It's a dangerous business, Frodo, going into Powell's. You step into the store, and if you don't keep your feet, there's no knowing where you might be swept off to.
Ugh. That’s awesome. Gotta have them now! Mainly because I dont even have (or have heard of) most of those!
Interesting that Children of Húrin isn't in any of these sets. I feel like it was a long enough book alone to not have been incorporated into one of these…
Have you been to More Books, around the corner from the Powell's on Hawthorne? They don't want you to use your cellphone, are anti-wifi, only accept cash and use a handwritten ledger - all of which I find quite charming in a bookstore.
They had a ~100 year old typewritten compilation of translated Chinese sex jokes.
Not much fantasy/sci-fi but if you like books it's got a real 'living my best life in my bookstore' kind of vibe that you might enjoy.
If you look on the shelf just below Tolkien, you'll see Folio Society editions of The Princess Bride and American Gods.
Not only are those editions GLORIOUS, it's really hard to go wrong with ANYTHING by the Folio Society. They're kind of like to books what the Criterion Editon is to movies.
(I'm still waiting on them to publish the last book in the James Bond run, Octopussy, then I'll buy that whole set). Apparently hung up by problems with the artist. :( She got caught plagiarising stuff for Wizards of the Coast.
Really, read these in publication order, not chronological order.
Fantasy/Horror, the classic of the genre, for me, is the Dark Tower series by Stephen King, 8 books proper, but it branches out and touches so many others of King's works. Stephen King shared universe.
I hesitate slightly to reccomend these books, because as good as they are, the author has kind of gone off the deep end supporting Russia in the war with Ukraine.
All six books were written before Russia invaded Crimea, so it doesn't color the text in any way, but Lukyanenko is of Ukrainian heritage and has now fully drunk the Russian kool-aid so if you have a hard time separating the author from the books, this can be a tough read.
As long as I'm talking about books in translation, the Cemetery of Forgotten Books series by Carlos Ruiz Zafon are all quite amazing.
See if the synopsis for the first book doesn't grab the hell out of you:
"At the first light of dawn in postwar Barcelona, a bookseller leads his motherless son to a mysterious crypt called the Cemetery of Forgotten Books. This labyrinthine sanctuary houses the books that have lost their owners, books that are no longer remembered by anyone. It is here that ten-year-old Daniel Sempere pulls a single book—The Shadow of the Wind—off of the dusty shelves to adopt as his own. With one fateful turn of a page, he begins an adventure that will unravel another man’s tragedy and solve a mystery that has already taken many lives and will shape his entire future."
For non-fiction? I dearly love the travel books by Redmond O'Hanlon:
That's been my last couple weeks lol. I mostly read audiobooks, but I decided to buy a couple favorites just to have actual copies of for some reason or other and just didn't stop.
Except for some in the third row all the circled stuff are "new" purchases. And I still have a couple more in other sections and a couple more still in the mail.
Technically you bought one book and left with one book. Had you walked into Powell’s for one and only one book you would have failed. You can’t buy a set without buying one.
It's HUGE and it's a tourist attraction of sorts. When friends visit they always ask if we can go to Powell's. If you search for things to do in Portland or even grab some tourist pamphlets, it's typically listed.
I put it on my to do list when I went to Portland a while back. Spent several hours there. Had to fly home with books. It would be dangerous if I lived in Portland.