Showing posts with label EHB. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EHB. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

We bring you good things

From the US - right outta the box!

The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman.
The Black Dossier by Alan Moore.
Watching the Watchmen by Dave Gibbons and Chip Kidd.
Agent to the Stars by John Scalzi.

And so much more.

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Alan Moore's Black Dossier

dossier

The Black Dossier by Alan Moore.

Due to legal reasons ("international copyright concerns"), this has not been available for sale outside of the US.

But we have it now.

Oh yes.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Are you watching closely?

EDIT: Nevermind - all gone.



graveyard

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

The Graveyard Book

Mr Gaiman's latest book The Graveyard Book has been released in the states. He is currently on tour and is reading a chapter from the book at each stop and his publishers are putting the readings online everyday.

The readings are posted HERE

(We will have the Graveyard Book in shortly).

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Banned Books Week 29 Sept - 4 Oct

http://bannedbooksweek.org/

According to the American Library Association, more than 400 books were challenged in 2007. The 10 most challenged titles were:

1. And Tango Makes Three by Justin Richardson and Peter Parnell
2. The Chocolate War by Robert Cormier
3. Olive’s Ocean by Kevin Henkes
4. The Golden Compass by Philip Pullman
5. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain
6. The Color Purple by Alice Walker
7. TTYL by Lauren Myracle
8. I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou
9. It’s Perfectly Normal by Robie Harris
10. The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky
(Click here to see why these books were challenged.)




Top 100 Challenged Books 2000-2007

Have you heard of Danny Wallace?

No?
Are you sure?
Well, I think you should change that. Pretty soon.
*hint hint*

friends
Friends Like These by Danny Wallace.

Danny Wallace is about to turn thirty and his life has become a clich‚. Recently married and living in a smart new area of town, he's swapped pints down the pub for lattes and brunch. For the first time in his life, he's feeling, well . grown-up.

But something's not right. Something's missing. Until he finds an old address book containing just twelve names. His best mates as a kid. Where are they now? Who are they now? And how are they coping with being grown-up too?

And so begins a journey from A-Z, tracking down and meeting his old gang. He travels from Berlin to Tokyo, from Sydney to LA. He even goes to Loughborough. He meets Fijian chiefs. German rappers. Some ninjas. And a carvery manager who's managed to solve time travel. But how will they respond to a man they haven't seen in twenty years, turning up and asking if they're coming out to play?

Part-comedy, part-travelogue, part-memoir, Friends Like These is the story of what can happen when you track down your past, and of where the friendships you thought you'd outgrown can take you today...


Also by Mr Wallace...

yesman
Yes Man by Danny Wallace.

'I, Danny Wallace, being of sound mind and body, do hereby write this manifesto for my life. I swear I will be more open to opportunity. I swear I will live my life taking every available chance. I will say Yes to every favour, request, suggestion and invitation. I WILL SWEAR TO SAY YES WHERE ONCE I WOULD SAY NO.'
Danny Wallace had been staying in. Far too much. Having been dumped by his girlfriend, he really wasn't doing the young, free and single thing very well. Instead he was avoiding people. Texting them instead of calling them. Calling them instead of meeting them. That is until that one fateful date when a mystery man on a late-night bus told him to 'Say Yes more'. These three simple words changed Danny's life forever. Yes Man is the story of what happened when Danny decided to say YES to everything, in order to make his life more interesting. And boy, did it get more interesting.


join
Join Me by Danny Wallace.

WANTED: 100 people to live in my new world order. A perfect utopia of our own design. No riff- raff, convicts or bongos. Please note: no space travel will be involved in this project. Cult- seekers need not apply. If still interested, go to www.join- me.co.uk to sign up. In one of the most original books of the year, Danny Wallace, award- winning journalist, and co- author of ARE YOU DAVE GORMAN?, places an advert on the internet and waits- Inspired by stories of his great uncle Gallus and his failed attempts to set up a commune in post- war Switzerland, Danny tries to do the same and this time succeed. He will travel anywhere, meet anyone. And he'll take it very, very seriously. JOIN ME is the magnificent story of his attempt to recruit 100 people to create a perfect world. But what will that be? Where will they live? Will they have rules? Will they agree on anything? Is one man's Heaven another man's Hell? This modern take on Utopia, will say a million things about the world in which we live. And if you've read ARE YOU DAVE GORMAN? you'll know that it will be very, very funny.

universe
Danny Wallace and the Centre of the Universe by Danny Wallace.

random
Random Acts of Kindness by Danny Wallace.

MORE good things #5

When too much cool new stuff is almost TOO MUCH!


servants
The Servants by Michael Marshall Smith.

