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61. Tower of Zanid
 
62. Citadels of Mystery
 
63. Blond Barbarians & Noble Savages
 
64. The floating continent (Krishna
65. GEHEIMNISVOLLE STATTEN DER GESCHICHTE
 
66. Great Cities of the Ancient World
 
$9.50
67. Pugnacious Peacemaker/the Wheels
 
68. Compleat Enchanter: The Magical
 
69. The Wheels of If
 
70. Science-fiction handbook;: The
 
$99.50
71. The Complete Enchanter; The Magical
$16.00
72. The Blade of Conan : The World's
 
$8.89
73. Conan the Adventurer #5 in Series
 
74. Rubber Dinosaurs and Wooden Elephants:
 
75. Phantoms & fancies, (Voyager
 
76. Elephant
 
$5.00
77. Ancient ruins and archaeology
 
78. Spirits, Stars and Spells: The
79. The Search for Zei
 
80. The Carnelian Cube

61. Tower of Zanid
by L Sprague De Camp
 Paperback: Pages (1994)

Asin: B000M67VE0
Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars
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Customer Reviews (1)

3-0 out of 5 stars thisdarkplace*blogspot*com
Typical space opera fare. Set on the planet Krishna, it follows the adventures of Anthony Fallon as he attempts to regain his throne. Not extremely memorable compared to Burrough's Barsoom stories, but a quick fun read. ... Read more


62. Citadels of Mystery
by L. Sprague de Camp
 Mass Market Paperback: Pages (1989-02)
list price: US$4.95
Isbn: 0345010183
Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

Customer Reviews (2)

5-0 out of 5 stars L. Sprague de Camp wrote a classic here
For me only my copies of Toynbee and Churchill will be as good a future reference for me as this. I had in the past researched Atlantis, Pyramids and Stonehenge: he says much what is on the web as "modern" research results
and he said it as much as 60 years ago in the first publishing.
This book has gone through many editions, now.
What the author does is to try to plant science into ancient history.
As an of fiction he is a well respected fantasy writer,
as an historian, he is just as good.

4-0 out of 5 stars Important book though already getting old
The subject is crucial : twelve enigmas of old human history from the pyramids to the Mayas, from Stonehenge to the Incas, from Atlantis to Nan Matol. The method is interesting : to cover all the « debates » on each one, but also to collect all the available data and sound historical and archaeological facts. Then to consider that there is absolutely no racial limitation in man's creativity, no geographical and climatic unfavorable conditions for man's inventiveness and imagination. The book seems to clearly criticize those who see the hand of some extra-terrestrials or gods of some kind in these old archaeological realizations, as being in fact racist against the « whole » human race, or as being European-centered, hence racist against all men who are not European caucasoids, and even at times a narrower category like nordic or aryan European caucasoids. At the same time the book overuses the terms of « primitive » and « barbarians ». It is not because some do not know how to write that they are more barbaric than those who know. Writing is a bad criterion, especially since we know today the Celts used the Ogham alphabet, and this after twenty centuries of belief that they could not write : one more myth that goes down the chute. It is not because a group of men practice human sacrifice and cannibalism that they are more barbaric than those who practice the death penalty in full stadiums or in front of TV cameras, than those who practice torture in some war prison in Baghdad, or some unknown dark hole. The question of civilization and barbarity is very relative and the borderline is very fuzzy, if there is any. The book would have been more modern if these words had been avoided. These people who erected these monuments were highly civilized for their times. And what's more, who is more barbaric between the Celts burning convicted criminals in some ritualistic ceremony (death penalty) and the Romans forcing gladiators to fight to the death in a circus, gladiators who were in no way criminals but just slaves who had this way --and only this way - a chance to maybe save their lives, at least for a while ? Civilization is at times so barbaric.

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU, Université Paris Dauphine, Université Paris I Panthéon Sorbonne
... Read more


63. Blond Barbarians & Noble Savages (Essays on Fantastic Literature, No. 2)
by L. Sprague De Camp
 Hardcover: 49 Pages (1986-06)
list price: US$23.00
Isbn: 0893705454
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64. The floating continent (Krishna series)
by L. Sprague De Camp
 Paperback: 158 Pages (1966)

