Books received 1/10/11 Texas edition

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

Of Blood and Honey
by Stina Leicht
Cover by Min Yum

Promo copy:

Fallen angels and the fey clash against the backdrop of Irish/English conflicts of the 1970s in this stunning debut novel by Stina Leicht.

Liam never knew who his father was. The town of Derry had always assumed that he was the bastard of a protestant–His mother never spoke of him, and Liam assumed he was dead.

But when the war between the fallen, and the fey began to heat up, Liam and his family are pulled into a conflict that they didn’t know existed. A centuries old conflict between supernatural forces seems to mirror the political divisions in 1970s era Ireland, and Liam is thrown headlong into both conflicts.

Only the direct intervention of Liam’s real father, and a secret catholic order dedicated to fighting "The Fallen" can save Liam… from the mundane and supernatural forces around him, and from the darkness that lurks within him.

Watch out for a special RevSF contest/giveaway for Of Blood and Honey and a Baker’s Dozen interview with author Leicht.

The Warlord’s Legacy
by Ari Marmell
Cover by Larry Rostant

Promo copy:

Corvis Rebaine, the Terror of the East, a man as quick with a quip as he is with a blade, returns in this highly anticipated sequel to Ari Marmell’s acclaimed The Conqueror’s Shadow, a debut hailed for its refreshing take on dark fantasy and surprising flashes of sharp, sarcastic wit. Now Marmell raises the stakes in a story that has all the humor and excitement of its predecessor, plus a terrifying new villain so evil that he may well be a match for Rebaine himself.

For let’s not forget how Corvis Rebaine came by the charming nickname “Terror of the East.” Certainly no one else has forgotten. Corvis Rebaine is no hero. In his trademark suit of black armor and skull-like helm, armed with a demon-forged axe, in command of a demonic slave, and with allies that include a bloodthirsty ogre, Rebaine has twice brought death and destruction to Imphallion in pursuit of a better, more equitable and just society. If he had to kill countless innocents in order to achieve that dream, so be it.

At least that was the old Rebaine. Before he slew the mad warlord Audriss. Before he banished the demon Khanda. Before he lost his wife and children, who could not forgive or forget his violent crimes. Now, years later, Rebaine lives in a distant city, under a false name, a member of one of the Guilds he despises, trying to achieve change nonviolently, from within the power structure.

Not even when the neighboring nation of Cephira invades Imphallion and the bickering Guilds prove unable to respond does Rebaine return to his old habits of slaughter. But someone else does. Someone wearing Rebaine’s black armor and bearing what appears to be his axe. Someone who is, if anything, even less careful of human life than Rebaine was.

Now Baron Jassion, Rebaine’s old nemesis, is hunting him once more, aided by a mysterious sorcerer named Kaleb, whose powers and secrets make him a more dangerous enemy than Rebaine has ever known. Even worse, accompanying them is a young woman who hates Corvis Rebaine perhaps more than anyone else: his own daughter, Mellorin. Suddenly Rebaine seems to have no choice. To clear his name, to protect his country, and to reconcile with his family, must he once again become the Terror of the East?

Sword Woman and Other Historical Adventures
by Robert E. Howard
Introduction by Scott Oden
Illustrations by John Watkiss

Promo copy:

The immortal legacy of Robert E. Howard, creator of Conan the Cimmerian, continues with this latest compendium of Howard’s fiction and poetry. These adventures, set in medieval-era Europe and the Near East, are among the most gripping Howard ever wrote, full of pageantry, romance, and battle scenes worthy of Tolstoy himself. Most of all, they feature some of Howard’s most unusual and memorable characters, including Cormac FitzGeoffrey, a half-Irish, half-Norman man of war who follows Richard the Lion-hearted to twelfth-century Palestine—or, as it was known to the Crusaders, Outremer; Diego de Guzman, a Spaniard who visits Cairo in the guise of a Muslim on a mission of revenge; and the legendary sword woman Dark Agnès, who, faced with an arranged marriage to a brutal husband in sixteenth-century France, cuts the ceremony short with a dagger thrust and flees to forge a new identity on the battlefield.

Lavishly illustrated by award-winning artist John Watkiss and featuring miscellanea, informative essays, and a fascinating introduction by acclaimed historical author Scott Oden, Sword Woman and Other Historical Adventures is a must-have for every fan of Robert E. Howard, who, in a career spanning just twelve years, won a place in the pantheon of great American writers.

