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Northwest of Earth: The Complete Northwest Smith (Trade Paperback)
Paizo Publishing, LLC
by C.L. Moore, with an introduction by C.J. Cherryh
75th Anniversary Edition!
From the crumbling temples of forgotten gods on Venus to the seedy pleasure halls of old Mars, Northwest Smith blazes a trail through the underbelly of the solar system in 13 action-packed stories you won’t soon forget.
Among the best-written and most emotionally complex stories of the Pulp Era, the tales of intergalactic smuggler Northwest Smith still resonate strongly 75 years after their first publication. A staple of Weird Tales in its Golden Age, C.L. Moore’s stories appeared alongside work by H.P. Lovecraft, Robert E. Howard, and Clark Ashton Smith, forming the backbone of the “unique magazine’s” approach to science fiction and planetary adventure.
For the first time ever, all of Northwest Smith’s adventures have been collected in a single volume, including “Quest of the Starstone,” which pairs Smith with Moore’s other famous creation, the fierce swordswoman Jirel of Joiry!
Contents:
- Introduction: "Teaching the World to Dream" by C. J. Cherryh
- "Shambleau"
- "Black Thirst"
- "Scarlet Dream"
- "Dust of Gods"
- "Julhi"
- "Nymph of Darkness"
- "The Cold Gray God"
- "Yvala"
- "Lost Parade"
- "The Tree of Life"
- "Quest of the Starstone"
- "Werewoman"
- "Song in a Minor Key"
"A delightful blend of classic science fiction, wonderful settings and some of the most memorable monsters you've never encountered."—Fred Kiesche, SFSignal.com
"If you're bored by the Saw franchise's literally mechanical twists and intrigued by the concept of crossbreeding Clark Ashton Smith with Star Wars, then try Northwest of Earth: A whole lot of bang for surprisingly little buck."—Gemma Files, FearZone.com
"For me 'Shambleau' remains one of the finest horror stories I've ever read even though it comes wrapped inside a pulp science fiction story."—Ed Gorman, editor of Pulp Masters
384-page softcover trade paperback
ISBN-13: 978-1-60125-081-0
About the Author
Twenty years after her death, Catherine Lucille Moore (1911–1987) remains one of the most influential female fantasy authors of all time. Born in Indianapolis, Indiana, Moore published her first story in Weird Tales in 1933, where it met with immediate success and earned praise from contemporaries such as H.P. Lovecraft. In a time when female authors were still marginalized and practically unheard of in genre fiction, Catherine hid her gender by publishing under the name C.L. Moore. She proceeded to write high-profile stories for Weird Tales and Astounding for the next decade, earning particular acclaim for her characters Jirel of Joiry, the first strong female protagonist in the sword and sorcery genre, and daring spaceman Northwest Smith. Moore met science fiction author Henry Kuttner in 1936 when he wrote her a fan letter, mistakenly believing her to be a man, and in 1940 the two were married. Together the couple collaborated on numerous stories and scripts for television shows under their own names and at least 17 pseudonyms, of which Lewis Padgett and Keith Hammond are the most recognized. In 1998 C. L. Moore was inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame.
Note: This product is part of the
Planet Stories Subscription.
Are there errors or omissions in this product information? Got corrections? Let us know at
webmaster@paizo.com.
PZO8007
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I remember seeing and meeting C.L. Moore back in the 1970s at a local fantasy/science-fiction convention, FOOLCON, in Overland Park, KS. She was a very nice lady and a very good guest. I remember when she was giving a talk about her work, when she was trying to think of one of her stories and couldn't think of the title. I blurted out "A Gnone There Was." I had her autograph the Ballantine/Del Rey paperback of "The Best Of C.L. Moore." I recomment both books being publshed this coming January. I know I will be purchasing both volumes.
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Thanks, JMark. I really would have liked to meet Ms. Moore (and Kuttner, and Howard, and Kline, and Farnsworth Wright, and a dozen more). I am so pleased to introduce these tales to a new generation of readers. They are a treasure.
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Any more precise ETA on this one? I have a couple of things on order waiting for it.
Thanks
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Nevynxxx wrote:
Any more precise ETA on this one? I have a couple of things on order waiting for it.
Thanks
It's working its way through U.S. Customs now, so it should be in our warehouse soon.
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Vic Wertz wrote:
Nevynxxx wrote:
Any more precise ETA on this one? I have a couple of things on order waiting for it.