Asin: B0007KEXJW
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

65. GEHEIMNISVOLLE STATTEN DER GESCHICHTE
by L. Sprague & Catherine C. DE CAMP
Hardcover: 314 Pages (1966)

Asin: B0000BQBZE
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

66. Great Cities of the Ancient World
by L. Sprague de Camp
 Hardcover: Pages (1972-01-01)

Asin: B003EYMB1K
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

67. Pugnacious Peacemaker/the Wheels of If (Tor Science Fiction Doubles, No 20)
by Harry Turtledove, L. Sprague De Camp
 Paperback: Pages (1990-03)
list price: US$3.50 -- used & new: US$9.50
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0812502027
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

68. Compleat Enchanter: The Magical Misadventures of Harold Shea
by L. Sprague De Camp, Fletcher Pratt
 Paperback: 532 Pages (2000-07-30)
list price: US$17.00
Isbn: 0756782139
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

69. The Wheels of If
by L. Sprague De Camp
 Paperback: Pages (1970-01-01)

Asin: B000QV5ZNK
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

Customer Reviews (1)

5-0 out of 5 stars Imaginary worlds, ordinary people
L. Sprague de Camp is one of science fiction's Grand Masters. Every couple of years the Science Fiction Writers of America honor a living author for his/her achievement and influence in the field. De Camp should be read because heritage is important.
The stories are fun, too. Written between 1938 and 1942, these seven tales do not include anything new to a reader of today. Rather, their charm lies in their simplicity. These are people who could be your neighbors; the tales told at the dinner table.
"The Wheels of If"- Alister Park wakes a different man than he was the night before. This difference brings dramatic change in the world around him.
"The Contrababand Cow"- Consumption of beef is illegal.
"Hyperpelosity"- A worldwide epidemic.
"The Gnarly Man"- All Clarence wants is to be left alone, really.
"The Warrior Race"- The alien invasion story.
"The Best Laid Scheme"- The time travel story
"The Merman"- Vernon Brock will do anything to marry his sweetheart.
These are short stories, which some will automatically avoid. The style is different: the pulps of 60 years ago. The language
may seem exaggerated, only to indicate accent or dialect. This collection is worth the while, however. Particularly if you have an interest in our science fiction heritage.
"The folly of trying to judge people by their looks has been pointed out by generations of psychologists and such people. But this form of judgment seems to be ingrained in human folkways. Perhaps that is why Coordinator Ronald Q. M. Bloss underestimated Hedges."-- "The Best-Laid Scheme"

... Read more


70. Science-fiction handbook;: The writing of imaginative fiction (Professional writers library)
by L. Sprague De Camp
 Unknown Binding: 328 Pages (1953)

Asin: B0007DO6YG
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71. The Complete Enchanter; The Magical Misadventures of Harold Shea
by L Sprague De Camp
 Hardcover: Pages (1975)
-- used & new: US$99.50
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B000K07SSC
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

72. The Blade of Conan : The World's Greatest Living Fantasy Writers Pay Tribute to Robert E. Howard
by L. Sprague De Camp
Paperback: Pages (1982-08-01)
list price: US$2.50 -- used & new: US$16.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0441117015
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

73. Conan the Adventurer #5 in Series
by Robert E. & De Camp, L. Sprague & Carter, Lin Decamp Howard
 Unknown Binding: Pages (1966-01-01)
-- used & new: US$8.89
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B003X6ACMO
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

74. Rubber Dinosaurs and Wooden Elephants: Essays on Literature, Film, and History (I. O. Evans Studies in the Philosophy and Criticism of Literature)
by L. Sprague De Camp
 Paperback: 144 Pages (1996-08)
list price: US$19.00
Isbn: 0893704547
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

75. Phantoms & fancies, (Voyager series, V-114)
by L. Sprague De Camp
 Hardcover: 107 Pages (1972)

Asin: B0006C4QPM
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

76. Elephant
by L. Sprague De Camp
 Mass Market Paperback: Pages (1964-01-01)

Asin: B001NRPGCG
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

77. Ancient ruins and archaeology
by L. Sprague De Camp
 Hardcover: 294 Pages (1992)
-- used & new: US$5.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1566190126
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

78. Spirits, Stars and Spells: The Profits and Perils of Magic
by L. Sprague and Catherine C. de Camp DE CAMP
 Hardcover: Pages (1966)

Asin: B001UA1FJE
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

79. The Search for Zei
by L. Sprague De Camp
Hardcover: 224 Pages (1962)

Asin: B0007F6I0O
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

80. The Carnelian Cube
by L. Sprague And Fletcher Pratt De Camp
 Paperback: Pages (1970-01-01)

Asin: B002JAF01S
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

Customer Reviews (3)