DVDs received 1/6/11

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

Robinson Crusoe on Mars (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray]

Promo copy:

Special effects wunderkind and genre master Byron Haskin (The War of the Worlds, The Outer Limits) won a place in the hearts of fantasy film lovers everywhere with this gorgeously designed journey into the unknown. Robinson Crusoe on Mars tells the story of U.S. astronaut Commander “Kit” Draper (Paul Mantee), who must fight for survival when his spaceship crash-lands on the barren waste of Mars, a pet monkey his only companion. But is he actually alone? Shot in vast Techniscope and blazing color, this is an imaginative and beloved marvel of classic science fiction.

Special Features

    Restored high-definition digital transfer, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack

    Audio commentary featuring cast and film historians

    Destination Mars, a video featurette

    Music video for Lundin’s song "Robinson Crusoe on Mars"

    Stills gallery

    Theatrical trailer

    PLUS: A booklet featuring an essay by Lennick

Sadly, I don’t own a blu ray player. (And yes, I already passed it on to an appreciative individual.)

Jack Goes Boating

Promo copy:

Jack (Academy Award winner Philip Seymour Hoffman, making his directorial debut) and Connie (Amy Ryan) are two single people who on their own might continue to recede into the anonymous background of New York City, but in each other begin to find the courage and desire to pursue a budding relationship. As Jack and Connie cautiously circle commitment, the couple that introduced them, Clyde (John Ortiz) and Lucy (Daphne Rubin-Vega), confront their own unresolved issues, and each couple comes face to face with the inevitable path of their relationship. Based on the acclaimed Off-Broadway play of the same name, this unconventional romantic comedy is a tale of love, betrayal, friendship and grace.

Stone

Promo copy:

Academy Award® winner Robert De Niro and Oscar® nominee Edward Norton deliver powerful performances as a seasoned corrections official and a scheming inmate whose lives become dangerously intertwined in this “gritty and engrossing thriller” (Steve O’Brien, WCBS-FM). Jack Mabry (De Niro), a parole officer days away from retirement, is asked to review the case of Gerald “Stone” Creeson (Norton), in prison for arson. Now eligible for early release, Stone needs to convince Jack he has reformed, but his attempts to influence the older man’s decision with his wife Lucetta (Milla Jovovich) have profound and unexpected effects on them both. This tale of passion, betrayal and corruption skillfully weaves together the parallel journeys of two men grappling with dark impulses, as the line between lawman and lawbreaker becomes precariously thin.

Behold the awesome power of RevSF & Brandon Zuern

Today Vertigo announced they were finally collecting the much sought-after early Grant Morrison/Frank Quitely collaboration Flex Mentallo.

Quote:
Tuesday, January 4th, 2011

By Pamela Mullin

If you’re a fan of Grant Morrison (and who isn’t?), you’ll be stoked to know that FLEX MENTALLO will be published in book form this year. This marks the first time the four-issue mini-series written by Morrison and illustrated by artist Frank Quitely is being collected. FLEX MENTALLO sprang out of Grant’s mind bending and infamous run on DOOM PATROL.

Pick up this beautiful Deluxe Edition hardcover with bonus material this Fall.

Back in late September/early October over a glorious six day period, we (being RevolutionSF) produced
Uncanny Un-Collectibles, which outlined the comics that have never been collected (or were currently not available) but really should be. On October 1, the sixth and final day, Brandon Zuern, manager of the finest comic shop in the land, made this pronouncement.

Quote:
Flex Mentallo, Grant Morrison’s four-issue limited series about a musclebound superhero searching for other champions of justice, might not be for you. It’s too psychedelic for a mainstream audience, yet too much in love with truth, justice, and the American Way for the weirdos and freaks. It’s drug-fueled science fiction fantasy is more than the straight-laces can handle, but has a strangely sweet optimism that cynics won’t get.

But if you simply love comic books, Flex Mentallo is the mondo bizarro comics commentary you’ve been looking for.

It’s a love letter to superhero ideals laced with LSD. It’s a beautiful like an explosion, thanks to the stunning art of Frank Quitely. But because of the lead character’s similarity in look and origin to bodybuilder-turned-pitchman Charles Atlas, we may never see a collection of this amazing series. Though DC Comics stood up to the lawsuit-version of getting sand kicked in their face by Charles Atlas Co., they’ve hesitated to reprint the story. Here’s hoping Flex Mentallo uses his reality-changing mastery of Muscle Mystery to flex us up a trade paperback! It could happen, because Flex Mentallo is proof that superheroes are real. -Brandon Zuern, store manager, Austin Books & Comics

And here we are a scant three months later and Vertigo is announcing that very collection. If that doesn’t demonstrate geek power, I’m not sure what does!*

*To be fair, Brandon was far from the only person clamoring for this collection. But, this does make the second title from the feature to be collected. Not sure if someone is paying attention, but I like to think so.

