Philip Jose Farmer joins The Apes of Wrath

Legendary sf/fantasy writer Philip Jose Farmer, recipient of the Damon Knight Memorial Grand Master Award, the World Fantasy Award for Life Achievement, and three Hugos, joins the stellar lineup of The Apes of Wrath.

Other contributors include Edgar Allan Poe, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Franz Kafka, Gustave Flaubert, Karen Joy Fowler, Joe R. Lansdale, Howard Waldrop, Steven Utley, Mary Robinette Kowal, Pat Murphy, Leigh Kennedy, James P. Blaylock, Clark Ashton Smith, Aesop, Hugh B. Cave, Jess Nevins, Scott Cupp, Mark Finn, and Rupert Wyatt.

A survey of ape literature, The Apes of Wrath will reprint 15-20 simian stories, along with four original essays on various aspects of apes in pop culture.

The fun comes your way in March 2013 from Tachyon Publications.

Rise director Rupert Wyatt joins The Apes of Wrath!

Rise of the Planet of the Apes director Rupert Wyatt will provide the foreword to The Apes of Wrath.

He joins a stellar lineup that includes Edgar Allan Poe, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Franz Kafka, Gustave Flaubert, Karen Joy Fowler, Joe R. Lansdale, Howard Waldrop, Steven Utley, Mary Robinette Kowal, Pat Murphy, Leigh Kennedy, James P. Blaylock, Clark Ashton Smith, Aesop, Hugh B. Cave, Jess Nevins, Scott Cupp, and Mark Finn.

A survey of ape literature, The Apes of Wrath will reprint 15-20 simian stories, along with four original essays on various aspects of apes in pop culture.

The fun comes your way in March 2013 from Tachyon Publications.

Stuff received 1/10/12

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

Unterzakhn
by Leela Corman

Promo copy:

A mesmerizing, heartbreaking graphic novel of immigrant life on New York’s Lower East Side at the turn of the twentieth century, as seen through the eyes of twin sisters whose lives take radically and tragically different paths.

For six-year-old Esther and Fanya, the teeming streets of New York’s Lower East Side circa 1910 are both a fascinating playground and a place where life’s lessons are learned quickly and often cruelly. In drawings that capture both the tumult and the telling details of that street life, Unterzakhn (Yiddish for "Underthings") tells the story of these sisters: as wide-eyed little girls absorbing the sights and sounds of a neighborhood of struggling immigrants; as teenagers taking their own tentative steps into the wider world (Esther working for a woman who runs both a burlesque theater and a whorehouse, Fanya for an obstetrician who also performs illegal abortions); and, finally, as adults battling for their own piece of the "golden land," where the difference between just barely surviving and triumphantly succeeding involves, for each of them, painful decisions that will have unavoidably tragic repercussions.

Jack of Ravens (Kingdom of the Serpent, Book 1)
by Mark Chadbourn
Cover by John Picacio

Promo copy:

Short-listed for the British Fantasy Award

Jack Churchill, archaeologist and dreamer, walks out of the mist and into Celtic Britain more than two thousand years before he was born, with no knowledge of how he got there. All Jack wants is to get home to his own time where the woman he loves waits for him. Finding his way to the timeless mystical Otherworld, the home of the gods, he plans to while away the days, the years, the millennia, until his own era rolls around again . . . but nothing is ever that simple.

A great Evil waits in modern times and will do all in its power to stop Jack’s return. In a universe where time and space are meaningless, its tendrils stretch back through the years . . . Through Roman times, the Elizabethan age, Victoria’s reign, the Second World War to the Swinging Sixties, the Evil sets its traps to destroy Jack.

Mark Chadbourn gives us a high adventure of dazzling sword fights, passionate romance and apocalyptic wars in the days leading up to Ragnarok, the End-Times: a breathtaking, surreal vision of twisting realities where nothing is quite what it seems.

Texas Killing Fields

Promo copy:

Inspired by true events, this tense and haunting thriller follows Detective Souder (Sam Worthington), a homicide detective in a small Texan town, and his partner, transplanted New York City cop Detective Heigh (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) as they track a sadistic serial killer dumping his victims’ mutilated bodies in a nearby marsh locals call ”The Killing Fields.”

Though the swampland crime scenes are outside their jurisdiction, Detective Heigh is unable to turn his back on solving the gruesome murders. Despite his partner’s warnings, he sets out to investigate the crimes. Before long, the killer changes the game and begins hunting the detectives, teasing them with possible clues at the crime scenes while always remaining one step ahead. When familiar local girl Anne (Chloë Grace Moretz) goes missing, the detectives find themselves racing against time to catch the killer and save the young girl’s life.

