The Vintage Paperback Reader
The Vintage Paperback Reader
  • Видео 7
  • Просмотров 625
Huge December 2024 Book Haul ~ SF, Fantasy, Men's Adventure, Westerns and More!
#booktube #bookhaul #smallbooktuber
Starting off 2025 by shaking off two years' worth of rust with a book haul! I have to give props to the following creators whose great content inspired me to get back in the game:
@GrammaticusBooks
@CriminOllyBlog
@TheBookGraveyard
@PulpMortem
@SciFiScavenger
@secretfirebooks7894
@zombieprincess82
00:00 Intro
01:43 Gifts
07:10 Amazon
08:48 Library Sale
14:28 Local Used Book Store
24:07 Thrift Store
25:22 eBay
30:03 Outro
Просмотров: 250

Видео

My Thoughts on The Amazons of Somelon by Raymond Kaminski (1981) | Vintage Sci-fi Paperback Review
Просмотров 292 года назад
A bit of an obscurity this time around with Raymond Kaminski's one-and-only novel The Amazons of Somelon. This post-apocalyptic romp was pleasantly surprising. #smallbooktube #booktube #scifibooks
Thoughts on When Death Birds Fly by Andrew Offutt and Keith Taylor ~ Vintage Fantasy Paperback
Просмотров 392 года назад
New phone, new case of RSV, new discussion of a vintage fantasy paperback. This time it's the fifth in Andrew J. Offutt's Cormac mac Art series. #smallbooktube #vintagepaperbacks #bookreview
By the Book by Smith and Rusch : A Star Trek Novel Review
Просмотров 132 года назад
Awkwardly discussing the first novel in my new(ish) TBR project is By the Book, a Star Trek: Enterprise novel written by Dean Wesley Smith and Kristine Kathryn Rusch, published in 2002 by Pocket Books. Link to the Star Trek Reading Order that I am following: startrekreadingorder.com/reading_order.php #smallbooktube #startreknovels #bookreview
City Primeval by Elmore Leonard: A Vintage Crime Fiction Paperback Review
Просмотров 1562 года назад
My clumsy, but spoiler-free, review of Elmore Leonard's 9th crime fiction novel "City Primeval: High Noon in Detroit". #smallbooktube #booktube #crimefiction
October 2022 Reading Wrap-Up ~ Vintage Paperback Horror
Просмотров 222 года назад
Making a (triumphant?) return to Booktube with a recap of my October reads which were, of course, all vintage horror paperbacks. 'Tis the season! Forgive me as I shake the rust off.
Vintage Fantasy Book Review: Oron (1978) by David C. Smith | #BookTube
Просмотров 1193 года назад
In this, the inaugural episode of The Vintage Paperback Reader, I present a spoiler-free review of David C. Smith's 1978 fantasy novel Oron. #booktubesff #bookreview Connect with me on Goodreads! www.goodreads.com/user/show/20265358-dave

Комментарии

  • @boystainey
    @boystainey 3 дня назад

    Vintage books are great dude, especially when the pages get that yellow tinge. I started reading The Bourne Identity (wayyyyyy better than the movie). It’s a 2002 print, not exactly vintage but it’s definitely old comparatively speaking lol. It’s just a better vibe when you smell it and go “Jesus…that’s musty. AWESOME!!!” lol

    • @thevintagepaperbackreader
      @thevintagepaperbackreader 2 дня назад

      Haha! Great take! I agree, there's just something about those old muster paperbacks. As for that copy of the Bourne Identity - I've come across some paperbacks in the thrifts that look like they've been to hell and back and I would've sworn that they were printed in the '70s or '80s, but nope. 15 or 20 years old! Anyway, thanks for watching!

  • @ToddsBookTube91
    @ToddsBookTube91 5 дней назад

    I just stumbled across this video! I hope you had a good christmas!

  • @DuncanMcCurdie
    @DuncanMcCurdie 5 дней назад

    Great to see you back! That’s an awesome haul. I have SOB number 1, let me know if you can’t find a copy locally.

    • @thevintagepaperbackreader
      @thevintagepaperbackreader 4 дня назад

      Thanks for watching! I've got my eye out for that SOB, but I will definitely hit you up when I run out of patience in trying to find it haha.

  • @GrammaticusBooks
    @GrammaticusBooks 7 дней назад

    Welcome back Vintage good to see you! Happy New Year and best wishes for you and your channel in 2025!

    • @thevintagepaperbackreader
      @thevintagepaperbackreader 7 дней назад

      Thank you, best wishes for you and yours as well. And thank you so much for being a Booktube inspiration!

