Serve yourself, your children with the tools that seed intuitive thinking skills, books that challenge and enrich the imagination. Take them back to the time before the mind-controlling television and electronic games to the origins of the ideas that gave birth to these electronic miracles. - BOOKS that fuel the creative processes of the human imagination.
INTRODUCTION
THE LURE AND LORE OF "THE BLIND SPOT"
BY FORREST J. ACKERMAN
The Blind Spot opens with the words: "Perhaps it were
just as well to start at the beginning. A mere matter of
news." Suppose I use them in the same sense:
A mere matter of news: The first instalment of this fabulous
novel was featured in Argosy-All-Story-Weekly for
May 14, 1921. Described as a "different" serial, it was introduced
by a cover by Modest Stein. In the foreground
was the profile of a girl of another dimension--ethereal,
sensuous, the eternal feminine--the Nervina of the story.
Filmy crystalline earrings swept back over her bare shoulders.
Dominating the background was a huge flaming yellow
ball, like our Sun as seen from the hypothetical
Vulcan--splotched with murky, mysterious globii vitonae.
There was an ancient quay, and emerging from the ultramarine
waters about it a silhouetted metropolis of spires,
domes, and minarets. It was 1921, and that generation thus
received its first glimpse of the alien landscape of The
Blind Spot and the baroque beauty of an immortal woman
of fantasy fiction.
The authors- Homer Eon Flint was already a reigning
favourite with post-World-War-I enthusiasts of imaginative
literature, who had eagerly devoured his Queen of Life
and Lord of Death; his King of Conserve Island and The
Planeteer. Austin Hall was well known and popular for his
Almost Immortal; Rebel Soul, and Into The Infinite.
Then came this epoch-making collaboration. When
Mary Gnaedinger launched Famous Fantastic Mysteries
magazine she early presented The Blind Spot, and printed
it again in that magazine's companion Fantastic Novels.
These reprints are now collectors' items, almost unobtainable,
and otherwise the story has long been out of print.
Rumour says an unauthorised German version of The Blind
Spot, has been published in book form. There is another
book called The Blind Spot, and also a magazine story,
and a major movie studio was to produce a film of the same
title. However, here is presented the only hard-cover version
of the only Blind Spot of consequence to lovers of fantasy.
Who wrote the story? When I first looked into the question,
as a 15 year old boy, Homer Eon Flint (he originally
spelled his name with a "d") was already dead of a fall
into a canyon. In 1949 his widow told me: "I think Homer's
father contributed that middle name"--the same name
(with slightly different spelling) that the Irish poet George
Russell took as his pen-name, which became known by its
abbreviation AE. Mrs. Flindt said of Flint's father: "He was
a very deep thinker, and enjoyed reading heavy material."
Like father, like son. "Homer always talked over his ideas
with me, and although I couldn't always follow his thoughts
it seemed to help him to express them to another--it made
some things come more clearly to him."
Flint was a great admirer of H. G. Wells (this little grandmother-
schoolteacher told me) and had probably read all
his works up to the time when he (Flint) died in 1924. He
had read Doyle and Haggard, but: "Wells was his
favourite--the real thinker."
Softcover, 5¼" x 8¼", 355+ pages
Perfect-Bound