Yes, it's exciting. But I'm trying not to get my hopes up that they'll measure up to his best work, since he and his publishers apparently made a conscious decision not to bring them out. These aren't "lost" stories in the sense that they were somehow overlooked, or fell behind Geisel's desk and were unnoticed for decades. As I understand it, they never made it into books because he was writing too much other stuff that was clearly better. But if only as a student of the great writer, it will be great to see "new" work.