Directed by Ami Canaan Mann, Produced by Michael Mann and Michael Jaffe, Texas Killing Fields also stars Jessica Chastain (Tree of Life, The Help), Jason Clarke (Public Enemies, FOX’s ”Chicago Code”) and Stephen Graham (Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides, HBO’s ”Boardwalk Empire”). Executive Produced by Bill Block, Paul Hanson and Ethan Smith, with music by Dickon Hinchliffe.

Fair Coin
by E.C. Myers
Cover by Sam Weber

Promo copy:

Ephraim is horrified when he comes home from school one day to find his mother unconscious at the kitchen table, clutching a bottle of pills. Even more disturbing than her suicide attempt is the reason for it: the dead boy she identified at the hospital that afternoon—a boy who looks exactly like him.

While examining his dead double’s belongings, Ephraim discovers a strange coin that makes his wishes come true each time he flips it. Before long, he’s wished his alcoholic mother into a model parent, and the girl he’s liked since second grade suddenly notices him.

But Ephraim soon realizes that the coin comes with consequences—several wishes go disastrously wrong, his best friend Nathan becomes obsessed with the coin, and the world begins to change in unexpected ways.

As Ephraim learns the coin’s secrets and how to control its power, he must find a way to keep it from Nathan and return to the world he remembers.

Karen Joy Fowler joins The Apes of Wrath

New York Times bestselling author Karen Joy Fowler joins the acclaimed lineup of the forthcoming anthology The Apes of Wrath. Author of six novels and five short story collections, Fowler has won World Fantasy, Nebula, and Commonwealth awards. Her novels and stories have been named New York Times Notable Books, a finalist for the 2001 PEN/Faulkner Award for fiction, and short-listed for the Irish Times International Fiction Prize.

The Apes of Wrath, an anthology of ape fiction, will reprint 15-20 stories, along with three original essays on various aspects of apes in pop culture; essentially a survey of ape literature that includes works by Edgar Allan Poe, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Franz Kafka, Gustave Flaubert, Karen Joy Fowler, Joe R. Lansdale, Howard Waldrop, Steven Utley, Mary Robinette Kowal, Pat Murphy, Leigh Kennedy, James P. Blaylock, Clark Ashton Smith, Aesop, Hugh B. Cave, Jess Nevins, Scott Cupp, and others.

The Apes of Wrath comes your way in March 2013 from Tachyon Publications.

Presenting The Apes of Wrath

For the past month or so my attention has been devoted to one of my dream projects.

I’m editing The Apes of Wrath, an anthology of ape fiction for Tachyon. The volume, a reprint collection of 15-20 stories, comes with three original essays on various aspects of apes in pop culture; essentially a survey of ape literature that will include works by Edgar Allan Poe, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Franz Kafka, Gustave Flaubert, Joe R. Lansdale, Howard Waldrop, Steven Utley, Mary Robinette Kowal, Pat Murphy, Leigh Kennedy, James P. Blaylock, Clark Ashton Smith, Aesop, Hugh B. Cave, Jess Nevins, Scott Cupp, and others.

This is a book I’ve been contemplating for sometime (even to the extent that I even outlined such a volume as part of an SF Signal Mind Meld) and thanks to the success of Rise of the Planet of the Apes and the forthcoming sequels, it’s finally becoming a reality.

The fact that so many ape stories exist may come as a surprise to many, but stories featuring apes are almost as old as the art of storytelling. There are stories about apes in most societies. Simians, especially the great apes, play an integral, vital role in our culture, our collective unconsciousness. These creatures represent a part of humanity that must remain hidden. They can be both savage and gentle. They are much like man but they are not men. With their human-like appearance and actions, it’s easy to see what Darwin saw. They may be humanity’s closest relation. How could apes not fascinate?

Surprisingly, given the simian’s important and influential role in popular culture, only one previous anthology of ape fiction exists. Published in 1978 by Corgi, The Rivals of King Kong collected eight reprinted stories, two originals, and an excerpt from one of H. Rider Haggard’s Allan Quartermain books. Editor Michel Parry contributed the introduction and a checklist of simian cinema. The difficult-to-locate paperback original commands collectible prices, ranging from $30-$200, when found.

The Apes of Wrath comes your way in March 2013.

The Raven: Nameless Here For Evermore Part 4

As part of his ongoing column at New Pulp, Alan J. Porter is serializing our story "The Raven: Nameless Here For Evermore," scheduled to appear in the not yet published Protectors anthology. The fourth segment appeared recently.

