The Perfect Short Fiction Anthology

I participated in my first Mind Meld for SF Signal. With the Mind Melds, a question is posited to a variety of speculative fiction pros–writers, artists, critics and the like–and their answers are posted on the site. The topic for my first one:

Q: If you could publish a short fiction anthology containing up to 25 previously-published sf/f/h stories, which stories would it include and why?

Since only one anthology of ape fiction exists (The Rivals of King Kong ed Michel Parry Corgi, 1978) and given my proclivity for apes, I chose to compile my ultimate ape fiction anthology.

I included tales by Edgar Allan Poe, Robert E. Howard, Howard Waldrop, Joe R. Lansdale, Gustave Flaubert, V. S. Pritchett, Pat Murphy, Grant Morrison, J. G. Ballard, Italo Calvino, Arthur C. Clarke, Clark Ashton Smith, Philip Jose Farmer, Robert Bloch, Franz Kafka, and others.

Other contributors to this intriguing Mind Meld included Nancy Kress, A.M. Dellamonica, Scott A. Cupp, Steven H Silver, John Sanford, Kelley Eskridge, and Sanford Allen.

Check out the whole shebang over at SF Signal.

Elvis Can’t Salvage Yahtzee

Even the King of Rock and Roll can’t elevate the inane dice rolling game out of the halls of lame-assery.

Though it hasn’t stopped USAopoly, makers of countless improbably licensed versions of Monopoly, Risk, Clue, and other classic games, from producing two different colored sets of the Elvis Yahtzee: black and blue, each with a unique design.

No matter how cool Elvis may be, Yahtzee still stinks.

Graphic novels received 10/6/10

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

The Occult Files of Doctor Spektor Archives Volume 1
Written by Donald Glut
Art by Jesse Santos and Dan Spiegle

Promo copy:

First appearing in 1972, the adventurous and wily Doctor Adam Spektor is an occult detective and monster hunter who travels the world over in search of the supernatural, aided by a Native American assistant, Lakota Rainflower. Investigating everything from rumors of odd, ghostly occurrences to appearances of strange, deadly creatures, Doctor Spektor spends his time in the field putting his life at risk to save innocents from the sinister and the grotesque. Whether conducting occult experiments on curing vampirism or fighting unearthly behemoths, Doctor Spektor stalks the forces of evil – to record and investigate their existence as well as protect us! As artist Santos said in a 1975 interview, "When you’re dealing with dead warriors and monstrous demons… let me tell you, you’ve got to think weird!" Created by writer Donald Glut and artist Dan Spiegle, The Occult Files of Doctor Spektor are the chronicles of a strange protector – a character who often breaks the fabled "fourth wall" to address readers directly and narrate a terrifying tale from his impressive files.

Odd Is on Our Side
Written by Dean Koontz & Fred Van Lente
Art by Queenie Chan

Promo copy:

When things get scary, it’s nice to know that Odd is on our side.

The one and only Odd Thomas is back—in his second edgy and enthralling graphic-novel adventure from #1 New York Times bestselling suspense master Dean Koontz.

It’s Halloween in Pico Mundo, California, and there’s a whiff of something wicked in the autumn air. While the town prepares for its annual festivities, young fry cook Odd Thomas can’t shake the feeling that make-believe goblins and ghouls aren’t the only things on the prowl. And he should know, since he can see what others cannot: the spirits of the restless dead. But even his frequent visitor, the specter of Elvis Presley, can’t seem to point Odd in the right direction.

With the help of his gun-toting girlfriend, Stormy, Odd is out to uncover the terrible truth. Is something sinister afoot in the remote barn guarded by devilish masked men? Has All Hallows Eve mischief taken a malevolent turn? Or is the pleading ghost of a trick-or-treater a frightening omen of doom?

Ryder of the Storm Issue 1
Written by David Hine
Art by Wayne Nichols

Promo copy:

Ryder on the Storm follows Ryder, a private eye hired by the beautiful femme fatale Katrina Petruska to investigate the horrifically bizarre suicide of her lover, Michael Hudson. Ryder’s journey to solve the case and finish Hudson’s work leads him to discover a truth more sinister and terrifying than he could ever have imagined – daemons walk among us. Now, he must team up with the last daemon hunter, Charles Monk, to take down the cabal of ancient evil controlling the city while struggling to reconcile the dark side of his own nature.