  • @TheBookGraveyard
    @TheBookGraveyard 7 дней назад

    Hello Dave, welcome back!! This is awesome. More channels that talk about various vintage genre fiction are always welcome. The black metal band Bathory has a song called Hammerheart that is about that Asa Drake series. PS- I'd love to see those records back there. I keep meaning to show mine but I can't get caught up on all the book stuff

    • @thevintagepaperbackreader
      @thevintagepaperbackreader 7 дней назад

      Thank you! And thank you also for the great content you've been putting out! I love it when bands write about books, or genre characters. I'm not much of a black metal fan (I have a few albums, but nothing by Bathory) but I will definitely have to check out Hammerheart as a soundtrack for reading the Hel series. In my absence from booktube I've been posting my music videos over on my alter ego @DavesBasementGrooves. I know you mentioned a couple of times you wanted to show your records, but thought no one would care - not true!

  • @CriminOllyBlog
    @CriminOllyBlog 7 дней назад

    Great haul!

  • @JoaquinRivera-h3v
    @JoaquinRivera-h3v Месяц назад

    Leonard's style is what makes his books excellent. Whether western or contemporary crime. Just the huge number of his books that have been made into movies should tell you something about the man's writing.

  • @LeoWhalen1933
    @LeoWhalen1933 Год назад

    Im waiting to receive the paperback of this Book. I'm thankful for your review. This is why I love RUclips. You only have 8 subscribers but I enjoyed your video immensely. Hope to see more, especially from Elmore Leonard.

  • @ThePontificatingAHole
    @ThePontificatingAHole Год назад

    If you read the books in chronological order by Cormac's career, you see why he is so brooding and seems aloof from the advances of the women (at least in The Tower of Death - he is still pining for Samaire and expects trouble when getting involved with the daughters of kings) who seem to throw themselves at his feet everywhere he goes. Cormac is not as one-dimensional as you might think at first glance. He actually has a lot of depth to him, and The Mists of Doom tells us a lot about this adventurer that explains his portrayal in other novels in the series. Now, I do agree that the novels Offutt co-wrote with Keith Taylor were better, but Cormac is a little deeper than most of the templates laid out for this genre of fantasy - Conan is strong, agile, and swift. Not much is said of his skill at arms per se. The impression one gets is that he survived largely through sheer determination and physical prowess. Cormac, on the other hand, is described as wily, cunning, and one character remarks that with Cormac in Eirinn, the snakes were not driven from that isle. In the Mists of Doom, it's Cormac's left-handed problem solving that turns the tides of battle in more than one occasion, not his strength, though that is clearly touted, too. I think of Cormac as a Gaelic Alexander the Great, and I have always been intrigued by heroes who aren't just big dumb fighters (or BDFs as we used to call them on the TTRPG game convention scene). I'm not refuting your opinion or anything. I just find Cormac to have more depth as a character than you do. To each his own.

  • @ThePontificatingAHole
    @ThePontificatingAHole Год назад

    It occurs to me that I probably should clarify the arrangements of the books, as several editions were published, with different numbering. For instance, I have a copy of The Mists of Doom numbered 4 in the series that has the author's signature on the splash page, and I have a copy of the same book numbered 1. The reason is because Offutt wrote The Sword of the Gael first, then The Undying Wizard, and The Sign of the Moonbow. After that, he published The Mists of Doom, The Tower of Death, and When Death Birds Fly. The latter three were prequels to the former three, and The Robert E. Howard collection of Cormac's adventures that started it all in the 30s was published as Tigers of the Sea. That is sort of the midpoint if you take the seven (including Howard's collection) in the following chronological order of Cormac's career: 1. The Mists of Doom (how Cormac was exiled from Eirinn and the girl he left behind) 2. The Tower of Death (eight years later after meeting Wulfhere Hausakliufr) and his adventures in Galicia 3. When Death Birds Fly (the book you review here - Sigebert and Lucanor were introduced in The Tower of Death 4. Tigers of the Sea (my edition is a Baen Books edition with a fleshed out story by David Drake) called Cormac mac Art 5. Sword of the Gael 6. The Undying Wizard (Thulsa Doom makes his appearance here) 7. The Sign of the Moonbow (something tells me that Offutt wrote this as a conclusion and Cormac is reunited with Samaire (the daughter of Leinster's king whom he had to leave as he fled Eirinn) I have only read 1, part of 2, and 4. I have seen some spoilers in various places for the other books and read the back cover blurbs that are supposed to entice you to buy it.

  • @ThePontificatingAHole
    @ThePontificatingAHole Год назад

    I read The Mists of Doom first and am reading The Tower of Death now, with When Death Birds Fly next since the series arrangement has set these up chronologically with Cormac's career. The Mists of Doom explore Cormac's exile from Connachtand ultimately Eirrinn. He falls in love with the princess of Leinstet and has to leave her behind. Cormac isn't so much strong as he is wily. He is nothing like the typical warrior hero template. He is a cool-headed tactician and planner. I find Cormac to have a little more depth than you have found him. I agree that Wulfhere is a stock character, though.

  • @andreseydel7282
    @andreseydel7282 2 года назад

    [̲̅p][̲̅r][̲̅o][̲̅m][̲̅o][̲̅s][̲̅m]

  • @DeadgrinCustoms
    @DeadgrinCustoms 2 года назад

    Bro I hope you continue this channel. Great honest review