Thanks
It's working its way through U.S. Customs now, so it should be in our warehouse soon.
Fantastic. Thanks Vic
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Hi!
How come there is no delivery date listed any more??
Take care.
Doug
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Douglas Draa wrote:
Hi!
How come there is no delivery date listed any more??
Take care.
Doug
Because it arrived in the warehouse on Friday, and is now shipping!
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Vic Wertz wrote:
Douglas Draa wrote:
Hi!
How come there is no delivery date listed any more??
Take care.
Doug
Because it arrived in the warehouse on Friday, and is now shipping!
EXCELLENT!!! :-)
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I just picked up Northwest of Earth the other week at my flgs, EndGame. While I'm only two stories in, this is a great read. I hadn't read any of the author's work up until now - my loss, but definitely a treat. Great prose and lots of raygun goodness. :)
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A number of reviewers have likened Northwest Smith to the likes of Indiana Jones or Han Solo.
I'm not seeing it.
These are fine stories, but Northwest is a man who "follows" through most of the plot. He's amazed, traumatized, caught time and again in deep emotional bits, bedazzled, and always a sucker for a pretty young thing. He gets by with bursts of moxie and a lack of scruples as to when and how to fire his sidearm at things.
Northwest, sad to say, would never shoot Greedo first.
Halfway through the book, it clicked for me. This is the kind of work where we'd see, say, William Shatner's James Kirk: elbows jammed into his ribs in pain and horror; mouth twisted in a swell of savage rage; a man of action, of danger, falling from one doomed romance with a beautiful young woman to the next.
Northwest Smith is Krk, if he'd been outlawed on Earth. He is Kirk without the quibbles of Star Fleet regulations.
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Chris Mortika wrote:
Northwest Smith is Krk, if he'd been outlawed on Earth. He is Kirk without the quibbles of Star Fleet regulations.
Holy crap, Chris. This statement makes me want to get the book even MORE!!
(I'll admit, I'm a Trekker first and foremost)
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Its great to see that Northwest is being read again, he was her favorite Male Character. And I am not a serious trekkie, as is my son and husband, however we all agree that Northwest is more like Han Solo,
and Catherine felt that way as well. I was fortunate enough to know her and love her, she was my step-mom, until I was grown up I did not realize who she was to the world. She was mommy to me and a great one at that
She was always gracious, and if she still was here today she would politely say thank you in a very modest voice for reading and enjoying her work.
Carole Ann
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Wow, thanks for posting Carole Ann.
I'm just starting the book and really looking forward to it. Your mom was an amazing storyteller. Wow.
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Chris Mortika wrote:
A number of reviewers have likened Northwest Smith to the likes of Indiana Jones or Han Solo.
I'm not seeing it.
I have to agree. Though I actually only see one person in this thread likening him to Han Solo, that's certainly the impression you would get from blurbs about Smith being an "intergalactic smuggler" and "daring spaceman". I've read the Indy comparison somewhere else, can't recall where, though. But the only similarity I see with Indiana Jones is the names...
The thing is that both Han and Indy are action heroes, and these are in no way action stories. They're all internal, there are few to none external events going on. And even though I like them, they're fine pieces of writing, reading them all so close together unfortunately highlights that they're all pretty much the same. They all deal with Smith getting possessed, hypnotized, enthralled or otherwise mind****ed, and how he struggles free from whatever's got him hooked this time around.
Now, to play the devil's advocate for a bit... The narration in the stories does make it clear that most of the time Smith actually is a physical, extroverted, take-charge kind of guy. Just not in the timeframes of these particular stories. It's as if someone wrote stories about Han Solo, but not when he's fighting stormtroopers or dodging imperial cruisers, instead focusing on the times he's sitting in a corner of a bar having a morose drink by himself. And to Smith's credit, the reason that he manages to break free of the various sirens where lesser men have failed, is that at the deepest, darkest core of his being he's just one mean bastard.
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Yarner58 wrote:
Its great to see that Northwest is being read again, he was her favorite Male Character. And I am not a serious trekkie, as is my son and husband, however we all agree that Northwest is more like Han Solo,
and Catherine felt that way as well. I was fortunate enough to know her and love her, she was my step-mom, until I was grown up I did not realize who she was to the world. She was mommy to me and a great one at that
She was always gracious, and if she still was here today she would politely say thank you in a very modest voice for reading and enjoying her work.
