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Wave 1 Edgeworks Abbey Archive + Blood & Children Hardcovers

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NOTE: These were my reference copies during the Harlan Ellison Books Preservation Project. They are all in very fine condition except for Honorable Whoredom, which has a dinged corner on the bottom of the front cover, and Possibly Impossible, which has a ding and a scratch on the cover.

Five years in the making, the Edgeworks Abbey Archive is finally here!

This collection represents Harlan Ellison’s last word on his written legacy. Researched and edited by the author’s long-time associate, Jason Davis, under the supervision of Harlan and Susan Ellison, this collection assembles the preferred texts of each story and essay along with previously uncollected and unpublished material to create the definitive edition.

The Edgeworks Abbey Archive Collection – Wave I

THE DEADLY STREETS (2021 Edgeworks Abbey Archive Hardcover)
GENTLEMAN JUNKIE and Other Stories of the Hung-Up Generation (2021 Edgeworks Abbey Archive Hardcover)
THE BEAST THAT SHOUTED LOVE AT THE HEART OF THE WORLD (2021 Edgeworks Abbey Archive Hardcover)
OVER THE EDGE (2021 Edgeworks Abbey Archive Hardcover)
APPROACHING OBLIVION (2021 Edgeworks Abbey Archive Hardcover)
HONORABLE WHOREDOM AT A PENNY A WORD (2021 Edgeworks Abbey Archive Hardcover)
POSSIBLY IMPOSSIBLE (2021 Edgeworks Abbey Archive Hardcover)

plus

CHILDREN OF THE STREETS (2020 Edgeworks Abbey Hardcover)

BLOOD’S A ROVER (2020 Edgeworks Abbey Hardcover)

THE EDGEWORKS ABBEY ARCHIVE COLLECTION WAVE 1

APPROACHING OBLIVION (Edgeworks Abbey Archive, 2021)

The New York Times called him “relentlessly honest” and then used him as the subject of its famous Sunday Acrostic. People magazine said there was no one like him, then cursed him for preventing easy sleep. But in these stories Harlan Ellison outdoes himself, rampaging like a mad thing through love (“Cold Friend,” “Kiss of Fire,” “Paulie Charmed the Sleeping Woman”), hate (“Knox,” “Silent in Gehenna”), sex (“Catman,” “Erotophobia”), lost childhood (“One Life, Furnished in Early Poverty”), and into such bizarre subjects as the problems of blue-skinned, eleven-armed Yiddish aliens, what it’s like to witness the end of the world and what happens on the day the planet Earth swallows Barbra Streisand. Oh yeah, this one’s a doozy!

The complete table of contents of the 1984 Bluejay Special Edition of APPROACHING OBLIVION, including later revisions by the author from subsequent short story appearances.

1984 Introduction to the Introduction
Foreword: Approaching Ellison by Michael Crichton
Introduction: Reaping the Whirlwind
Knox
Cold Friend
Kiss of Fire
Paulie Charmed the Sleeping Woman
I’m Looking for Kadak
Silent in Gehenna
Erotophobia
One Life, Furnished in Early Poverty
Ecowareness
Catman
Hindsight: 480 Seconds

NEW Edgeworks Abbey Archive Content:

No Winners by Jason Davis
An original essay detailing the history of Ellison’s fourteenth short story collection.

Nihilistic Copy: 1974-1984
A compendium of Ellison-written cover copy for 10 years’ worth of APPROACHING OBLIVION reissues.

Story Introductions: 1974-1979
Ellison-written commentary on the stories from FINAL STAGE, edited by Edward L. Ferman & Barry N. Malzberg (Charterhouse, 1974); THE FUTURE NOW, edited by Robert Hoskins (Fawcett Crest Books, 1978), and GALAXY: Thirty Years of Innovative Science Fiction, edited by Frederik Pohl, Martin H. Greenberg, and Joseph Olander (Playboy Press, 1980).

