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BookFinder.com tracks the most sought-after out-of-print titles in America. This ninth annual edition is based on BookFinder.com searches from the past 12 months. On this year's list there are a fair share of out-of-print mainstays such as Madonna's nearly perennial number one Sex, but also a host of interesting newcomers; here are a few examples.
New to the BookFinder Report
Tudor Roses by Alice Starmore
Alice Starmore is a superstar in the knitting world but publishers have only just begun to take notice. Last year her immensely popular book Aran Knitting was brought back into print (after perpetually being listed on the BookFinder.com Report) and now her fans are looking for more. In this book Starmore creates a number of sweater designs inspired by the Tudor royals (eg. Henry VIII and Elizabeth I) and their over-the-top gold embroidery, velvet, jewels and lace. The book goes through the history of Tudor fashion and includes reproductions of artwork from the era.
The Reluctant King by Sarah Bradford
This biography of King George VI was published in 1989-1990 by St. Martin’s Press and suddenly shot into steady demand after the mammoth success of the movie The King’s Speech. Colin Firth’s amazing performance portraying George VI piqued the interest in The Reluctant King and made readers eager to learn more.
The House Without Windows by Barbara Newhall Follet
Barbara Newhall Follet was a child prodigy novelist who published this first novel in 1927. At the time she was destined to become the next great American writer but in 1939 she became depressed about her marriage and walked out of her apartment with just $30 in her pocket. The 25-year-old was never seen again. In December 2010 Follet's life story was broadcast on NPR and featured in Lapham’s Quarterly, reigniting interest in her work.
Other interesting out-of-print books
A Payroll to Meet: A Story of Greed, Corruption, and Football at SMU by David Whitford
In A Payroll to Meet, David Whitford discusses the incidents surrounding Southern Methodist University's (SMU) receiving the "death penalty" from the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA); which involves banning the school from competing in a sport for a year or more (two in SMU's case). This book has been out-of-print since 1989 but scandal in college football has never been more in vogue. The recent rash of cheating, bribing and recruitment scandals to hit Ohio State, Southern Cal, Auburn, North Carolina, Oregon, Tennessee, LSU, and the Hurricanes in Miami have renewed the interest in the grandfather of college football scandal.
The Magic Talisman by John Blaine
This was the final novel in the 24-title Rick Brant series of self-described science-adventure stories. This series was written by Harold (Hal) Goodwin and Peter J. Harkins who collectively worked under the pseudonym John Blaine. The series was published by Grosset & Dunlap in the 1940s-1960s but The Magic Talisman was rejected owing to the inclusion of extra sensory perception elements in the story (the publishers wanted a science-based series). The Magic Talisman was finally published independently (by Manuscript Press) in 1990 as a limited edition run of 500 copies.
William Burges and the High Victorian Dream by J. Mordaunt Crook
Today Burges is considered a genius and one of the greatest architects to come out of the Victorian era; however this was not always so. Most of his life and for decades after, his work was unappreciated and precious little was written about his incredibly short career (which did not begin until he was 35 and endedwith his death at 53). Crook's study of Burges' work (which included St. Finbarre's Cathedral in Cork, the renovation of Cardiff Castle in 1868, and the reconstruction of Castle Coch) was published in 1981 and is generally considered to be the best biographical work on Burges to date.
Gather Yourselves Together by Philip K. Dick
Gather Yourselves Together was one of PKD's early works but the novel was not released until after his death (The first and only printing being printed in 1994). Unlike much of Dick’s later work, Gather Yourselves Together is not science fiction but rather straight literary fiction. The plot is set in China shortly after Mao Zedong’s revolution and centers around the affairs of three employees from an American company which is shutting its Chinese operations. Gather Yourselves Together is set to be reprinted by Houghton Mifflin in July 2012.