Books received 10/6/10

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

Johnny Halloween: Tales of the Dark Season
by Norman Partridge

Promo copy:

Norman Partridge’s Halloween novel, Dark Harvest, was chosen as one of Publishers Weekly‘s 100 Best Books of 2006. A Bram Stoker Award winner and World Fantasy nominee, Partridge’s rapid-fire tale of a small town trapped by its own shadows welcomed a wholly original creation, the October Boy, earning the author comparisons to Stephen King, Ray Bradbury, and Shirley Jackson.

Now Partridge revisits Halloween with a collection featuring a half-dozen stories celebrating frights both past and present. In “The Jack o’ Lantern,” a brand new Dark Harvest novelette, the October Boy races against a remorseless döppelganger bent on carving a deadly path through the town’s annual ritual of death and rebirth. “Johnny Halloween” features a sheriff battling both a walking ghost and his own haunted conscience. In “Three Doors,” a scarred war hero hunts his past with the help of a magic prosthetic hand, while “Satan’s Army” is a real Partridge rarity previously available only in a long sold-out lettered edition from another press.

But there’s more to this holiday celebration besides fiction. “The Man Who Killed Halloween” is an extensive essay about growing up during the late sixties in the town where the Zodiac Killer began his murderous spree. In an introduction that explores monsters both fictional and real, Partridge recalls what it was like to live in a community menaced by a serial killer and examines how the Zodiac’s reign of terror shaped him as a writer.

Halloween night awaits. Join a master storyteller as he explores the layers of darkness that separate all-too-human evil from the supernatural. Let Norman Partridge lead you on seven journeys through the most dangerous night of the year, where no one is safe…and everyone is suspect.

I’ve long been a Norman Partridge fan. I reviewed the above referenced Dark Harvest, declaring that "[it] thrills with staccato scenes of action, ideal for a horror novel. Using a quick, lean prose reminiscent of the finest Gold Medal-era fiction and, at the same time, as fresh as a Quentin Tarantino film, Partridge packs more into this slim volume than most authors do in a bloated 600-page epic."

Salute the Dark (Shadows of the Apt, Book 4)
by Adrian Tchaikovsky

Promo copy:

The vampiric sorcerer Uctebri has at last got his hands on the Shadow Box and can finally begin his dark ritual–a ritual that the Wasp-kinden Emperor believes will grant him immortality–but Uctebri has his own plans for both the Emperor and the Empire.
The massed Wasp armies are on the march, and the spymaster Stenwold must see which of his allies will stand now that the war has finally arrived. This time the Empire will not stop until a black and gold flag waves over Stenwold’s own home city of Collegium.

Tisamon the Weaponsmaster is faced with a terrible choice: a path that could lead him to abandon his friends and his daughter, to face degradation and loss, that might possibly bring him before the Wasp Emperor with a blade in his hand–but is he being driven by Mantis-kinden honor, or manipulated by something more sinister?

All Clear
by Connie Willis

Promo copy:

In Blackout, award-winning author Connie Willis returned to the time-traveling future of 2060—the setting for several of her most celebrated works—and sent three Oxford historians to World War II England: Michael Davies, intent on observing heroism during the Miracle of Dunkirk; Merope Ward, studying children evacuated from London; and Polly Churchill, posing as a shopgirl in the middle of the Blitz. But when the three become unexpectedly trapped in 1940, they struggle not only to find their way home but to survive as Hitler’s bombers attempt to pummel London into submission.

Now the situation has grown even more dire. Small discrepancies in the historical record seem to indicate that one or all of them have somehow affected the past, changing the outcome of the war. The belief that the past can be observed but never altered has always been a core belief of time-travel theory—but suddenly it seems that the theory is horribly, tragically wrong.

Meanwhile, in 2060 Oxford, the historians’ supervisor, Mr. Dunworthy, and seventeen-year-old Colin Templer, who nurses a powerful crush on Polly, are engaged in a frantic and seemingly impossible struggle of their own—to find three missing needles in the haystack of history.

Told with compassion, humor, and an artistry both uplifting and devastating, All Clear is more than just the triumphant culmination of the adventure that began with Blackout. It’s Connie Willis’s most humane, heartfelt novel yet—a clear-eyed celebration of faith, love, and the quiet, ordinary acts of heroism and sacrifice too often overlooked by history.

