellers. Designed by Jerry Kelly, this beautifully printed small format edition is, as Mark Valentine observes, “suitable for a gentleman-scholar’s waistcoat pocket, for consultation upon occasion, or for the reticules of learned ladies.”

Temporary Culture started as a photocopy ’zine in the summer of 1988. The sumac and fingerprint logo was adapted from a blockprint by A. Wessells and used as stickers produced for the seventh issue (1992). The publishing activities of Temporary Culture have always been connected to the literature of the fantastic and have included web content since 1995 (starting with the Avram Davidson website). The Temporary Culture website includes a visual record of A Conversation larger than the Universe, the first ever science fiction exhibition at the Grolier Club in New York City.

Happy reading!