Graphic Novels/Comics received 1/2/11

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

The Light
Written by Nathan Edmondson
Art by Brett Weldele

Promo copy:

It is as sudden as it is deadly. Its origins are unknown. When it strikes, a father must risk all to protect his daughter and escape across the Oregon countryside – before they are infected by THE LIGHT! Prepare yourself for the wildly acclaimed horror-thriller from writer Nathan Edmondson and artist Brett Weldele. Learn to love the darkness; learn to fear THE LIGHT! Collects THE LIGHT #1-5.

I interviewed Weldele (along with writer Robert Vendetti) about The Surrogates back in July, 2009.

Abattoir Issue #2
Created by: Darren Lynn Bousman
Concept by: Michael Peterson
Written by: Rob Levin & Troy Peteri
Illustrated by: Bing Casino

Promo copy:

Some puzzles are best left unsolved…

Time Bomb Issue 3
Created and Written by: Jimmy Palmiotti & Justin Gray
Illustrated by: Paul Gulacy
Paints by: Rain Beredo
Cover Art by: Paul Gulacy

Promo copy:

Nazis, Bombs and Babes!

Jack and WW II spy Ruth cool their heels in Metzger’s prison cell far below the surface, while the rest of the team hurries to rescue the duo and prevent the launch of the Omega Bomb. Unbeknownst to the heroes of the future, Metzger has a secret that could change the course of history as we know it. Can Jack and his team of commandos stop the Omega Bomb, defeat Metzger and escape without altering history?

Books received 1/2/11 Pyr edition

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

Cowboy Angels
by Paul McAuley
Cover by Sparth

Promo copy:

The first Turing gate, a mere hundred nanometers across, is forced open in 1963, at the high-energy physics laboratory in Brookhaven; three years later, the first man to travel to an alternate history takes his momentous step, and an empire is born.
For fifteen years, the version of America that calls itself the Real has used its Turing gate technology to infiltrate a wide variety of alternate Americas, rebuilding those wrecked by nuclear war, fomenting revolutions and waging war to free others from communist or fascist rule, and establishing a Pan-American Alliance. Then a nation exhausted by endless strife elects Jimmy Carter on a reconstruction and reconciliation ticket, the CIA’s covert operations are wound down, and the Real begins to wage peace rather than war.

But some people believe that it is the Real’s manifest destiny to impose its idea of truth, justice, and the American way in every known alternate history, and they’re prepared to do anything to reverse Carter’s peacenik doctrine. When Adam Stone, a former CIA field officer, one of the Cowboy Angels who worked covertly in other histories, volunteers for reactivation after an old friend begins a killing spree across alternate histories, his mission uncovers a startling secret about the operation of the Turing gates and leads him into the heart of an audicious conspiracy to change the history of every America in the multiverse–including our own.

Cowboy Angels is a vivid, helter-skelter thriller in which one version of America discovers the true cost of empire building, and one man discovers that an individual really can make a difference.

The Scar-Crow Men (Swords of the Albion)
by Mark Chadbourn
Cover by Chris McGrath

Promo copy:

The year is 1593. The London of Elizabeth I is in the terrible grip of the Black Death. As thousands die from the plague and the queen hides behind the walls of her palace, English spies are being murdered across the city. The killer’s next target: Will Swyfte.
For Swyfte–adventurer, rake, scholar, and spy–this is the darkest time he has known. His mentor, the grand old spymaster Sir Francis Walsingham, is dead. The new head of the secret service is more concerned about his own advancement than defending the nation, and a rival faction at the court has established its own network of spies. Plots are everywhere, and no one can be trusted. Meanwhile, England’s greatest enemy, the haunted Unseelie Court, prepares to make its move.

A dark, bloody scheme, years in the making, is about to be realized. The endgame begins on the night of the first performance of Dr. Faustus, the new play by Swyfte’s close friend and fellow spy Christopher Marlowe. A devil is conjured in the middle of the crowded theater, taking the form of Will Swyfte’s long-lost love, Jenny–and it has a horrifying message for him alone.

That night Marlowe is murdered, and Swyfte embarks on a personal and brutal crusade for vengeance. Friendless, with enemies on every side and a devil at his back, the spy may find that even his vaunted skills are no match for the supernatural powers arrayed against him.

The Buntline Special
by Mike Resnick
Cover and interior illustrations by J. Seamas Gallagher

Promo copy:

The year is 1881. The United States of America ends at the Mississippi River. Beyond lies the Indian nations, where the magic of powerful Medicine Men has halted the advance of the Americans east of the river.

An American government desperate to expand its territory sends Thomas Alva Edison out West to the town of Tombstone, Arizona, on a mission to discover a scientific means of counteracting magic. Hired to protect this great genius, Wyatt Earp and his brothers.

