Also, if you're looking at Adorama's or B&H's site, you can filter down to just Pentax-mount lenses. They usually have a reasonably complete selection of what's out there, not counting import lenses like the Zenitar 16mm fisheye, of course.
I prefer looking at Adorama's site because B&H separates out film lenses and digital-only lenses, whereas Adorama lets you choose that later on, so you don't have to look in two places to see all the available lenses.
We'll be getting new Zeiss lenses in Pentax K-mounts in a few months, too... fun stuff!
As for circular polarizers, I think a lot of the usefulness is that it shrinks the dynamic range of a scene - by darkening the sky, it makes it less likely that the sky will be "blown out", ie, just a big white blotch. This is obviously not a concern if the sky isn't in your photo, or if the sky is dark. At that points, its benefits are being able to control reflections.
handicap18 said:
With the CP you can rotate the filter so that the darker part of the filter covers the sky, therefor making the camera think that there's not as much light and you still get the same nicely exposed landscape and the sky wont be as blown out.
Your description kind of sounds more like a neutral density graduated filter, where one side is light and the other is dark. A CP is uniformly dark.