“Dostoevski Never Wrote for Tony Either, So Get On with Your Life” (previously uncollected)
Ellison’s 1999 essay on getting published in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction.

Knox & One Life, Furnished in Early Poverty (previously unpublished)
Ellison’s first drafts of these short story.

You Are What You Write (previously uncollected)
The second of Ellison’s trilogy of essays featured in the three CLARION anthologies edited by Robert Scott Wilson.

RIF (previously unpublished)
A 1971 prospectus for an abandoned novel.

The Song of the Soul
The introduction to Ellison’s 1971 retrospective, ALONE AGAINST TOMORROW.

Thoughts on Turning Eighteen (previously uncollected)
Ellison’s 1973 afterword to Leslie K. Swigart’s Harlan Ellison: A Bibliographic Checklist.

THE BEAST THAT SHOUTED LOVE AT THE HEART OF THE WORLD (Edgeworks Abbey Archive, 2021)

A FEW (AMONG THE MANY) QUESTIONS THIS BOOK ANSWERS:

What stopped Attila the Hun from sacking the Holy City of Rome in the year 452 when it lay defenseless before him? Where is the sunken continent of Atlantis and what will happen if it rises? Has anyone ever made an interesting case for the merits of waging war, and how does war benefit the human race? What happened When Santa Claus attacked Ronald Reagan in the men’s toilet of the abandoned Camarillo State Mental Institution? Is it true that Jesus had a homosexual liaison with Prometheus? Does the Abominable Snowman exist, and what’s his sex life like? What’s the worst thing that can happen to those who do too much bad dope? How do you identify and survive the attentions of emotional vampires? Are you listening? Why are the bizarre stories of Harlan Ellison so damned popular, translated into thirteen languages, and made into movies; why do they influence a whole generation of younger writers, provoke lynch mobs, and win this Ellison person such an unconscionable array of literary awards?

ASK NOT FOR WHOM THIS BOOK TOILS.
IT TOILS FUR THEE, KIDDO.

The complete table of contents of the 1994 Borderlands Press hardcover of THE BEAST THAT SHOUTED LOVE AT THE HEART OF THE WORLD, including later revisions by the author from EDGEWORKS, Volume 4 and subsequent short story appearances.

Foreword by Neil Gaiman
Introduction: The Waves in Rio
The Beast That Shouted Love at the Heart of the World
Along the Scenic Route
Phoenix
Asleep: With Still Hands
Santa Claus vs. S.P.I.D.E.R.
Try a Dull Knife
The Pitll Pawob Division
The Place with No Name
White on White
Run for the Stars
Are You Listening?
S.R.O.
Worlds to Kill
Shattered Like a Glass Goblin
A Boy and His Dog

NEW Edgeworks Abbey Archive Content:

Whatever Happened to “The 90003rd Fantastic Spectacular Windi Maypole Movie?” by Jason Davis
An original essay detailing the history of Ellison’s eleventh short story collection.

Beastly Copy: 1969-1997
A compendium of Ellison-written cover copy for 51 years’ worth of BEAST THAT SHOUTED. reissues.

Story Introductions: 1959-2004
Ellison-written commentary on the stories from an early assembly of A TOUCH OF INFINITY (1959), the unpublished collection CRACKPOTS and Other Delusions (ca. 1962), an early assembly of FROM THE LAND OF FEAR (1967), unpublished introductions from ALONE AGAINST TOMORROW (1971), Heavy Metal (December 1979), BLOOD IS NOT ENOUGH, edited by Ellen Datlow (1989), Absolute Magnitude (Winter, 1996), and THE MAMMOTH BOOK OF VAMPIRES, edited by Stephen Jones (2004).

Worlds to Kill (previously unpublished)
Ellison’s original plot synopsis for the short story.

School for Apprentice Sorcerers
Ellison’s 1969 essay on the Clarion Writer’s Workshop, previously collected in THE BOOK OF ELLISON (1978).

