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Ellison Wonderland

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Like New

$18.89
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Book Overview

Originally published in 1962 and updated in later decades with a new introduction, Ellison Wonderland contains sixteen masterful stories from the author's early career. This collection shows a vibrant... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

A QUICK NOTE

This book is also known as "Earthman Go Home." Just in case you think you should buy both titles.

In which we trace our hero back to gentler times,...

It's a dastardly shame that so many titles on Harlan Ellison's backlist are so wretchedly hard to find (that is, find and KEEP -- some titles may be wrested from the library, but they have an awful habit of wandering away, so the books are kept as reference materials; curses and swear words, I say! But I digress,...)I didn't actually run into a collection of Mr. Ellison's work until I was in the middle of the brain-drain that was my 20's. I couldn't catch them as they appeared, but I made it my business to seek them wherever possible. SHATTERDAY and ANGRY CANDY completely overtook me, and I started writing myself, and took every opportunity to find Ellison's work. Elsewhere, I've written a review of his latest, SLIPPAGE. That went so well (even Mr. Ellison seemed pleased with it) I made it my business to look further.And what I found, at last, was the collection that really, but really, set it all rolling: ELLISON WONDERLAND.Oh, I know there were novels before that, a collection or two -- MEMOS FROM PURGATORY, I think, and GENTELMAN JUNKIE. But this was where Ellison took off and never looked back.In the 1974 and 1984 editions, you'll find an introductory essay by the author, titled "The Man On the Mushroom," and, in that essay, he tells anyone who's interested about his push West, the Fiend in Human Form for whom he worked, and all the circumstances that led to and occurred during his move to Hollywood, with his soon-to-be-ex-wife and her terrific son; that he was toiling like mad to take care of the various rents and daily necessities; how things were really begining to look sort of grim-ish, when a package arrived from his publisher, and he opened it, and there was ELLISON WONDERLAND, and a nice royalty check, and at that moment, his luck, his life and his future changed. Everything was bright and shiney and bursting with promise, and by damn it shows in the work.Those readers familiar only with Mr. Ellison's more recent offerings, splendid though those books are, may have only had the experience of the author addressing Social Issues, possessed of a certain amount of justified ill-temper and venom, and generally making few if any bones about the state of the species and the fate of the planet because of it. And it is true that, say, about 1965, Mr. Ellison did indeed apply himself with greater vigor to the task of Making Us Aware. But these are older stories, before things got quite so hateful and nutty in the world at large. When asked about them, Mr. Ellison speaks as fondly of them as any father of any of his children; but he remembers writing them so long ago, thinks of them now, and cringes the least bit. And I cannot understand why. If one judges them against his more recent work, there are certainly differences; there has been a maturation of his style, naturally. But those are comparisons of the author with himself. The stories in ELLISON WONDERLAND stand the test of time easily, I think and reading them leaves one in n
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