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Lost in Time and Space With Lefty Feep: Eight Funny and Fanciful Fables of the Forties, Plus One Brand-New Parable of Modern Times
 
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Lost in Time and Space With Lefty Feep: Eight Funny and Fanciful Fables of the Forties, Plus One Brand-New Parable of Modern Times [Paperback]

Robert Bloch (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Paperback: 270 pages
  • Publisher: Creatures at Large Pr; 1 edition (April 1987)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0940064014
  • ISBN-13: 978-0940064010
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.5 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.1 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,247,601 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Editor loved Lefty more than his creator did., May 11, 2000
By 
This review is from: Lost in Time and Space With Lefty Feep: Eight Funny and Fanciful Fables of the Forties, Plus One Brand-New Parable of Modern Times (Paperback)
This collection of pulp tales brilliantly shows just how different the meaning of a writer's work can differ between a fan and the writer. Editor John Stanley, host of the once popular San Francisco based late night horror movie television show Creature Features, put together many of Robert Bloch's 'famous' Lefty Feep stories. Each yarn involved a very contemporary (for the 1940's that is) con man named Lefty Feep who delighted in telling some long suffering schmuck in a coffee shop the wild tales about his failed get rich quick schemes. Written for the fantasy pulps of yore, each tale has a magical trapping of sorts (i.e. flying carpets, genie in a bottle, etc) that inevitably trip up our tireless, and quite clueless, fall guy of a hero. Not surprisingly Bloch barely remembered writing some of the stories (most were written at the request of the publisher and not out of any desire by Bloch to explore the character further) and this workmanlike attitude casts a humorous light on Stanley's obvious, and quite fanatical, love for the character in the interview segments with Bloch that bookend each story. The small press edition, from Stanley's own, and now defunct, Creatures at Large Press, was intended to be the first volume in a series, but none ever followed. Bloch, in his unauthorized autobiography, blamed the stories with his trademarked bemused self-deprecation. Highly recommended for both the silly stories and the probably unintended fan/writer insight.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Lost fantasy from the pages of Fantastic Adventures, August 23, 2011
By 
Alan Olsen (Portland, OR USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Lost in Time and Space With Lefty Feep: Eight Funny and Fanciful Fables of the Forties, Plus One Brand-New Parable of Modern Times (Paperback)
When I was a kid I used to collect old pulp magazines. One of my favorites was a magazine called "Fantastic Adventures". The stories were an odd combination of science fiction and fantasy. Most of the stories were set in the present day. You would see stories of people who found bottles with genii in them or dropping into odd dimensions, or whatever. Most of it was pretty light fantasy stuff.

My favorite of these stories were about a character named "Lefty Feep". Lefty was a race track tout who would tell all sorts of outrageous stories. Imagine Damon Runyon stories as written by a compulsive punster.

Lately I have been going back and rereading the stories. They do contain a few bits that are not considered PC. (These were written during World War II, so there are various anti-Japanese and German slanders.) They are still fun to read. Robert Bloch had a wicked sense of humor and it shows in these stories.

This was the first volume of a planned three volume set. The second and third volumes were never printed. (As well as the story that started it all "In the land of the sky-blue ointments" which has never been published and "The Return of Lefty Feep" which was printed in an obscure fanzine.) It is too bad. There are far too many stories of that era that are forgotten because it is next to impossible to find them in print.
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2.0 out of 5 stars A Calculated Assault on the English Language, January 15, 2008
By 
Paul Camp (Chattanooga, TN United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Lost in Time and Space With Lefty Feep: Eight Funny and Fanciful Fables of the Forties, Plus One Brand-New Parable of Modern Times (Paperback)
Between 1942 and 1946, Robert Bloch wrote 22 comical fantasy adventures of Lefty Feep, a cross between a Damon Runyan gambler and Baron Munchausan. The formula for each story was essentially the same. Lefty corners the reluctant narrator at a cheap restaurant and tells him of his latest adventures with the pied piper, a magic carpet, an invisible coat, or a golden touch machine. In each case, his plans to get rich go askew. All of these stories appeared in _Fantastic Adventures_. At one point, Bloch was writing them at the rate of one a month. He says that editor Ray Palmer steadily bought the stories but gave him no special praise; that would have encouraged him to ask for higher rates.

In _The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction_ (1995), John Clute states that all of these stories were collected in _Lost in Time and Space with Lefty Feep_ (1987). Would that it were so. But the collection consists of only nine stories-- the first eight Lefty Feep yarns, plus a new one written especially for the collection. Future collections were planned and advertised, but I can find no evidence that they were ever published.

The new story, "A Snitch in Time," has Lefty travel to our own time. It's a bit too world-weary and gloomy. It doesn't go with the breezy optimism of the earlier pieces. "Time Wounds All Heels," the first Lefty Feep story, is relatively rough. And "Jerk the Giant Killer" is flawed because Lefty is telling about the adventures of somebody else. Bloch rates it as his least favorite of his early stories in the series, and properly so.

On the other hand, "The Weird Doom of Floyd Scrilch," "The Little Man Who Wasn't There," "Son of a Witch," and "The Golden Opportunity of Lefty Feep" have a certain manic fun about them. They are loaded with slapstick action, ghastly puns, comical dialogue and other assaults upon the English language.

Make no mistake. I am glad that this collection was assembled. I would like to see more Lefty Feep stories in print. Perhaps the one in which Lefty gets henpecked (but not by a housewife), or the one where he has misadventures in an old folks home for gangsters, or the one where he encounters the dragon and the sleepy-time princess. And yet, you know, the stories-- even the better ones-- are not really top of the line. The jokes sometimes misfire. The dialogue is frequently corny. And you can usually predict their endings early into the story. And I am not either stuffy and humorless!
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