RevSF Books Editor wrote this about Blackout and All Clear:

Quote:
Despite its cliffhanger of an ending, Blackout is an engaging and suspenseful read. I have no doubt that when All Clear is released, Willis will give us a satisfying ending.

Munday’s Abundance of Riches

For the fine folks over at Moving Pictures, I interviewed Barry Munday director Chris D’Arienzo and stars Patrick Wilson and Judy Greer.

Quote:
“Barry Munday” opens with the eponymous title character, as portrayed by Patrick Wilson, lying dazed in a hospital bed shortly after losing his testicles. Earlier that day, while sitting in a theater with a young woman of questionable legal age, a strange man, whom she identifies as Dad, viciously attacks Barry with a trumpet, ultimately leading to the opening event. Shortly afterward, Barry receives notice of a paternity suit. A one-night-stand that Barry fails to remember, Ginger, played by Judy Greer, at first wants little to do with him beyond acknowledgement of responsibility. But Barry, affected by his recent physical alteration, desires to be involved with Ginger and their unborn child. He soon meets her high-brow, dysfunctional parents (Cybill Shepherd and Malcolm McDowell) and her younger, temptress sister Jennifer (Chloë Sevigny). Barry’s clinging mother (Jean Smart), psychotic ex-girlfriend (Missy Pyle), and cooler-than-thou boss (Billy Dee Williams) further enhance the excellent ensemble.

Quote:
Basing “Barry Munday” on Frank Turner Holon’s novel “Life Is a Strange Place,” director and screenwriter Chris D’Arienzo first encountered the little-known book when his agent, who also represents Holon, sent him a copy. “He thought I would dig it and said that if it was something I wanted to write that I could go off and try to tackle it. It was incredibly generous and I loved the novel immediately … the characters were so rich.”


Quote:
“[Barry’s] style is stuck around 1990,” expounds Wilson, “It was a very specific time when The Limited Express, which is a very popular women’s clothing store, started [the men’s store] Structure. Why do I know this? Because I hung out in the mall. Barry should have had stock in Structure. He bought a lot of paisley polo and rugby shirts there. And that’s kind of when he rocked.”

Quote:
The veteran actors often awed Greer. “We’re all together hanging out in this apartment complex in the Valley. Everyone’s sitting around the pool chilling out in their director’s chairs. Patrick Wilson. Chloë Sevigny. Malcolm McDowell. Jean Smart. Cybill Shepherd. It was all too much. And Billy Dee Williams. Are you kidding me?”

At the pool, Greer, who experimented with blurry photography, snapped several pictures. “My eyesight is really bad. I wear contact lenses. I had this phase of wanting to photograph things the way I saw them when I didn’t have my contacts in. Now I look back on them: ‘Really, Judy, you couldn’t take one that was in focus?’”

Read more of my discussion with D’Arienzo, Wilson, and Greer at Moving Pictures.

The Uncanny Un-Collectibles

For my regular SF Site column Nexus Graphica, I produced a companion piece of sorts to the Uncanny Un-Collectibles: Missing Comic Book Trades.

Quote:
Upon completion, the project weighed in at 52 titles, 48 essays, 29 contributors, and some 14,000 words. I divided the writings, thankfully better titled "The Uncanny Un-Collectibles: Missing Comic Book Trades," into six easily digestible servings, each title listed in chronological order from Scribbly (1939) through Batman: The Doom That Came To Gotham (2001). Beginning on Monday, September 27, the feature serialized over the next six days.

Beyond the origins of the project, I also supplied some analysis of the survey.

Quote:
A few interesting statistics emerged. Half of the titles originated at DC Comics. The number increases to 56 percent if you include properties that DC acquired later. The only other publisher with even a double digit percentage (10) resulted from Marvel’s preponderance of toy licenses in our survey, as three of their five titles were based on toys.

The 40s and 80s dominate, each with 11 titles. Superhero stories (35%) barely beat out science fiction/fantasy (33%) publications.

Read the entire article (with also includes three reviews of recent books) and be sure to check out the Uncanny Un-Collectibles. ’nuff said!