4-0 out of 5 stars Be careful what you wish for!
It is the evening of July 8, 1939 and the scene is the mountainous district of Cappadocia, in Asia Minor.Arthur Cleveland Finch, the story's hero, is a historian and archeologist, and he and his friend, Lloyd Owens, are on a dig, examining whatever ancient artifacts they can find in the hope of expanding human knowledge.The dig is being finance by Leo Pushman, a rich movie magnate who once read Arthur's dreary, academic tome "The American Deme; a Study of Pontus and Armenia under the Byzantine Empire" and liked it.Arthur has no idea of how Pushman even struggled through the book, which he considers to be as "dull as a third-rate sermon".Why should that "unimportant piece of prose" have attracted so much attention when his book of poetry, which was liked by the critics, sold only 37 copies?The world just doesn't seem to be reasonable Arthur thinks.Arthur and Lloyd discover that Tirdat Ariminian, one of the local workers on the dig, seems to have purloined a small find: as red carnelian cube, about the size of a golf-ball, with an Etruscan inscription on it.The cube seems rather out of place here in Cappadocia and Arthur and Lloyd think it may be quite a find.But Tirdat claims that the cube is his: that he got it from a man named Iblunos in far away Nigdeh.Iblunos was an old man, "maybe three hundred years".The stone was a "dream-stone.Arthur is bemused and that night sleeps with the cube under his pillow.If only the world were more rational Arthur laments again!In the morning Arthur wakes to a very different world.It has become exactly what he asked for: a completely rational world.But will Arthur like what he asked for, and if not how will he get out of this strange enchantment?

This book was first published in 1948 and is De Camp and Pratt's third collaboration.The first two were The incomplete enchanter (1941) and Land of Unreason (1942).After these two authors went on to write many short stories and several more novels.

De Camp and Pratt both wrote for the pulp magazine trade, which favors shorter works, and that background shows clearly in this book.The volume is really three short stories linked by the recurring motif of the cube.The stories are also linked by the thematic idea that what we long for is not always what is best for us.Indeed we may not even understand what it is about our present life that is good.The three stories hold together well as a unit and they progress from being (1) quite humorous, to (2) light-hearted, but with some qualms, to (3) quite threatening.This book, however, is not as coherent as some of the authors' other works., for example, has a real sense of taking the readers somewhere, where this book at times flounders.The same point could possibly have been made with less words.

Arthur Finch is quite a pompous, self-assured man and his confidence leads him into trouble.As the stories proceed the character gradually becomes less certain, but this growth is not marked.All of the other characters are basically cameos, adding color to the tales, but not having an arch of development.

De Camp and Pratt definitely have a sense of the absurd, so if you like 'out there' books you may enjoy this one, but if you are of a more stayed mind you would be advised to steer clear.The cube, after all, is a "dream-stone" and this book, in some ways, makes as much sense as dreams.If you are good at suspending disbelief you will enjoy it.

This is not De Camp and Pratt's best book, but it is worth dipping into.It earns four stars for its originality.I certainly have never read another book like it.

4-0 out of 5 stars Be careful what you wish for!
It is the evening of July 8, 1939 and the scene is the mountainous district of Cappadocia, in Asia Minor.Arthur Cleveland Finch, the story's hero, is a historian and archeologist, and he and his friend, Lloyd Owens, are on a dig, examining whatever ancient artifacts they can find in the hope of expanding human knowledge.The dig is being finance by Leo Pushman, a rich movie magnate who once read Arthur's dreary, academic tome "The American Deme; a Study of Pontus and Armenia under the Byzantine Empire" and liked it.Arthur has no idea of how Pushman even struggled through the book, which he considers to be as "dull as a third-rate sermon".Why should that "unimportant piece of prose" have attracted so much attention when his book of poetry, which was liked by the critics, sold only 37 copies?The world just doesn't seem to be reasonable Arthur thinks.Arthur and Lloyd discover that Tirdat Ariminian, one of the local workers on the dig, seems to have purloined a small find: as red carnelian cube, about the size of a golf-ball, with an Etruscan inscription on it.The cube seems rather out of place here in Cappadocia and Arthur and Lloyd think it may be quite a find.But Tirdat claims that the cube is his: that he got it from a man named Iblunos in far away Nigdeh.Iblunos was an old man, "maybe three hundred years".The stone was a "dream-stone.Arthur is bemused and that night sleeps with the cube under his pillow.If only the world were more rational Arthur laments again!In the morning Arthur wakes to a very different world.It has become exactly what he asked for: a completely rational world.But will Arthur like what he asked for, and if not how will he get out of this strange enchantment?