Kicking the Hobbit; or, Why Do Science Fiction Fans Have Fur on Their Feets? (previously uncollected)
Ellison’s 1968 essay on the pleasures of science fiction fandom.

DEMON WITH A GLASS HAND (featuring previously uncollected material)
A previously uncollected 1968 introduction and four chapters from Ellison’s unfinished novel that was the basis for The Outer Limits episode “Demon with a Glass Hand.” The novel-in-progress was previously published as OBITUARY FOR AN INSTANT in BRAIN MOVIES, Volume 3.

The Queer File
An abandoned short story and preliminary outline that Ellison adapted into the DEMON WITH A GLASS HAND. Previously collected BRAIN MOVIES, Volume 3.

These Are My Dreams (previously uncollected)
A 1968 essay originally published in Harlan Ellison: The Man, the Writer.

THE DEADLY STREETS (Edgeworks Abbey Archive, 2021)

These are stories of juvenile delinquents, bopping gangs, switchblade street thugs whose direct lineal descendants roam the nights in every major American city from New York to San Francisco. It’s a book that first saw issue in 1958, when kid gangs ruled the stoops and sidewalks of every urban ghetto. But Ellison has updated the book to match the times: while it’s true the gangs are back in Pittsburgh and Detroit, Washington D.C. and Denver, the author has drawn a shockingly obvious line from the punks of the Fifties to the street criminals of today, creating a package of paralyzing panic that reflects not only where we are today in terms of fear…but where we came from…how we got here…crouched in our little rooms with triple locks on the doors.

The complete table of contents of the 1975 Pyramid edition of THE DEADLY STREETS, with the author’s revisions from the 2014 Subterranean Press hardback:

Introduction to the 1975 Edition: Avoiding Dark Places
Introduction to the 1958 Edition: Some Sketches of the Damned
Rat Hater
“I’ll Bet You a Death”
We Take Care of Our Dead
The Man With the Golden Tongue
Johnny Slice’s Stoolie
Joy Ride
Buy Me That Blade!
The Hippie Slayer
Kid Killer
With a Knife in Her Hand
Sob Story (with Henry Slesar)
Look Me in the Eye, Boy!
The Dead Shot
Ship-Shape Pay-Off (with Robert Silverberg)
Made in Heaven
Students of the Assassin

NEW Edgeworks Abbey Archive Content:

Knocking Over the Candy Store by Jason Davis
An original essay detailing the history of Ellison’s first [published] short story collection.

Selling the Streets: 1975-2014
A compendium of Ellison-written cover copy for 62 years’ worth of DEADLY STREETS reissues.

Story Introductions: 1958
Ellison-written commentary on eleven stories from the first edition of THE DEADLY STREETS (Ace Books, 1958). Unseen since they were dropped from the 1975 Pyramid reissue.

Tightrope (previously unpublished)
An unpublished Ellison short story originally intended for the 1958 edition of THE DEADLY STREETS, but dropped at the last minute because the magazine that purchased it failed to debut the story before the collection went to print. Includes Ellison’s 1958 introduction.

GENTLEMAN JUNKIE and Other Stories of the Hung-Up Generation (Edgeworks Abbey Archive, 2021)

This is the book that established Harlan Ellison once and for all as a master of short fiction; this is the book that took Ellison to Hollywood; and this is the only paperback book, ever, reviewed by the legendary Dorothy Parker in Esquire magazine:

“It is not the province of this department to take up recent paperbacks. But lately there has come into my weary hands a paperback of short stories by Harlan Ellison, a young writer whose name I had not known before. The book is horribly titled, `Gentleman Junkie and Other Stories of the Hung-Up Generation.’ . It turns out that Mr. Ellison is a good, honest, clean writer, putting down what he has seen and known, and no sensationalism about it. I cannot recommend it too vehemently.”

DOROTHY PARKER

Edited by Jason Davis, director of the Harlan Ellison Books Preservation Project.