Eleven–year–old Mark is bored. He spends his days on the Brighton sea–front, practicing on his skate–board. His mother is too ill to leave the house, and his stepfather is determined that Mark shouldn't disturb her. So when the old lady who lives in the flat downstairs introduces him to rock cakes and offers to show him a secret, he's happy to indulge her. The old lady takes a large, old–fashioned key and leads Mark down a dusty corridor to a heavy door. Beyond the door is a world completely alien to Mark's understanding. For behind the old lady's tiny apartment, the house's original servants' quarters are still entirely intact, although derelict. Mark finds himself strangely drawn to this window onto the past, and when, the next time he visits, the old lady falls asleep, he steals the key and goes to visit the servants' quarters alone. And suddenly Mark's life takes a bizarre turn, as the past seems to collide with the present, dreams invade reality and truths become apparent to this hitherto unperceiving boy.

((We here a EHB love love love Mr M M Smith. You should too. -Jordan))


oddie
One Flew into the Cuckoo's Egg: My Autobiography by Bill Oddie.

Bill Oddie is best known for the wacky humour of the Goodies, and the irrepressible enthusiasm of his nature programmes, off screen there has been a darker side. Bill has suffered from bouts of depression which have more than once taken him to the brink. Now he is back in control and wiser about the causes and the cure. Here he describes the childhood blighted by the absence of his mother who had been committed to a mental asylum when he was small. It was a lonely and difficult start to life, but there were to be happier times. Touring with the Cambridge Footlights in the 1960s saw him alongside the greatest comic talents of his generation John Cleese and of course fellow Goodies Tim Brooke-Taylor and Graeme Garden. Soon the Goodies were to become on of the biggest comedy hits of the 70s bringing a new brand of surreal humour to our screens. Now as Britain s favourite birdwatcher Bill has turned his private passion into his most public role and presented more than 20 nature programmes for the BBC. He has also become a fervent and outspoken campaigner for the environment. It has been an extraordinary and far from straightforward journey. Bill Oddie takes us along with him in a memoir which is as witty, candid, curious and unconventional as the man himself.

hell
A Snowball in Hell by Christopher Brookmyre.

If society has the B-list celebrities it deserves, it now has a killer to match. Except that Simon Darcourt is a great deal more successful in his career choice than the average talent show contestant. He's also got the media taped - by the simple expedient of by-passing them completely and posting real-time coverage of his killings on the internet. He's got viewing figures to make the world's TV executives gasp in envy, and he's pulling the voyeuristic strings of every viewer by getting them to 'vote' to keep his captives alive. Angelique De Xavier, his previous nemesis, is drafted onto the police team trying to bring this one-man celebrity hate-fest to an end. But she can't do it alone, she needs the magical skills of her lover, only she doesn't know where Zal is and meanwhile a whole load of celebs are, literarly, dying to be famous. An intelligent satire, a thriller with exhilarating pace - Christopher Brookmyre at his best.


givenday
The Given Day by Dennis Lehane.

Danny Coughlin, son of Captain Thomas Coughlin, is Police Department Royalty. Danny is in charge of the predominately Italian neighbourhoods of the North End. Political dissent is in the air - fresh and intoxicating. Drawn into the ideological fray as a favour to his father, Danny is soon laying his loyalties on the other side.
Meanwhile Luther Lawrence is on the run. Suspected of a drug-related shooting in Tulsa, Luther abandons his wife and flees to Boston and begins work as a personal driver to the Coughlin household. After striking up a friendship with Danny and the family's Irish servant, Nora, he sees that the two once had a powerful bond. As the mystery of their relationship unravels, Luther resolves to return to his wife and son but his law-breaking past has followed him north and first he must settle scores with those hot on his trail.
Set at the end of the Great War in an era of unprecedented uncertainty, The Given Day is an utterly spectacular family epic. Meticulously researched and expertly plotted, it will transport readers to an unforgettable time and place.


PHEW!

We bring you good things #4

firmin
Firmin by Sam Savage.

Firmin is the runt of a litter of rats born in the basement of Pembroke Books, a ramshackle old bookstore run by the equally shambolic owner Norman Shine. Forced to compete for food, Firmin ends up chewing on the books that surround him. Thanks to his unusual diet, he acquires the miraculous ability to read. He subsequently develops an insatiable hunger for literature and a very unratlike sense of the world and his place in it. He is a debonair soul trapped in a rat's body But a literary rat is a lonely rat and, spurned by his own kind, he thinks he recognises a kindred soul in Norman. Firmin seeks solace in the Lovelies of the local burlesque cinema and in his own imagination. But the days of the bookshop and of the close community around it are numbered. The area has been marked out for urban regeneration and soon the faded glory of the bookshop, the low-life bars, loan agencies and pawn shops will face the bulldozers. Brilliantly original and richly allegorical, Firmin is brimming with charm and wistful longing for a world that treasures its seedy theatres, one-of-a-kind characters, and cluttered bookshops.

