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Pearls from Peoria
by Philip Jose Farmer

Illustrated by Keith Howell, Charles Berlin, Jason Robert Bell, and Mario Zecca

Limited: (sold out)
Lettered: (sold out)
Trade: (sold out)
Unsigned 2nd printing: (sold out)

An outstanding and unique collection from an outstanding and unique talent. Philip Jose Farmer, three time Hugo winner and Nebula Grand Master in 2001, has written exciting and provocative fiction since his debut, the ground breaking "The Lovers," stunned the SF community in 1952.

Pearls from Peoria assembles over sixty previously uncollected pieces of fiction, nonfiction, poetry and autobiography that demonstrate the extraordinary range and vitality of Philip Jose Farmer's imagination.

Many of the pieces appear here for the first time anywhere, while others have previously appeared only in small run magazines that have remained elusive and avidly sought after by Farmer aficionados.

These tales and articles provide the reader with a grand tour of the literary pocket universes that make up Philip Jose Farmer's private cosmos. The range is vast, from horror to pulp heroes, and autobiography with pieces on Tarzan and Edgar Rice Burroughs, Doc Savage and Sir Richard Burton, Riverworld and Oz, Sherlock Holmes and Ralph von Wau Wau.

Pearls from Peoria represents outstanding value for people who want access to this incredibly rare work without spending a fortune, and copious amounts of time and energy, tracking down the individual original publications.

Pearls from Peoria is available in three unique editions:

Lettered: 26 signed leatherbound copies housed in a custom traycase
Limited: 100 signed and numbered leatherbound copies
Trade: Deluxe cloth bound hardcover

Table of Contents

Myths and Paramyths
ItemNobody’s Perfect
ItemWolf, Iron, and Moth
ItemEvil, Be My Good
ItemMother Earth Wants You
ItemOpening the Door
ItemThe Wounded
ItemHeel

Ralph von Wau Wau
ItemA Scarletin Study
ItemThe Doge Whose Barque Was Worse Than His Bight
ItemJonathan Swift Somers III: Cosmic Traveller in a Wheelchair

Lost Futures
ItemSeventy Years of Decpop
ItemFundamental Issue
ItemSome Fabulous Yonder
ItemPlanet Pickers
ItemThe Terminalization of J.G. Ballard

Psychological Tales
ItemThe Blind Rowers
ItemHunter’s Moon
ItemThe Rise Gotten
ItemThe Good of the Land
ItemO’Brien and Obrenov

Doc Savage
ItemWriting Doc’s Biography
ItemSavage Shadow
ItemDoc Savage and the Cult of the Blue God
ItemThe Monster On Hold

Tarzan and Edgar Rice Burroughs
ItemThe Princess of Terra
ItemThe Golden Age and the Brass
ItemAn Appreciation of Edgar Rice Burroughs
ItemThe Arms of Tarzan
ItemThe Two Lord Ruftons
ItemA Reply to "The Red Herring"
ItemThe Great Lorak Time Discrepancy
ItemThe Lord Mountford Mystery
ItemFrom ERB to YGG
ItemA Language for Opar
ItemThe Purple Distance

PJF on SF
ItemThe Source of the River
ItemA Rough Knight for the Queen
ItemThe Journey as the Revelation of the Unknown
ItemThe Jos�s from Rio
ItemGetting A-Long with Heinlein
ItemGod’s Hat
ItemTo Forry Ackerman, the Wizard of Sci-Fi
ItemPornograms and Supercomputers
ItemA Review of the 1977 Anthology Chrysalis ..
ItemReview of The Prometheus Project ..
Item
Review of How the Wizard Came to Oz ...
ItemOft Have I Travelled
ItemWhite Whales, Raintrees, Flying Saucers...
ItemIF R.I.P. .....
ItemThe Tin Woodman Slams the Door
ItemWitches and Gnomes and Talking Animals, oh my
ItemSuffer A Witch to Live

Poems
ItemImagination
ItemThe Pterodactyl
ItemSestina of the Space Rocket
ItemBeauty in This Iron Age
ItemIn Common
ItemBlack Squirrel on Cottonwood Limb’s tip
ItemJob’s Leviathan

PJF on PJF
ItemMaps and Spasms
ItemReligion and Myths
ItemCreating Artificial Worlds
ItemPhonemics
ItemLovers and Otherwise
ItemA Fimbulwinter Introduction
ItemOn A Mountain Upside Down

On PJF
ItemMother of Pearl
ItemThe Artwork
ItemPhoto Montages

From Publishers Weekly (Starred Review):
"This colossal scrapbook of scarce, offbeat fiction, poetry and nonfiction from SF veteran Farmer offers fans a smorgasbord of his hard--and impossible--to find work from fanzines and other small publications, spanning the 1940s to the 1990s. Amassed by Mike Croteau, who runs the official Philip Jose Farmer Web site, and edited by Paul Spiteri, who provides brief introductions for each piece, this collection is especially valuable for its insights into the author's writing methods. For fun, Farmer reinterpreted the adventures of pulp hero Doc Savage, Oz characters, Sherlock Holmes and Tarzan. His canine detective, Ralph von Wau Wau, in 'A Scarletin Study,' somehow blended Holmes, Sam Spade and, typically, puns. Farmer also reprised vampire, werewolf and Frankenstein stories. About the sale of his first story, 'The Lovers' (which won a Hugo in 1952), Farmer says in the autobiographical 'Maps and Spasms' that he thought he 'had the world by the tail. But, as it turned out, there was a tiger at the other end.' Fortunately for generations of SF readers, he persisted."

From Booklist:
"More than 60 pieces in all showcase Farmer’s amazing versatility and should gratify the pants off fans searching for previously unpublished and long-out-of-print gold."

Paul Di Filippo, in Science Fiction Weekly (A+ Review)
"... we have to acknowledge that Farmer's unique voice leaps out of every piece. Cumulatively, they represent as clear a transmission of his startling mind and talents as any other book in his oeuvre. The sheer bulk of the material has the effect of enwrapping the reaer in PJF's warm embrace. (Perhaps that image is a bit too creepy, given Farmer's notoriously kinky fiction, but we'll let it stand.) Farmer's ludic delights in fiction as gameplaying; his nostalgia for the milestones of Western pop culture (Oz, pulps, Hollywood, etc.); his Midwestern moral sunniness underpinned by psychological darkness (Farmer is the genre's Sherwood Anderson or Thornton Wilder); his vibrant prose, packed with metaphors--all of this is on display in even the most 'trivial' piece herein."

And Philip Jose Farmer's Reaction to Pearls:
"After a lifetime of writing it is a real joy to see a collection such as Pearls in print. That it covers so many aspects of my work is especially gratifying. I've enjoyed revisiting this diverse collection of my work (some over fifty years old!) and am impressed with the thought that went into arranging the pieces into the order they appear. I do believe it gives a good overview of my whole catalog; I hope the reader will enjoy the collection and the access it affords to some of my rarer pieces. I had fun writing them, I hope the reader has fun reading them."

From MagillOnLiterature:
"For fifty years or more, Philip Jose Farmer has been known as a major science fiction writer, one unafraid of sex, religion, and politics; in 2001 the Science Fiction Writers of America selected him as a Grand Master. Pearls from Peoria showcases the full range of his interests... it is a rich and varied look into one of the strangest and most fascinating minds in the science fiction community."


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