This book was first published in 1948 and is De Camp and Pratt's third collaboration.The first two were The incomplete enchanter (1941) and Land of Unreason (1942).After these two authors went on to write many short stories and several more novels.

De Camp and Pratt both wrote for the pulp magazine trade, which favors shorter works, and that background shows clearly in this book.The volume is really three short stories linked by the recurring motif of the cube.The stories are also linked by the thematic idea that what we long for is not always what is best for us.Indeed we may not even understand what it is about our present life that is good.The three stories hold together well as a unit and they progress from being (1) quite humorous, to (2) light-hearted, but with some qualms, to (3) quite threatening.This book, however, is not as coherent as some of the authors' other works., for example, has a real sense of taking the readers somewhere, where this book at times flounders.The same point could possibly have been made with less words.

Arthur Finch is quite a pompous, self-assured man and his confidence leads him into trouble.As the stories proceed the character gradually becomes less certain, but this growth is not marked.All of the other characters are basically cameos, adding color to the tales, but not having an arch of development.

De Camp and Pratt definitely have a sense of the absurd, so if you like 'out there' books you may enjoy this one, but if you are of a more stayed mind you would be advised to steer clear.The cube, after all, is a "dream-stone" and this book, in some ways, makes as much sense as dreams.If you are good at suspending disbelief you will enjoy it.

This is not De Camp and Pratt's best book, but it is worth dipping into.It earns four stars for its originality.I certainly have never read another book like it.

4-0 out of 5 stars Be careful what you wish for!
It is the evening of July 8, 1939 and the scene is the mountainous district of Cappadocia, in Asia Minor.Arthur Cleveland Finch, the story's hero, is a historian and archeologist, and he and his friend, Lloyd Owens, are on a dig, examining whatever ancient artifacts they can find in the hope of expanding human knowledge.The dig is being finance by Leo Pushman, a rich movie magnate who once read Arthur's dreary, academic tome "The American Deme; a Study of Pontus and Armenia under the Byzantine Empire" and liked it.Arthur has no idea of how Pushman even struggled through the book, which he considers to be as "dull as a third-rate sermon".Why should that "unimportant piece of prose" have attracted so much attention when his book of poetry, which was liked by the critics, sold only 37 copies?The world just doesn't seem to be reasonable Arthur thinks.Arthur and Lloyd discover that Tirdat Ariminian, one of the local workers on the dig, seems to have purloined a small find: as red carnelian cube, about the size of a golf-ball, with an Etruscan inscription on it.The cube seems rather out of place here in Cappadocia and Arthur and Lloyd think it may be quite a find.But Tirdat claims that the cube is his: that he got it from a man named Iblunos in far away Nigdeh.Iblunos was an old man, "maybe three hundred years".The stone was a "dream-stone.Arthur is bemused and that night sleeps with the cube under his pillow.If only the world were more rational Arthur laments again!In the morning Arthur wakes to a very different world.It has become exactly what he asked for: a completely rational world.But will Arthur like what he asked for, and if not how will he get out of this strange enchantment?

This book was first published in 1948 and is De Camp and Pratt's third collaboration.The first two were The incomplete enchanter (1941) and Land of Unreason (1942).After these two authors went on to write many short stories and several more novels.

De Camp and Pratt both wrote for the pulp magazine trade, which favors shorter works, and that background shows clearly in this book.The volume is really three short stories linked by the recurring motif of the cube.The stories are also linked by the thematic idea that what we long for is not always what is best for us.Indeed we may not even understand what it is about our present life that is good.The three stories hold together well as a unit and they progress from being (1) quite humorous, to (2) light-hearted, but with some qualms, to (3) quite threatening.This book, however, is not as coherent as some of the authors' other works., for example, has a real sense of taking the readers somewhere, where this book at times flounders.The same point could possibly have been made with less words.

Arthur Finch is quite a pompous, self-assured man and his confidence leads him into trouble.As the stories proceed the character gradually becomes less certain, but this growth is not marked.All of the other characters are basically cameos, adding color to the tales, but not having an arch of development.

De Camp and Pratt definitely have a sense of the absurd, so if you like 'out there' books you may enjoy this one, but if you are of a more stayed mind you would be advised to steer clear.The cube, after all, is a "dream-stone" and this book, in some ways, makes as much sense as dreams.If you are good at suspending disbelief you will enjoy it.

This is not De Camp and Pratt's best book, but it is worth dipping into.It earns four stars for its originality.I certainly have never read another book like it.
... Read more


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