Impending Geekgasm on Netflix Instant Watch- October edition

Another amazing month for Netflix streaming as the NBC/Universal deal comes to fruition. Afro Samurai, Eureka, Battlestar Galactica, Psych, the most recent seasons of The Office and 30 Rock, and the complete series of Monk all premiere. Toss in a ton of anime and horror, Superman, and Spider-man, and there’s a little something for geeks of all stripes.

Premiering October 1:

009-1
10 Items or Less: Seasons 1-3
1001 Rabbit Tales
1984 (1984)
30 Rock: Season 4
Adventures of Johnny Tao
Afro Samurai: Resurrection
Afro Samurai: Season 1
Aquarion Season 1: Parts 1-2
Basilisk
Battlestar Galactica: Seasons 1-4
Black Blood Brothers
Blassreiter: Parts 1-2
Borderland (2007)
Burst Angel
Claymore
Code 46
Code Monkeys: Season 1
Confess
Creepshow
Curse of the Pink Panther
D. Gray-man Season 1: Parts 1-2
Darker Than Black: Vols. 1-6
The Deaths of Ian Stone
Desert Punk
Desert Punk: A Change of Heart
Desert Punk: A Dog in Heat
Desert Punk: A Little Bit of Wisdom
Desert Punk: A Load of…
Desert Punk: A Raw Deal
Desert Punk: Age Before Beauty
Desert Punk: All That Glitters
Desert Punk: An Ace in the Sand
Desert Punk: Compromising Positions
Desert Punk: Fire Dragon Kong
Desert Punk: Hidden Agendas
Desert Punk: Kosuna: Fully Automatic
Desert Punk: Opposites Collide
Desert Punk: Perv in Pursuit
Desert Punk: Rock, Paper, Scissors
Desert Punk: Scratching the Surface
Desert Punk: Successor of the Desert
Desert Punk: The Demon and the Double D’s
Desert Punk: The Demon Revealed
Desert Punk: The Girl Next Door
Desert Punk: The Price of Water
Desert Punk: Too Close for Comfort
Desert Punk: Voices in the Wind
Desert Punk: Wandering Lust
Devil May Cry
The Donner Party
Drive Thru
Eureka: Seasons 1-3
Fantastic Voyage
Fruits Basket
Full Metal Panic: The Second Raid
Fullmetal Alchemist
Funny Farm
The Gravedancers
Groundhog Day
Gunslinger Girl: Seasons 1-2
Harvey
Hell Girl
It’s Alive (2008)
Jyu-Oh-Sei: Complete Series
Kaze No Stigma Season 1: Parts 1-2
Lake Dead
Last Exile
Last Exile: Arbiter Attack
Last Exile: Breakthrough
Last Exile: Calculate Alex
Last Exile: Castling Lucciola
Last Exile: Develop
Last Exile: Discovered Attack
Last Exile: Etude Lavie
Last Exile: Fairy Chess
Last Exile: Grand Stream
Last Exile: Interesting Clause
Last Exile: Isolated Pawn
Last Exile: Luft Vanship
Last Exile: Making Material
Last Exile: Positional Play
Last Exile: Promotion Sophia
Last Exile: Queen Delphine
Last Exile: Quiet Move
Last Exile: Resign
Last Exile: Rook Dio
Last Exile: Sealed Move
Last Exile: Sicilian Defense
Last Exile: Swindle
Last Exile: Takeback
Last Exile: Transpose
Last Exile: Zugzwang
Le Chevalier D’Eon
Marathon Man
Married… with Children: Seasons 1-11
Monk Seasons 1-8
Mulberry Street
Mushi-Shi
My Bloody Valentine (2009)
The NeverEnding Story 2: The Next Chapter
Octopus
The Office: Season 6
Origin: Spirits of the Past
Ouran Season 1: Parts 1-2
Parks and Recreation: Seasons 1-2
Peter Benchley’s Creature
The Pink Panther (1963)
The Pink Panther Strikes Again
Psych: Seasons 1-4
The Rage: Carrie 2
The Return of the Pink Panther
Revenge of the Pink Panther
Romancing the Stone
Samurai 7
The Scorpion King
Shark Zone
Shigurui: Death Frenzy-Complete Series
Shinobi: Heart Under Blade
Skeleton Man
Son of the Pink Panther
Soul Eater: Parts 1-4
Space Cowboys
The Spectacular Spider-Man: Vols. 2-4
Speed Grapher
Spider-Man: Attack of the Lizard
Spiders II
Stargate
Staunton Hill
Stigmata (1999)
Tales From the Hood
Trinity Blood
Vandread
Vandread: Second Stage
Vexille
Wicked Little Things
Witchblade
Xenosaga
Xenosaga: Awakening
Xenosaga: Chance Encounter
Xenosaga: Dropping Anchor
Xenosaga: Encephalon
Xenosaga: Gouchin
Xenosaga: Grotesque
Xenosaga: Kioku
Xenosaga: Place of Death
XXXholic