Cover photograph by Harlan Ellison.

The complete table of contents of the 1975 Pyramid edition of GENTLEMAN JUNKIE and Other Stories of the Hung-Up Generation, with the author’s revisions from the 2013 Subterranean Press hardback:

  • Foreword, by Frank M. Robinson
  • Introduction: The Children of Nights
  • Final Shtick
  • Gentleman Junkie
  • May We Also Speak? (Four Statements From the Hung-Up Generation [1. Now You’re in the Box 2. The Rocks of Gogroth 3. Payment Returned, Unopened. 4. The Truth ]
  • Daniel White for the Greater Good
  • Lady Bug, Lady Bug
  • Free With This Box!
  • There’s One on Every Campus
  • At the Mountains of Blindness
  • This Is Jackie Spinning
  • No Game for Children
  • The Late, Great Arnie Draper
  • High Dice
  • Enter the Fanatic, Stage Center
  • Someone Is Hungrier
  • Memory of a Muted Trumpet
  • Turnpike
  • Sally in Our Ally
  • The Silence of Infidelity
  • Have Coolth
  • RFD #2 (with Henry Slesar)
  • No Fourth Commandment Murder
  • The Night of Delicate Terrors

NEW Edgeworks Abbey Archive Content:

No Doors, No Windows by Jason Davis
An original essay detailing the history of Ellison’s fifth short story collection.

Selling the Hung-Up Generation: 1961-2013
A compendium of Ellison-written cover copy for 60 years’ worth of GENTLEMAN JUNKIE reissues, including Dorothy Parker’s famous review.

Story Commentary: 1958-2014
Ellison-written introductions and afterwords from THE DEADLY STREETS (unpublished), Rogue magazine, The Saint Detective Story magazine,  OVER THE EDGE, TROUBLEMAKERS, and JEWISH NOIR.

“The Hangman with the Turquoise Eyes” (previously uncollected)
The only uncollected story from Ellison’s Rogue years.

“Coffee Houses Are Cabarets, Police Say; Owners Deny It” and “My Day in Stir, or Buried in the Tombs” (previously uncollected)
Two pieces of reportage for The Village Voice. The latter was the seed for MEMOS FROM PURGATORY.

Ellison’s 1961 Preface
The author’s original preface, omitted from all editions since the first.

Truth and the Writer, or “I’ve had a fabulous life; all you have to do is write it and I’ll split it with you, fifty-fifty!” (previously uncollected)
Ellison’s 1961 essay for Writer’s Digest, with his 1989 revisions and an introduction, “Grinning at the Kid,” written for that reappearance.

The Night of Delicate Terrors (previously unpublished)
An abandoned novel of the early 1960s.

NOTE: This volume was originally solicited with “Frank Robinson: The Finest Human Being Who Ever Lived” listed among its contents. As the book neared completion, the editor was reminded that Ellison had incorporated his obituary for Robinson into the lengthy 2015 introduction to ELLISON WONDERLAND. To avoid a further redundancy herein, the piece has been dropped from GENTLEMAN JUNKIE. We hope the additional story and Village Voice pieces will make up for the omission.

OVER THE EDGE (Edgeworks Abbey Archive, 2021)

Amid the ruins of a world in which men become monsters, dreams turn to poison, and the only sanity lies in fantasy, these nine stories and three essays take you beyond the brink, to study the terrifying landscape charted by Harlan Ellison.

“An impressive performer; a young man to watch for surprises; unpredictable and rewarding.”
The Chicago Tribune

Edited by Jason Davis, director of the Harlan Ellison Books Preservation Project.

Cover by Jason Davis.

The complete table of contents of the 1996 EDGEWORKS, Volume 1 version of OVER THE EDGE, including later revisions by the author.