1 | Madonna | Sex |
2 | Nora Roberts | Promise Me Tomorrow |
3 | Stephen King (as Richard Bachman) | Rage |
4 | Stephen King | My Pretty Pony |
5 | Ray Garton | In a Dark Place: The Story of a True Haunting |
6 | Luigi Serafini | Codex Seraphinianus |
7 | Johnny Cash | Man in Black |
8 | Norman Mailer | Marilyn: A Biography |
9 | H.Henry Thomas | Arithmetic Progress Papers |
10 | Kyle Onstott | Mandingo |
11 | Allan D. Richter | Eve of the End |
12 | Ray Bradbury | Dark Carnival |
13 | Associated Press | The Torch is Passed: The Associated Press Story of The Death of a President |
14 | Jean Larteguy | The Centurions |
15 | Carl Sagan | Murmurs of Earth: The Voyager Interstellar Record |
16 | Cameron Crowe | Fast Times at Ridgemont High |
17 | J.R. Hartley | Fly Fishing: Memories of Angling Days |
18 | Dennis Potter | Ticket To Ride |
19 | Mary and Vincent Price | A Treasury of Great Recipes |
20 | Anne Alexander | The Pink Dress |
21 | Lynne Cheney | Sisters |
22 | Stuart Chase | The Road We Are Traveling, 1914-1942, Guide Lines to America's Future as Reported to the Twentieth Century Fund |
23 | Andrew Loomis | Creative Illustration |
24 | David Williams | Second Sight |
25 | Anna Elizabeth Bennett | Little Witch |
26 | Nan Gilbert | 365 Bedtime Stories |
27 | Allen Drury | Advise and Consent |
28 | C.S. Lewis | The Allegory of Love: A Study in Medieval Tradition |
29 | Alex Angos | Endgame Artillery |
30 | Philip K. Dick | Gather Yourselves Together |
31 | A.C.H. Smith | Labyrinth: A Novel |
32 | Salvador Dali, illustrator | The Jerusalem Bible |
33 | Elmer Keith | Hell, I Was There! |
34 | Ricky Jay | Cards As Weapons |
35 | Madeleine L'Engle | Ilsa |
36 | Norman Denny | The Casket and the Sword |
37 | Charles Eric Maine | World Without Men |
38 | Paul Gallico | Jennie |
39 | Robert Nathan | The Bishop's Wife |
40 | Ben Bova | The Star Conquerors |
41 | Walt Kelly | I Go Pogo |
42 | Curtis Richards | Halloween |
43 | S.O. Pidhainy | The Black Deeds of the Kremlin: A White Book |
44 | Clancy Holling | The Book of Indians |
45 | Tom Lea | The King Ranch |
46 | John Blaine | The Magic Talisman |
47 | José Garcia Villa | Footnote to Youth |
48 | Harry Twyford Peters | Currier & Ives: Printmakers to the American People |
49 | Rasiel Suarez | ERIC : The Encyclopedia of Roman Imperial Coins |
50 | Alice Starmore | Tudor Roses |
51 | Kate Holmes | Too Good to be Threw |
52 | Nicholas Guild | The Blood Star |
53 | Charles M. Russell | Good Medicine; The Illustrated Letters of Charles M. Russell |
54 | Donald Hamilton | The Big Country |
55 | J. Mordaunt Crook | William Burges and the High Victorian Dream |
56 | David Whitford | A Payroll to Meet: A Story of Greed, Corruption, and Football at SMU |
57 | Leo S. Figiel | On Damascus Steel |
58 | Marie Simmons | Pancakes A to Z |
59 | W. Somerset Maugham | Tellers of Tales: 100 Short Stories From the United States, England, France, Russia and Germany |
60 | Arthur Koestler | The Act of Creation |
61 | Charles Thomson | The Septuagint Bible |
62 | Henry W. Simon | A Treasury of Grand Opera |
63 | Jack S Levy | War in the Modern Great Power System, 1495-1975 |
64 | Jack Howell | The Lovely Reed : An Enthusiasts Guide to Building Bamboo Fly Rods |
65 | John Harris | Covenant With Death |
66 | Charles Luk (Translator) | Empty Cloud: The Autobiography of the Chinese Zen Master, Hsu Yun |
67 | Jan Wolkers | Turkish Delight |
68 | Watt Piper | The Bumper Book; a Harvest of Stories and Verses |
69 | John Burnet | Platonism |
70 | David Miller | The Nature of Political Theory |
71 | Laura Bannon | The Wonderful Fashion Doll |
72 | John D. Green | Birds of Britain |
73 | Glen Cook | She Is The Darkness |
74 | Sarah Bradford | The Reluctant King |
75 | Charles Flato | The Golden Book of the Civil War |
76 | James Virgil Howe | The Modern Gunsmith : a guide for the amateur and professional gunsmith in the design and construction of firearms, with practical suggestions for all who like guns |
77 | Ernest Cole | House of Bondage |
78 | Patricia C. Barry | ABCs of Long Arm Quilting |
79 | Ferdinand Pecora | Wall St. Under Oath; The Story of our Modern Money Changers |
80 | A.E. Gutnov and A. Baburov | The Ideal Communist City |
81 | Arthur Upfield | The Lure of the Bush aka The Barrakee Mystery |
82 | Polan Banks | Carriage Entrance |
83 | Barbara Newhall Follett | The House Without Windows |
84 | R.P. Hunnicutt | Stuart: A History of the American Light Tank |
85 | John Cage | Notations |
86 | M.J. Whitley | German Coastal Forces of World War Two |
87 | Roland Pierrot | Chemical and determinative tables of mineralogy |
88 | Arthur Watt | VLF Radio Engineering |
89 | John Atlee Kouwenhoven | The Columbia Historical Portrait of New York: An Essay in Graphic History |
90 | Cecil Beaton | The Glass of Fashion |
91 | David Sokol | Pleased, But Not Satisfied |
92 | Steve Wiper | USS New Jersey BB-62 |
93 | Laura London | The Windflower |
94 | Edward Matunas | Practical Gunsmithing |
95 | Thomas Craven | A Treasury of American Prints - A Selection of One Hundred Etchings and Lithogrphas by the Foremost Living American Artists |
96 | Paul Hoffman | To Drop a Dime |
97 | Nicholas Brawer | British Campaign Furniture: Elegance Under Canvas, 1740-1914 |
98 | Sam Dalal | Swami and Mantra |
99 | Alan Raven and John Roberts | British Battleships of World War Two |
100 | Don Graf | Basic Building Data: 10,000 Timeless Construction Facts |