Premiering October 2:

Starship Troopers

Premiering October 7:

A Fish Called Wanda

Premiering October 8:

Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans
M. Butterfly

Premiering October 9:

Louie
Paranormal Activity

Premiering October 10:

Miner’s Massacre
Pact with the Devil
Ring of Darkness
Slash
Snake Island
Stranded
Trail of the Pink Panther

Premiering October 15:

Last of the Living
Lexx: Series 1-4
Memory
Monster Island
Penn & Teller’s Magic and Mystery Tour
River Monsters: Season 1
Rollerball (2002)
Salem Witch Trials (2002)
Superman: The Movie
Superman II
Superman III
Superman IV: The Quest for Peace
The Thaw

Premiering October 16:

Gamer (2009)

Premiering October 23:

Saw VI

Premiering October 25:

Batman: Under The Red Hood
Demetri Martin: Season 1

Premiering October 26:

Teknolust

Premiering October 27:

Assault of the Sasquatch
Bane
The Descent: Part 2
Survivors: Series 1-2
The Zombie Apocalypse

Premiering October 30:

Ghostbusters: The Animated Series Vol. 1

Info courtesy of FeedFliks.

Graphic novels received 10/1/10

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

Chew Omnivore Edition Volume 1
Written by John Layman
Art by Rob Guillory

Promo copy:

Tony Chu is a detective with a secret. A weird secret. Tony Chu is cibopathic, which means he gets psychic impressions from whatever he eats. It also means he’s a hell of a detective – as long as he doesn’t mind nibbling on the corpse of a murder victim to figure out whodunit and why. He’s been brought on by the Special Crimes Division of the FDA, the most powerful law enforcement agency on the planet, to investigate their strangest, sickest and most bizarre cases. This gorgeous, oversized edition loaded with extras follows Tony for the first ten issues of IGN.com’s pick for "Best Indie Series of 2009," and MTV Splash Page’s "Best New Series of 2009." Collects the New York Times‘ best seller "Taster’s Choice," as well as the follow-up story-arc "International Flavor."

I’m a big fan of Chew. I had this to say in "Nexus Graphica" about the first collected volume "Taster’s Choice":

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.

American Vampire Vol. 1
Written by Scott Snyder and Stephen King
Art by Rafael Albuquerque

Promo copy:

From writers Scott Snyder and Stephen King, AMERICAN VAMPIRE introduces a new strain of vampire – a more vicious species – and traces the creatures’ bloodline through decades of American history.

This first hardcover volume of the critically acclaimed series collects issues #1-5 and follows two stories: one written by Snyder and one written by King, both with art by future superstar Rafael Albuquerque. Snyder’s tale follows Pearl, a young woman living in 1920s Los Angeles, who is brutally turned into a vampire and sets out on a path of righteous revenge against the European monsters who tortured and abused her. And in King’s story set in the days of America’s Wild West, readers learn the origin of Skinner Sweet, the original American vampire – a stronger, faster creature than any vampire ever seen before.

Don’t miss out as Snyder and King set fire to the horror genre with this visionary, all-original take on one of the most popular monster stories!

This beautiful collection features a new introduction by Stephen King and bonus art including character sketches, variant covers and more!