Here’s an excerpt:

After sitting in stunned silence for several minutes, Lala sputtered, “He and I, well we were…. You know… and he never gave the slightest sign… You know… a double life. I don’t believe it. He was just an actor… a good one. But not a spy.”

“Spies don’t wear badges, my dear,” Vandemeer cooed in something that Malone assumed was meant to be an attempt at a soothing voice, “at least I don’t think they do, I’ve never met one. Well at least I don’t think I have, and if I had how would have known. Of course, except for Edwin, and I didn’t know, and neither did you. After all what better person to be a spy than someone who lies and tells stories for a living?”

“Have you quite finished?” Lala flashed Vandemeer a withering look.

“I don’t like to admit it, but Mr. Vandemeer has a point, Miss Ward. An actor would make for a perfect spy.“ He slid the British Security Council folder across the table. “I’m afraid it’s all true. See for yourself.”

Lala flipped through the enclosed papers. She didn’t read them, she didn’t really need to. She could tell from the look and just a few brief glances that they corroborated Malone’s story. She returned the folder with a deep sad sigh. “So you think that the Nazis got to him?”

Read the rest of the fourth part and find links to the previous installments at New Pulp.

Impending Geekgasm on Netflix Instant Watch- Jan. edition

Wecome to the New Year’s edition of the Geekgasm. TV rules the new arrivals this month. Beloved shows such as Adam-12, the original Knight Rider, Magnum P.I., Miami Vice, and Quincy M.E. alongside newer series Ghost Hunters: International, United States of Tara, and Supernatural premiere. On the movie front, the classic Chinese Ghost Story trilogy and True Legend headline the meager movie selections.

* streaming for the first time via Netflix.
* streaming in HD
* close captioning is available

Premiering January 1:
*Adam-12
The Adventures of Brer Rabbit
*Amazing Stories
Antitrust
*Beyblade: Fierce Battle: The Movie Despise titles with two colons. It’s just wrong.
*A Chinese Ghost Story
*A Chinese Ghost Story 2
*A Chinese Ghost Story 3: Special Edition
*City on Fire "Lung fu fong wan"
*Disco Worms
*The Dark Half
Dragnet (1967)
Dying Breed (2008)
*Ghost Hunters: International
*Going Berserk
*In the Cold of the Night
*Knight Rider (1982) The original "classic" show
*Louis C.K.: Hilarious
*Magnum P.I.
*Miami Vice (1984)
*The Mod Squad (1999)
*The Neverending Story 3: Escape From Fantasia
Office Space
*Pokemon: Destiny Deoxys
*Quincy, M.E.
Rollerball (1975)
*Sitting Ducks
*Swordsman "Xiao ao jiang hu" (1990)
Toys (1992)
*True Legend "Su Qi-Er"

Premiering January 2:
*Phase 7
*United States of Tara

Premiering January 5:
*Thoda Pyaar Thoda Magic

Premiering January 6:
American Kickboxer 1
*Carrie (2002)

Premiering January 12:
*The Butcher, the Chef and the Swordsman

Premiering January 24:
*Grave Encounters

Premiering January 30:
*Supernatural (2005)

Titles expiring soon

Expiring January 1:
*The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert
*Akira Kurosawa’s Dreams
**Amadeus
*Arsenic and Old Lace
**Arthur (1981)
*The Blues Brothers
Cannibal! The Musical
*Carrie (1976) Apparently two verisions of Carrie streaming at the same time will cause a disruption in the spce-time continutity.
*Chinatown
Class of Nuke ‘Em High
*A Clockwork Orange
*Cobra
*Conspiracy Theory
**The Craft
*CQ
Creepshow
*Cypher
**Dial M for Murder (1954)
Drunken Master
*Duck, You Sucker
**Dumb and Dumber: Unrated
*Ghost Story (1981)
Gotcha!
*The Gumball Rally
**Hearts in Atlantis
**Heavenly Creatures Better hurry up if you plan on catching Peter Jackson’s best movie!
**The Hudsucker Proxy
**Insomnia (2002)
**Interview with the Vampire
Jeremiah: Season 2
**The Lost Boys: Special Edition
**Mad Max
**The Majestic
**Murder by Death
**Natural Born Killers: Director’s Cut
*9 1/2 Weeks
*Ocean’s Eleven (1960)
**The Omega Man
**One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest
**The Queen of the Damned
**Racing Stripes
*Scarface (1983)
**The Science of Sleep
Shadowlands (1985)
Shiri
**Space Cowboys
The Street Fighter (1974)
*Streets of Fire
Supercop
*Superfly
*Superman: The Movie
**Superman II
Superstarlet A.D.
Surf Nazis Must Die
*Tarzan, the Ape Man (1981)
Teen Wolf
*Teen Wolf Too
Teenage Catgirls in Heat
**The Terminator
Terror Firmer: Special Edition
*(John Carpenter’s) The Thing (1982)
The 39 Steps (1935)
Time Barbarians
**Timecop
The Toxic Avenger
The Toxic Avenger, Part 2
The Toxic Avenger, Part 3
**Trick ‘r Treat
Troma Triple B-Header: Vol. 5: Bloodspell
Tromeo & Juliet
True Stories
*Vince Vaughn’s Wild West Comedy Show
*Weird Science
**Wild Wild West Good riddance!
Wizards of the Demon Sword
Wolfen
Yes, Madam Michelle Yeoh’s first starring role
Young Einstein
Zombie Island Massacre
Zu Warriors From The Magic Mountain