  • The Frontiers of Edgeville by Norman Spinrad (1996 version)
  • Introduction: Brinksmanship (1996 version)
  • Pennies, Off a Dead Man’s Eyes
  • The End of the Time of Leinard
  • 3 Faces of Fear (essay)
  • Blind Lightning
  • Walk the High Steel
  • Shadow Play
  • The Words in Spock’s Mouth (essay)
  • From a Great Height
  • Night Vigil
  • Xenogenesis (essay)
  • Rock God
  • Ernest and the Machine God

NEW Edgeworks Abbey Archive Content:

The All New, All Different… by Jason Davis
An original essay detailing the history of Ellison’s twelfth short story collection.

Cutting-Edge Copy: 1966
A compendium of Ellison-written cover copy for 26 years’ worth of OVER THE EDGE reissues.

Story Commentary: 1955-2001
Ellison-written commentary on the stories from an early assembly of A TOUCH OF INFINITY (1959), an early assembly of FROM THE LAND OF FEAR (1967), the 1970 edition of OVER THE EDGE, and unpublished introductions from ALONE AGAINST TOMORROW (1971).

The Final Push
Ellison’s other traditional Western short story, previously collected in the 2014 edition of AGAIN, HONORABLE WHOREDOM AT A PENNY A WORD, but collected here as a complement to “The End of the Time of Leinard.”

The Dead Man’s Pennies (previously unpublished)
Ellison’s unfinished My Name Is Adam treatment that became the basis for “Pennies, Off a Dead Man’s Eyes.”

Dreamers on the Barricades (previously uncollected)
The first of Ellison’s trilogy of essays featured in the three CLARION anthologies edited by Robin Scott Wilson.

Goodbye, Gypsy (previously uncollected)
An August 1972 Ellison essay from Knight that ties in to “From a Great Height.”

Good Morning, Folks; I Am Not Kathie Lee Gifford
Ellison’s 1996 introduction to EDGEWORKS, Volume 1, which featured OVER THE EDGE and AN EDGE IN MY VOICE.

Bring on the Dancing Frogs (previously uncollected)
Harlan Ellison’s unfinished 1982 novella, previously heard only at conventions on the KPFK radio show Hour 25.

HONORABLE WHOREDOM AT A PENNY A WORD (Edgeworks Abbey Archive, 2021)

Previously issued as an oversized trade paperback in 2013, HONORABLE WHOREDOM AT A PENNY A WORD has been completely re-set for its reissue as part of the Edgeworks Abbey Archive collection.

HONORABLE WHOREDOM AT A PENNY A WORD collects the hard-boiled fiction Ellison wrote for the mystery/suspense digests of the 1950s, along with a few later contributions to the genre from the men’s magazines of the 1960s. In these pages, you will find Ellison’s only recurring character, insurance investigator-turned-fixer Jerry Killian, as well as the diminutive private dick Big John Novak, a character intended to continue, but only appearing in one suspenseful outing. His aborted second appearance, “In Small Packages,” makes its debut herein, alongside a pair of first drafts that showcase the rapid development of Ellison’s craft across his first years as a professional writer—a time when pros were paid a penny a word.

Edited by Jason Davis, director of the Harlan Ellison Books Preservation Project.

Cover photograph by Marty Woess.

Table of Contents:

  • Introduction to Burn My Killers (incorporating Naked Deranged Psycho Thrill-Demon or, Bitch-Slut Gun-Crazy Homicidal Rat)
  • Burn My Killers!
  • The Golden Virgin (starring Jerry Killian)
  • Thrill Kill
  • Riff
  • Scum Town (starring Jerry Killian)
  • Kill Joy
  • Girl at Gunpoint
  • Can Opener (starring Big John Novak)
  • Knife/Death
  • They Killed My Kid! (starring Jerry Killian)
  • Final Movement
  • The Honor in the Dying
  • Mac’s Girl
  • The Honor in the Dying (first draft)

NEW Edgeworks Abbey Archive Content:

Is a Purveyor of Literary Whoredom a Publishing Pimp? by Jason Davis
An expanded version of the original 2013 introductory essay.