The Crusades Volume 1: Knight
Written by Steven T. Seagle
Art by Kelley Jones

Promo copy:

The Dark Ages Begin Again! An enigmatic 11th century Crusader has come to render terrible justice on the citizens of 21st century San Francisco. His acts of unspeakable violence spark a firestorm of moral soul-searching in the hearts and minds of the city’s most colorful figures. Putting together the pieces of the Knight’s mysteriously brutal puzzle is the voluptuous Venus Kostopikas, a fact checker for a dying newspaper who has aspirations to rise above her station and lead her own crusade. This first of two skull-crushing, re-mastered volumes collects – for the first time – the macabre Vertigo crime series by noted creators Steven T. Seagle (Soul Kiss, Sandman Mystery Theater) and Kelly Jones (Sandman, Batman, The 13th Son).

Readings From the Throne Room– September edition

From 2003-2007, I produced the monthly email newsletter, "All the GEEK That’s Fit To Print" that kept subscribers to my GeekConfidential e-group appraised of my monthly happenings. As part of my missives, I also recounted what I was currently reading. Perhaps the most mentioned aspect of the newsletter appeared under this heading: And since what I’m reading in the bathroom fascinates many of you

With the advent of the Geek Curmudgeon blog, the newsletter became redundant and so I let it fall by the wayside, but what books are currently in my bathroom continues to fascinate, so I’ve decided to resurrect that part of the newsletter under the heading of "Readings From the Throne Room" as a regular monthly feature here at The Geek Curmudgeon.

Without further ado, here’s the current reading contents in my bathroom:

Intergalactic Nemesis Program Book

Brandy and I were lucky enough to catch the Long Center performance of the radio play Intergalactic Nemesis. (Thanks, Martin!) Scripted and directed by Jason Neulander, the story uses the traditional set-up of actors reading lines and a foley artist producing sound effects, but with the addition of Tim Doyle’s sequential art projected above the actors, which gives a new dimension to the tale. I had seen the first two acts at STAPLE! but not the extraordinary full length production. Can’t wait to see more from Neulander and Doyle.

At the production we picked the program book which discussed the project, their creators, and forthcoming Long Center events. Not surprisingly ,it made its way into the throne room.

Four Color Fear: Forgotten Horror Comics of the 1950s
Edited by Greg Sadowski and John Benson

A collection of obscure pre-code 1950s horror comics with art by Jack Cole, Reed Crandall, George Evans, Frank Frazetta, Jack Katz, Al Williamson, Basil Wolverton, and Wallace Wood? Story notes and an essay about Ruth Roche further sweeten the deal. It doesn’t really get much better than this. Plus each story is short (5-10 pp), ideal for a bathroom read!

The Bronx is Burning: 1977, Baseball, Politics, and the Battle for the Soul of a City
by Jonathan Mahler

Mahler’s intriguing book chronicles the tumultuous 1977 of NYC with the Yankees run for the pennant at its crux. Very well written, The Bronx Is Burning will appeal to baseball fans and fans of sociological history in general. This highly recommended book is sure to graduate soon to my bedside table.

(The ESPN mini-series, while good, barely scratched the surface.)

Dr. Strange Vs. Dracula: The Montesi Formula
Written by Marv Wolfman, Steve Englehart, and Roger Stern
Art by Gene Colan, Dan Green, and Steve Leialoha

Every Labor Day weekend, the legendary Austin Books, recently named one of the top ten comic books shops in the country, has a graphic novel sale. The literally thousands of titles all for half or more off makes it one of my favorite weekends of the year. At this years event, I purchased five graphic novels including the Dr. Strange mentioned above.

The Montesi Formula, collecting Dr. Strange #14, #58-62 and Tomb of Dracula #44, recounts the origins of vampirism in the Marvel Universe through several Dr. Strange-Dracula encounters. I originally owned the individual comics but long ago got rid of them. The beautiful stories hold up fairly well and reminded me why at one time Dr. Strange was one of my favorite characters.

And of course issues of Wired, Mental Floss, MSFocus, Momentum, and Moving Pictures magazines.

Books received 9/25/10 Part I

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

Four Color Fear: Forgotten Horror Comics of the 1950s
Edited by Greg Sadowski and John Benson

Promo copy:

Of the myriad genres comic books ventured into during its golden age, none was as controversial as or came at a greater cost than horror; the public outrage it incited almost destroyed the entire industry. Yet before the watchdog groups and Congress could intercede, horror books were flying off the newsstands. During its peak period (1951-54) over fifty titles appeared each month. Apparently there was something perversely irresistible about these graphic excursions into our dark side, and Four Color Fear collects the finest of these into a single robust and affordable volume.