Carole Ann
Thanks for posting Carole! Its always great to see a family member post and provide insight into the author's work. I finished the book a month or so back, and I really enjoyed it. NW felt like Han Solo to me, but clearly he was more than just a space smuggler.
Good read!
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Yarner58 wrote:
Its great to see that Northwest is being read again, he was her favorite Male Character. And I am not a serious trekkie, as is my son and husband, however we all agree that Northwest is more like Han Solo,
and Catherine felt that way as well. I was fortunate enough to know her and love her, she was my step-mom, until I was grown up I did not realize who she was to the world. She was mommy to me and a great one at that
She was always gracious, and if she still was here today she would politely say thank you in a very modest voice for reading and enjoying her work.
Carole Ann
(***) (Staggers a moment, clutching his harness and metal)
Wow. Thank you very much, Ma'am, for sharing.
I have had the privilege of meeting C.J. Cherryh, and of agreeing with her that C. L. Moore and Leigh Brackett were the greatest inspirations.
Are you aware of the late Wallace Wood's painting of "Shambleau?"
http://www.vanguardproductions.net/wallywood/shambleau.html
Wally Wood is recognized as one of the greatest comics artists who ever lived. Many EC Comics and the classic "Mars Attacks!" cards came from his pencil and pen. He rarely worked in other media, and the Northwest Smith story "Shambleau" became one of the very few oil paintings Wood ever made.
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wow i got Northwest of earth for christmas. Iv been so busy with other things that i have not been able to start reading it till now
i am blown away Ms Moore is a great story teller. In Northwest Smith i can really see han solo and indiana jones also maybe a little james bond to. also the way she discribes planets is beautiful.
i read through shambleau in one read and im hooked.
i would like to thank the good people at planet stories for giving me the opertunity to read this great collection
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Erik may hunt me down but I like Northwest more than Jirel. Need to loan my copy to my friends to see if they think their kids can handle it.
(Well after they get through all the Pendragon Press books I got them)
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Glad to see everyone enjoying Northwest of Earth! If I may make a recommendation, I'd say that if you enjoy Northwest Smith, you should definitely check out Leigh Bracket's The Ginger Star. For my money, Eric John Stark and Northwest Smith are the two pillars upon which most of the badass Han-Solo-style space pirates are based (not surprising, considering Brackett wrote the first draft of The Empire Strikes Back).
After that, of course, you should try reading Black God's Kiss... that was my first encounter with C. L. Moore, and the title story blew me away right from the start.
On a side note, anybody else think it's interesting that the two authors in our line who have received the most praise so far (and rightfully so) are female? Is there a correlation there, or is it coincidental?
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James Sutter wrote:
On a side note, anybody else think it's interesting that the two authors in our line who have received the most praise so far (and rightfully so) are female? Is there a correlation there, or is it coincidental?
It’s hard to say, I must point out though that Planet Stories has currently published works by the two most famous female pulp authors and, with the exception of Almuric, none of the works of the most famous male authors. When Burroughs, Howard, Lovecraft, Leiber, Vance, (etc., etc.,) grace this line, we can better compare.
Don’t get me wrong, I think these women were brilliant writers, and to give the men a chance they’ll need better representation than Gygax for instance (the male author this line has primarily published).
P.S. On all that Han Solo business discussed earlier, I think I heard that Northwest Smith was an inspiration.
P.P.S. By the way, thanks for adding photographs to the author bios.
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Theris Nordo Ichka wrote:
On all that Han Solo business discussed earlier, I think I heard that Northwest Smith was an inspiration.
Definitely. As he pointed out in his introduction to the Reavers of Skaith, Lucas was a big fan of all the pulp SF, and it had a huge impact on the sorts of worlds and characters he developed.
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Mr Sutter thank you for the reccomendation of the ginger star thats probly going to be my next planet story i add to my SF/Horror collection
in northwest of earth i just finished Black Thirst. and it was equally as good as shambleau
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This book was (is) my introduction to Planet Stories publications, and I'm really impressed. The quality of the book is very good, the cover art is evocative of the story (the first one in the collection) - and personally I prefer it to the original magazine cover featuring that story - and the price is very fair indeed.
After seeing a couple other of your books, I signed up as a subscriber and I'm sure I won't be disappointed. Thank you for publishing this book and the others in your catalog!
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