The Final Movement
Previously unpublished text deleted from the story.

The Only Thing Piper Kell Knew (previously unpublished)
The first draft of “Riff,” which features a different narrator than the published version of the story.

In Small Packages (previously unpublished)
The abandoned first draft of “Find One Cuckaboo,” which was originally written to star Big John Novak and featured references to “Can Opener.”

POSSIBLY IMPOSSIBLE (Edgeworks Abbey Archive, 2021) – A new collection!

Often written overnight for a penny a word and tailored to a title and cover art created months in advance, the fantasies herein were written in the first year and a half of Harlan Ellison’s career, when he churned out fiction at a remarkable rate, to learn his craft and pay the rent. From a detective stumbling upon an impossible murder to an environmental apocalypse that bathes the world in fire, these are tales brimming with invention, prefiguring later obsessions, and dashing along at a breakneck pace. This is not the nihilistic Ellison of “‘Repent, Harlequin!’ Said the Ticktockman” or the nostalgic Ellison of “Jeffty Is Five”; this is the embryonic author, trying to type at the speed of an imaginative engine just coming to life.

Previously collected in the out-of-print limited editions, COFFIN NAILS and PEBBLES FROM THE MOUNTAIN, these rare stories were the last published-but-uncollected tales in the Ellison œuvre, finally available in the first of three trade editions.

Edited by Jason Davis, director of the Harlan Ellison Books Preservation Project.

Cover photo by Rod Searcey.

Where possible, each of the following stories is sourced from Harlan Ellison’s original typescript:

  • Children of Chaos (Amazing, Nov. 1957) – Previously collected in PEBBLES FROM THE MOUNTAIN
  • Satan is My Ally (Fantastic, May1957) – Previously collected in COFFIN NAILS
  • The Cave of Miracles (Fantastic, Sept. 1957) – Previously collected in PEBBLES FROM THE MOUNTAIN
  • The Big Trance (Dream World, Aug. 1957) – Previously collected in PEBBLES FROM THE MOUNTAIN
  • Phoenix Treatment (Fantastic, Aug. 1957) – Previously collected in COFFIN NAILS
  • Conversation Piece (Caper, Mar. 1957) – Previously collected in COFFIN NAILS
  • Vector: Two Attempts At Story (Tomorrow and…, Jan. 1969)
    The Saddest Lot of All – Previously collected in COFFIN NAILS
    Visitation on a Thursday – Previously collected in COFFIN NAILS
  • Waste (Fantastic, Oct. 1958) – Previously collected in COFFIN NAILS

“The Big Trance” and “Satan Is My Ally” have been set from Harlan Ellison’s original typescript, and feature text and profanity omitted or censored from the stories’ original publications and previous reprints.

Edgeworks Abbey Archive Content:

Pebbles and Nails by Jason Davis
An original essay detailing the history of Ellison’s final published short story collection(s).

CHILDREN OF THE STREETS (Edgeworks Abbey Archive, 2020)

When he is down, kick for the head and groin. Avoid cops. Play it cool. There are not many rules in the primer for gang kids, but they all count. They are all easily understood, because they use a simple and sound philosophy—it’s a stinking life, so get your kicks while you can. The gang is home, take what you want, tell them nothing—and do not get caught. Two gangs of juvenile delinquents run riot in New York City. They constantly try to outdo each other with their clothes, weapons, language, and lack of morals. They are not just kids playing at war—they mean business. The only person who can infiltrate the gang is someone they can trust, someone like themselves. Someone who knows how to handle a knife and a gun…

If all you know of Harlan Ellison is his speculative fiction, prepare yourself for the breakneck reality of CHILDREN OF THE STREETS.

Edited by Jason Davis, director of the Harlan Ellison Books Preservation Project.

Cover photograph by Marty Woess of Prospect Park, where many of the book’s stories take place.

The complete table of contents of the 2004 Severn House hardcover of CHILDREN OF THE STREETS, including last-minute revisions by the author that were not incorporated into the published edition.