EC is the comic book company most fans associate with horror; its complete line has been reprinted numerous times, and deservedly so. But to the average reader there remain unseen quite a batch of genuinely disturbing, compulsive, imaginative, at times even touching, horror stories presented from a variety of visions and perspectives, many of which at their best can stand toe to toe with EC.

All of the better horror companies are represented: Ace, Ajax-Farrell, American Comics Group, Avon, Comic Media, Fawcett, Fiction House, Gilmor, Harvey, Quality, Standard, St. John, Story, Superior, Trojan, Youthful and Ziff-Davis. Artist perennials Jack Cole, Reed Crandall, George Evans, Frank Frazetta, Jack Katz, Al Williamson, Basil Wolverton, and Wallace Wood contribute both stories and covers, with many of the 32 full-sized covers created by specialists Bernard Baily, L.B. Cole, William Eckgren, and Matt Fox.

Editors John Benson and Greg Sadowski have sifted through hundreds of rare books to cherry-pick the most compelling scripts and art, and they provide extensive background notes on the artists, writers, and companies involved in their creation. Digital restoration has been performed with subtlety and restraint, mainly to correct registration and printing errors, with every effort made to retain the flavor of the original comics, and to provide the reader the experience of finding in the attic a bound volume of the finest non-EC horror covers and stories of the pre-code era.

Magnificent looking collection of some amazing art and stories. I’ve seen several of these stories in the past, but only in black & white. All in FULL color here. I’ll be writing more about this one later but for now check out the preview.

Bearers of the Black Staff (Legends of Shannara)
by Terry Brooks

Promo copy:

For more than three decades, New York Times bestselling author Terry Brooks has ruled the epic fantasy realm with his legendary Shannara series. With each new novel the mythos has deepened, ever more fascinating characters have arisen, and increasingly breathtaking vistas of magical adventure have emerged. Now the evolution of one of imaginative fiction’s most beloved worlds continues in the first book of the new series Legends of Shannara: Bearers of the Black Staff.

Five hundred years have passed since the devastating demon-led war that tore apart the United States, leaving nothing but scorched and poisoned ruins, and nearly exterminating humankind. Those who escaped the carnage and blight were led to sanctuary by the boy savior known as the Hawk—the gypsy morph. In an idyllic valley, its borders warded by powerful magic against the horrors beyond, humans, elves, and mutants alike found a place they believed would be their home forever.

But after five centuries, the unimaginable has come to pass: The cocoon of protective magic surrounding the valley has vanished. When Sider Ament, the only surviving descendant of the Knights of the Word, detects unknown predators stalking the valley, he fears the worst. And when Panterra Qu and Prue Liss, expert Trackers from the human village of Glensk Wood, find two of their own gruesomely killed, there can be no doubt: The once safe haven of generations has been laid bare and made vulnerable to whatever still lurks in the wasteland of the outside world.

Together, Ament, the two young Trackers, and a daring Elf princess race to spread word of the encroaching danger—and spearhead plans to defend their ancestral home. But suspicion and hostility among their countrymen threaten to doom their efforts from within—while beyond the breached borders, a ruthless Troll army masses for invasion. And in the thick of it all, the last wielder of the black staff and its awesome magic must find a successor to carry on the fight against the cresting new wave of evil.

The House on Durrow Street
by Galen Beckett

Promo copy:

“A charming and mannered fantasy confection with a darker core of gothic romance” is how New York Times bestselling author Robin Hobb described Galen Beckett’s marvelous series opener, The Magicians and Mrs. Quent. Now Beckett returns to this world of dazzling magick and refined manners, where one extraordinary woman’s choice will put the fate of a nation—and all she cherishes—into precarious balance.

Her courage saved the country of Altania and earned the love of a hero of the realm. Now sensible Ivy Quent wants only to turn her father’s sprawling, mysterious house into a proper home. But soon she is swept into fashionable society’s highest circles of power—a world that is vital to her family’s future but replete with perilous temptations.

Yet far greater danger lies beyond the city’s glittering ballrooms—and Ivy must race to unlock the secrets that lie within the old house on Durrow Street before outlaw magicians and an ancient ravening force plunge Altania into darkness forever.

More in Part II