((I read this as a proof, and found it the most delightful, original and charming thing I'd read in quite some time. -Jordan))


rat
Monsieur Rat by Federica Mossetti.

Monsieur Rat is a little rat with a big problem.
When a moustache experiment goes wrong, Monsieur Rat sets off on a journey that leads him to an unexpected destination.

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

We bring you good things #2

October new releases are flying in - thick and fast!

anathem
Anathem (Tradepaper) by Neal Stephenson

vertigo
The Vertigo Encyclopedia (Hardcover) by Alex Irvine, with introduction by Neil Gaiman!


dc
The DC Comics Encyclopedia (Hardcover) by Michael Teitelbaum, Scott Beatty & Robert Greenburger.

GAH!

We bring you good things...

Fresh out of the box from the US:

hellboy

Hellboy Library Edition, Vol. 1: Seed of Destruction and Wake the Devil (Hardcover)
by Mike Mignola & John Byrne.

black

Absolute League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: The Black Dossier (Hardcover/Slipcase)
by Alan Moore.
((You won't find this ANYWHERE else - because we are super sneaky!))


leagues

20,000 Leagues Under the Sea: A Pop-Up Book (Hardcover)
by Sam Ita.

sneakers

Sneakers: The Complete Collectors' Guide (Hardcover)
by Unorthodox Styles.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

James Beckingham - Fantastic New Fantasy

songforge

Hot off the press, James Beckingham is sure to be The Next Big Thing in Australian scifi/fantasy ficition.

Hailing from Melbourne, James has freed himself from the evil clutches of the IT industry and is charming our collective pants off with his debut (but not first) novel - SongForge.



((I got to read this in draft form, and am pleased as punch to finally have it in stock! -Jordan))

10 days to go!

brisingr
Brisingr (Inheritance, Book 3) by Christopher Paolini.

If you're down with the hype-machine, then you'll be looking forward to this.
If you preorder with us, you will get a free copy of THE TAPESTRY 1: THE HOUND OF ROWAN by Henry H Neff.

tapestry

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Go Graphic!

Yesterday we went to the opening of 'Go Graphic' - an exhibition featuring award winning Tasmanian graphic artists, illustrators and film makers. It's on in the wonderful space that is the Allport Library & Museum of Fine Arts at the State Library of Tasmania in Murray St. It's on from today until October 18 and well worth a long look. My favourite bit was getting to see Madeleine Rosca's sketches for 'Hollow Fields' - super, super cool.

The exhibition is running in conjunction with the State Library's 'Graphic Novels - Try Something Different' program. If you're looking for some ideas for which graphic novel to read next have a look at their website http://www.statelibrary.tas.gov.au/readrelax/graphicnovels
or come into the shop and grab a flyer - there is a set of 3 illustrated by Christopher Downes and they should adorn all attractive walls.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

A great book for a rainy day

penguin

If you buy two 'great book for a rainy day' stickered books, you will get a FREE black penguin umbrella!

Just in time for your winter reading needs! -Jordan

Monday, July 7, 2008

Play time is indeed fun time

Do you like Toys? I know I do.

dot
Dot Dot Dash by Robert Klanten (Editor), Matthias Hubner (Editor).

Dot Dot Dash! is brought to you by the editors of Pictoplasma and Pictoplasma 2. Expanding on the widely popular subject of contemporary character design, this definitive volume showcases an up-to-date survey of the personalities and characters that have entered the third dimension.

Vinyl figures, plush dolls, designer toys and action figures can be seen as a new movement in contemporary design, art and popular culture. Interest in these three-dimensional toys have surged, drawing on pop culture, graffiti and visual art. The new-generation-characters appear cute, cuddly and innocuous at first, but are often elicit, subversive and politically incorrect. Not intended for child's play, they are highly esteemed by teens and adults alike. Each is a work of art, often created by world-famous artists and many of them are produced independently in limited editions and become highly sought after collectibles.

A recent trend of character applications aspiring from inherent crossovers of the character and art worlds is also taking form in sculptures and objects, creating a new art market where artists are progressively moving beyond the boundaries of the gallery and extending their work to a disparate audience.

This voluptuous volume exhibits the expansive scope of designs and objects in the ultimate compilation of contemporary character design.

Also available:
plastic
I am Plastic by Paul Budnitz.

vinyl
Full Vinyl by Ivan Vartanian.