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From left, Julius Fast (winner of the first Edgar Award), pulp author Ann Bannon and John Norman, creator of the Gor science fiction series, are kept busy by ardent autograph-seekers.
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By: Bob Riedel
Printmat@aol.com
This show just keeps getting better and bigger. I've been exhibiting here for the past four years, and sporadically attending for a little longer than that, and it's become one of my favorite bookselling and collecting venues. Not because it's the most lucrative - but it is often far and away the most interesting.
Impresario Gary Lovisi managed again to keep things lively on two fronts - the 35 dealers ranged from relative newcomers to longtime paperback specialists like Chris Eckhoff (who's forgotten more about adult paperbacks than I ever hope to find out, and has authored a useful checklist on the subject), and the guests' table was a great mix of authors and illustrators. Between checking out all the gems on the tables and garnering signatures from the guests, attendees were packed in throughout the day. The show drew collectors from far and wide (we noticed, for example, Tom Lesser, who produces the Paperback Collectors Show and Sale in Los Angeles, making the rounds).
Walter Wager (left), author of Telefon and many other thrillers, talks shop with crime and mystery writer Dan Sontup.
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Partly as a tribute to the female guests, Lovisi also made available the long-running show's first souvenir T-shirt, which featured the imaginary cover of Book Show Girl ("Men bought her books at their peril!"). I bought two; one as a back-up in case the need for emergency biblio-apparel comes up. (There are still a few available from Lovisi; check out his Gryphon Books website.
Expo organizer Gary Lovisi (center) of Gryphon Books, introduces guest author Ann Bannon to Howard Schoenfeld, author of 1950s crime cult classic, Let Them Eat Bullets.
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This show is particularly welcome when I'm hunting up specific titles, especially given the vagaries of Internet-dealer grading, and the heightened importance of condition in paperback collecting. There's nothing like actually handling the goods. This year, I've been trying to assemble a "Kerouac in paperback" collection, and managed to get quite decent copies of both the first U.S. and first U.K. paperback printings of On the Road. To have a show that allows one-stop shopping like that is a treasure indeed. The next Expo is sheduled on Oct. 3, 2004, again at the Holiday in on West 57th Street in Manhattan. See you there!