Expiring January 4:
Wizards of Waverly Place: Season 1

Expiring January 5:
*2012: Supernova
*Haunting of Winchester House
*The Land That Time Forgot (2009)
*Transmorphers: Fall of Man

Expiring January 6:
Independent Lens: The Atom Smashers

Expiring January 7:
Memoirs of an Invisible Man Great book, terrible movie

Expiring January 8:
Bond Girls Are Forever
Casino Royale (1954) 1st ever James Bond screen adaptation was originally intended as the pilot for a TV series
*Diamonds Are Forever
*Dr. No
*For Your Eyes Only
Goldeneye
*Goldfinger
*Licence To Kill
*Live and Let Die
*The Living Daylights
*The Man With the Golden Gun
*Moonraker
*Never Say Never Again
*Octopussy
*On Her Majesty’s Secret Service
*The Spy Who Loved Me
*Thunderball
*A View To a Kill
*The World Is Never Enough
*You Only Live Twice

Expiring January 10:
*Lost Boys: The Thirst

Expiring January 12:
Backwoods
The Color of Magic
Gulliver’s Travels (1996)
Hogfather
Journey to the Center of the Earth (2008)
*Killer Wave
*Son of the Dragon
*Tin Man

Expiring January 14:
Body Snatchers

Info courtesy of FeedFliks and Instantwatcher

Stuff received 12/18/11

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

Chew Volume 4: Flambe
Written by John Layman
Art by Rob Guillory

Promo copy:

These are strange times for Tony Chu, the cibopathic federal agent with the ability to get psychic impressions from the things he eats. Strange writing in extraterrestrial script has appeared in the skies of Planet Earth – and stayed there! People don”t know if the end days are upon them or not, but they don”t seem terribly concerned about the laws of the FDA, and what was once the most powerful law enforcement agency is rapidly descending into irrelevancy. So where does that leave the FDA best agent, Tony Chu?

I’ve been a fan of this extraordinary series almost from the beginning. The Chew Omnivore Edition, Volume 1 even ranked among my top ten graphic novels of 2010.

Quote:
Layman and Guillory create an alternate present where, due to avian flu fears, the American government has criminalized the possession, sale, and consumption of all poultry! Tony Chu, investigator for the Special Crimes Division of the powerful FDA, employs his abilities as a cibopathic — he gets psychic impressions from whatever he eats — to solve crimes. Guillory’s over-the-top humorous illustrations and Layman’s clever script expertly mix to spawn an enjoyable concoction of cannibalism, conspiracy, and murder. This luscious hardcover collects issues 1-10 (Volumes 1 and 2 of the trade paperback collections), complete with character design and sketches.

On the Ground: An Illustrated Anecdotal History of the Sixties Underground Press in the U.S.
Edited by Sean Stewart
Cover by Simon Benjamin

Promo copy:

Forthright anecdotes and interviews fill this eye-opening account of the birth of the underground newspaper movement. Stemming from frustration with the lack of any mainstream media criticism of the Vietnam War, the creation of the papers was emboldened by the victories of the Civil Rights–era, anticolonial movements in the Third World and the use of LSD. In the four short years from 1965–1969, the subversive press grew from five small newspapers in five cities in the United States to more than 500 newspapers—with millions of readers—all over the world. Stories by the people involved with the production and distribution of the papers, such as Bill Ayers, Paul Buhle, Paul Krassner, and Trina Robbins, bring the history of the movement to life. Full-color scans taken from a broad range of publications, from the Berkeley Barb and the Los Angeles Free Press to Chicago Seed and Screw: The Sex Review, are also included, showing the incredible energy that fueled the counterculture of the 1960s.