  • 2004 CE: Looking Down the Street
  • 1961 CE: Ten Weeks in Hell
  • No Way Out
  • Matinee Idyll
  • No Game for Children
  • The Rough Boys
  • A Tiger at Nightfall
  • School for Killers
  • Memory of a Muted Trumpet
  • Stand Still and Die!
  • Gang Girl

NEW Edgeworks Abbey Archive Content:

From the Gutters to the Streets by Jason Davis
An original essay detailing the history of Ellison’s fourth short story collection.

Story Introductions: 1958-2001
Ellison-written commentary on the stories from an early assembly of THE DEADLY STREETS and OPENING SHOTS, edited by Lawrence Block.

School for Killers (previously unpublished)
Ellison’s preliminary outline of a novel to run approximately 60,000 words.

Black Money & Blind Date
Two 1957 short stories previously collected in the limited-edition PS Publishing volume, PEBBLES FROM THE MOUNTAIN.

6″ x 9″ Hardcover with Dust Jacket on 60# paper, approx. 236p. ISBN: 978-1-946542-13-7.

BLOOD’S A ROVER (Edgeworks Abbey Archive, 2020)

Harlan Ellison introduced you to Vic and Blood in 1969’s Nebula Award-winning novella, “A Boy and His Dog.” You thrilled to their on-screen adventures in the 1975 Hugo Award-winning feature film adaptation billed as “a kinky tale of survival.” 1977 and 1980 brought brief reunions in “Eggsucker” and “Run, Spot, Run,” and the promise of another story—and a third solo, Spike, to make the Dystopian Duo a Tribulation Trio—but only audiobooks and comics followed, revisiting the same tales.

Now, nearly fifty years after they first set off across the blasted wasteland, Vic and Blood are back.

Harlan Ellison and his editor, Jason Davis, have painstakingly assembled the whole story of Vic and Blood and Spike from the author’s files, using revised-and-expanded versions of the novella and short stories, interstitial material developed for Richard Corben’s graphic adaptation, and—for the first time—never-before-published material from the aborted 1977 NBC television series Blood’s a Rover to tell the complete story of A Boy and His Dog, and a Girl who is tougher than the other two combined.

And let’s not forget…the wit and wisdom of Blood.

Edited by Jason Davis, director of the Harlan Ellison Books Preservation Project.

Cover sculpture by Brett Bather.

The complete table of contents of the 2018 Subterranean Press hardcover of BLOOD’S A ROVER:

  • Fifty Years in the Post-Apocalyptic Wastes by Jason Davis (expanded introduction)
  • Eggsucker
  • This Is a Conversation That Took Place on a Wednesday Night
  • A Boy and His Dog
  • Run, Spot, Run
  • Blood’s a Rover [adapted from the 1977 pilot teleplay]
  • The Wit & Wisdom of Blood

NEW Edgeworks Abbey Archive Content:

Over the Hill: Fifty Years in the Post-Apocalyptic Wastes by Jason Davis
An expanded version of the original introductory essay that originally appeared in the Subterranean Press edition, detailing the history of Ellison’s final, long-awaited book.

Richard Corben (previously uncollected)
Ellison’s appreciation of the iconic Vic & Blood artist.

Story Commentary (1981-2003)
Including “Why I Wrote This Story” (previously uncollected), Ellison’s introduction to “Run, Spot, Run” from the July 1981 issue of Amazing;After Vic & Blood, Some Afterthoughts as Afterword,” Ellison’s afterword from VIC & BLOOD: The Chronicles of a Boy and His Dog (NBM, 1989); and “Latest Breaking News: The Kid and the Pooch,” Ellison’s afterword from VIC & BLOOD: The Continuing Adventures of a Boy and His Dog (iBooks, 2003).

6″ x 9″ Trade Hardcover, 228p. ISBN: 978-1-946542-49-6.

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