"Hunting.Lake (2)" - читать интересную книгу автора (Resnick Mike)

HUNTING LAKE by Mike Resnick In my life, I have written a grand total of three fan letters to writers. One of the recipients, Barry Malzberg, became my closest friend and occasional collaborator. Another, humorist Ross Spencer, also became a good friend. The third was African writer Alexander Lake, who died on Christmas Day, 1961, a month before I wrote to him. I've always regretted not meetiing Lake, who has been virtually forgotten by the American reading public, despite a number of bestsellers. I recently moved THE RESNICK LIBRARY OF AFRICAN ADVENTURE from St. Martin's Press over to Alexander Books, an offshoot of WorldComm Press. The primary reason was to bring Lake back into print. Sounds simple, right? I mean, hell, all editors do is sit on their judgment all day and see what comes in the mail. Well, sometimes it's not _quite_ that easy. Take Lake, for example. Hell, take the whole damned chronology: 1954: I buy the paperback edition of KILLERS IN AFRICA at age 12, take it to summer camp with me, read it in its entirety once a week for two months. From that day to this, I am fascinated by all
things African, I take 5 safaris, I write 13 books and 18 short stories set in Africa, and I never forget that it is Alexander Lake who awakened this passion in me. 1988: St. Martin's Press buys Tor Books. St. Martin's also publishes Peter Capstick's LIBRARY OF AFRICAN HUNTING, a series of classic reprints. 1989: IVORY becomes a Nebula and Clarke nominee for Tor right after SANTIAGO hits #3 on the bestseller list, and the nice people at Tor look about for ways to keep me happily in their stable. I tell them that if Capstick ever dies or gives up editing the Library, I want to take it over. 1991: St. Martin's informs me that Capstick has moved to a different publisher, and I can edit the Library. I tell them that the first two authors I want to bring back -- they've each written two books -- are Alexander Lake and John Boyes, a scalawag who was one of the Kenya pioneers and at one time was the white king of the Kikuyu. They reply that they'll reprint the Boyes books, which were written in 1910 and 1928 and are in the public domain, but with so many classics available for free they won't spend a penny to purchase the Lakes, which we all assume are still under copyright. I reluctantly agree -- after all, no one else is beating down my door to edit books about killing animals in this Politically Correct year of 1991 -- and I select three books, by Boyes, F. C. Selous, and Arthur Neumann, for publication, writing new introductions for each.