Tanner Hall

Promo copy:

As Fernanda (Rooney Mara) enters her senior year at Tanner Hall–a sheltered boarding school in New England–she’s faced with unexpected changes in her group of friends when a childhood acquaintance, the charismatic yet manipulative trouble-maker Victoria (Georgia King), appears. Shy and studious, Fernanda is usually the voice of reason among her friends–adventurous and sexy Kate (Brie Larson) and tomboy Lucasta (Amy Ferguson)–but when she begins a complicated friendship with Gio (Tom Everett Scott), an older family friend, she decides it’s finally time to take some risks. Jealous of Fernanda’s exciting relationship, Victoria begins to sabotage Fernanda’s plans and plots to publicly humiliate her. Meanwhile, Lucasta struggles with her newfound feelings towards another classmate, and mischievous Kate is too preoccupied with making her teachers nervous to pay much attention to her actual classes. However, as each of the girls flirt with adulthood, they realize they still need each other to help get through their first grown-up decisions–and the consequences they bring.

Directed by Tatiana von Furstenberg and Francesca Gregorini, Tanner Hall also stars Amy Sedaris and Chris Kattan. Featuring designs by Diane von Furstenberg Studios. Produced by Julia R. Snyder, Tatiana von Furstenberg and Francesca Gregorini. Executive producer by Richard L. Bready.

Robin Hood: People’s Outlaw and Forest Hero
by Paul Buhle

Promo copy:

Using a unique blend of text, collage, and comic art, this social commentary written in graphic novel format analyzes the continuity between the myth of Robin Hood and the occurrence of social uprisings among peasants. In addition, the book explores the mysteries, factual evidence, and trajectory that led to centuries of village festivals, songs, films, and cult television shows about the mythical hero who robbed from the rich and gave to the poor. Featuring a collage of various artistic renderings of Robin Hood over the past seven centuries, the comic portion presents a distinct perspective of the folk hero. Furthermore, the book reveals a largely unknown and unconsidered environmental side of Robin Hood, and touches on ecological wholeness that, for the most part, is absent in the mythos.

Back Issue No. 53
Edited by Michael Eury
Cover by Walter Simonson

Promo copy:

BACK ISSUE #53 (84 pages with FULL-COLOR, $8.95) takes an in-depth look at WALTER SIMONSON’s Thor in this “Gods” issue! And there’s more Thor: the Thunder God in the Bronze Age and a TOM DeFALCO/RON FRENZ “Pro2Pro” interview. Plus: Hercules: Prince of Power, Moondragon, Three Ways to End the New Gods Saga, and an exclusive interview with fantasy writer MICHAEL MOORCOCK. Featuring art and/or commentary by GERRY CONWAY, JACK KIRBY, BOB LAYTON, and more, with a hammer-swinging Thor cover by Simonson. Now in FULL COLOR!

The excellent Moorcock interview by RevSF’s own Alan J. Porter focuses on the SF master’s comic book career.

Bags, Bacteria, TV, and Me

Due to the Thanksgiving holiday and a particularly hectic schedule at the Geek Compound (more on that in future posts), I’m just getting around to telling y’all about my recent 20 second brush with fame.

Unbeknownst to most of you, I like to shop for groceries. At first blush, that would seem pretty weird unless you factor in that I like to eat (a lot!) and that my first job was sacking groceries for Randall’s in Houston. For over four years, I worked at the Dairy Ashford & Memorial location. Because of all this (and that Brandy hates to grocery shop), I handle all the food shopping for the Geek Compound.

In mid-October during my weekly sojourn, I was approached by a familiar-looking woman. I searched my mind for who the hell she was. This isn’t that uncommon for me. After living in Austin for 24 years, I’ve met a lot of people. Problem is that even though I have a great memory for faces, names often elude me. (So if you run into me and I look dumbfounded, it’s because I’m trying to recall your name)

Turns out the well-dressed woman was the local NBC affiliate KXAN evening anchor Leslie Rhode. She stopped me because I was the only guy she could find in the grocery store who was using re-usable bags. They were doing a story on the cleanliness (or not) of the bags. She asked if she could take two of my bags to test for bacteria levels. They’d give me two brand new bags right then and return my bags after the piece ran.


Leslie Rhode

Seemed like a dumb idea for a news report but what the hell. We exchanged the bags and I continued my shopping.

Soon after, Leslie and a cameraman advanced on me. "I’ve been looking for you. We’d like to interview you on camera." While the cameraman prepped, Leslie told me how impressed she was that I did all the grocery shopping. Apparently her husband can’t be trusted to do it right. They interviewed me for a few minutes.

The piece finally ran on November 21. I appear on camera for all of about 20 seconds, saying something snarky. A transcript and video are available on the KXAN site.


Our bags to be tested are on the far right.