But there are plenty who would like to see the Earps and Edison dead. Riding to their aid are old friends Doc Holliday and Bat Masterson. Against them stand the Apache wizard Geronimo and the Clanton gang. Battle lines are drawn, and the Clanton gang, which has its own reasons for wanting Edison dead, sends for Johnny Ringo, the one man who might be Doc Holliday’s equal in a gunfight. But what shows up instead is The Thing That Was Once Johnny Ringo, returned from the dead and come to Tombstone looking for a fight.

Welcome to a West like you’ve never seen before, where "Bat Masterson" hails from the ranks of the undead, where electric lights shine down on the streets of Tombstone, while horseless stagecoaches carry passengers to and fro, and where death is no obstacle to The Thing That Was Once Johnny Ringo. Think you know the story of the O.K. Corral? Think again, as five-time Hugo winner Mike Resnick takes on his first steampunk western tale, and the West will never be the same

The Past That Was

For my latest Nexus Graphica column over at SF Site, I wrote about… rather than summarize, here’s the first paragraph.

Quote:
Perhaps my favorite comment that Mark and I receive in response to our annual "Year That Was" sequences of the best graphic novels (the 2010 incarnation concluded two weeks ago) goes something likes this: "I love your selections, even though I’ve never heard of half of the books." When we started this journey in April 2008, Mark and I decided to strive for observations that stretch beyond the realms of mainstream comic book society of superheroes, fantasy, and wish fulfillment. Though we gladly cover titles from well known publishers such as DC, Dark Horse, and Image, Mark and I routinely explore the more obscure outings of the medium. In this spirit, I present this list (complied in chronological order of publication) of perhaps lesser known works that would have made the cut if we had been preparing best-of compilations when they were originally published. Sadly, half of these books are currently out of print.





Impending Geekgasm on Netflix Instant Watch – Jan edition

In 2011, Netflix continues to offer a while lot of geeky goodness. 2001, 2010, Blazing Saddles, A Clockwork Orange, Creature from the Black Lagoon, Cleopatra Jones, Farscape Seasons 1-3, The Fountain, Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed, The Kids in the Hall Seasons 1-5, The Larry Sanders Show Season 1, Naked Lunch, The Road Warrior (from a time before we realized what a complete ass Mel Gibson is), RoboCop (plus its two terrible sequels), and Smokey and the Bandit (and its complete forgettable follow up) all make their premiere or return to Instant Watch this month.

Happy viewing!

Premiering January 1:

2001: A Space Odyssey
2010: The Year We Make Contact
Above the Law
Action Jackson
The Adventures of Hajji Baba
Around the World in 80 Days (1989)
Arsenic and Old Lace
The Bad Seed
Bird of Paradise (1932)
Blazing Saddles
Child’s Play (1988)
Cleopatra Jones
A Clockwork Orange
Commando
The Craft
Creature from the Black Lagoon
The Curse of Frankenstein
Dark Portals: The Chronicles of Vidocq
Days of Darkness
Death Machine
Deathwatch
Dominion: Prequel to the Exorcist
Dracula: Dead and Loving It
Elvira, Mistress of the Dark
Farscape Seasons 1-3
Flashback (2000)
Forced Vengeance
Forever Young
The Fountain
Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed
Freejack
The Graveyard
Grim Reaper
HALO Legends
Haunted Forest
Hellbound: Hellraiser II
Hellraiser
The Hudsucker Proxy
Johnny Mnemonic
Kangaroo Jack
The Kids in the Hall Seasons 1-5
The Lady Refuses
The Larry Sanders Show Season 1
Led Zeppelin: The Song Remains the Same
The Legend of Hell House
Leprechaun 2
A Little Princess
The Lost Boys
Mars Attacks!
Naked Lunch
The Philadelphia Experiment
Pink Panther Classic Cartoon Collection
Poltergeist
The Queen of the Damned
Red Sonja
RoboCop
RoboCop 2
RoboCop 3
Romeo Must Die
The Science of Sleep
Scourge
Shaft in Africa
Shaft’s Big Score!
Spartacus: Blood and Sand
Sphere
Tank Girl
Timecop
Trick ‘r Treat
Wild Wild West
The Wizard of Oz (1939)
Wolfen

Premiering January 4:

Wizards of Waverly Place: Season 1

Premiering January 7:

Blade 2
The Disappeared
Foxy Brown
Mr. North
Seventh Moon
Smokey and the Bandit
Smokey and the Bandit II
When Time Ran Out…

Premiering January 8:

Reno 911! Season 6

Premiering January 10:

Lost Boys: The Thirst

Premiering January 21:

The Road Warrior

Premiering January 24:

Dorian Gray

Premiering January 25:

A/k/a Tommy Chong
Enter the Void
The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest

Info courtesy of FeedFliks.