Saturday, December 30, 2023

At the Library Sale, Christmas 2023

At the Library Sale
Christmas, 2023
I spend Christmas in my hometown in Upstate New York. One of the libraries there has a used book sale timed to coincide with the holidays. So a week ago I stopped in at the library sale, sweating in my overcoat as I crouched and squatted to peer at the shelves, and discovered that someone named 'R. M. Keating' (or someone who knows that person) had donated a collection of Paperbacks from Hell............!

There are some true gems and obscurities here. I mean, I don't think that Will Errickson, over at the 'Too Much Horror Fiction' blog, has some of these on his shelves........?!

I've never heard of 'The Beast'.........nor 'Night of the Wolf'.
Nothing wrong with a vintage Graham Masterton title.......with a stepback cover, of course ! 

According to Errickson, 'Manitou' is '...tasteless and outrageous fun.' Can't go wrong with that endorsement..........!
I'm not all that sure about the Dennis Etchison novel 'Shadow Man', but Errickson judged his short story collection, 'Cutting Edge', as worthwhile.
Errickson regarded Alan Ryan's 'Dead White' as a competent, if not particularly memorable, novel.
'The Dogs' is a novelty......not sure if it will rise to the heights of 'Hell Hound' / 'Baxter' and 'Manstopper'.
Errickson says that 'The Totem' is a 'gripping read', which makes me glad I picked the book up.
Regarding the 1979 anthology 'Shadows 2', Errickson is decidedly lukewarmmostly filler and mostly too tame and polite to offer any real horror. I can't say I'm surprised, as Charles L. Grant's approach to editing horror fiction was not exactly dynamic and transgressive. And in '79, Splatterpunk was still some years away.
And so, as 2024 arrives, I have a  stack of reading material awaiting me. Some promising titles, some not so promising. But the message is the same: you never know what you might find at the Library Sale........... 

Friday, December 29, 2023

White Christmas by America

'White Christmas' by America
from the album 'Holiday Harmony' (2002)
So, as I was driving around I heard this song on one of the Sirius XM channels. It's 'White Christmas' by the group America. I'd never heard it before. It sounds like 'Tin Man', crossed with 'White Christmas'. Who did this ?! 
Was this song some obscurity from the 1970s ?! 

It turns out it's from a 2002 vinyl LP, called 'Holiday Harmony', produced by Andrew Gold (of 'Lonely Boy' fame) and released by Rhino Records. A CD was issued in 2010, and nowadays there is a digital download available, too.
Along with some standards, the album features some original compositions from Gerry Beckley and Dewey Bunnell, as well as Bunnell and Andrew Gold.

I think 'White Christmas' is the best track, and overall, 'Holiday Harmony' is a pretty decent album. Most of the songs have the slightly overproduced, smooth rock sound that America exemplified / exemplifies. I have to say that I'd rather listen to 'Holiday Harmony', that any Christmas song by Mariah Carey............

Monday, December 25, 2023

Book Review: The Mammoth Book of Folk Horror

Book Review: 'The Mammoth Book of Folk Horror' edited by Stephen Jones
 4 / 5 Stars

'The Mammoth Book of Folk Horror' is a thick brick of a book at 524 pages, published by Skyhorse Publishing, Inc., in 2021.

Britisher Stephen Jones is of course the world's foremost editor of horror fiction, with over 140 books to his credit.

In his Introduction to the anthology, Jones states that folk horror is '....basically the horrific side of folklore'. As well, folk horror is horror that usually is set in rural environs. I note that in 1993, DAW Books issued an anthology, edited (inevitably) by Martin Greenberg, titled 'Urban Horrors', so it would seem appropriate that attention be given to horror placed in pastoral places.

The contents of 'Folk Horror' range from old favorites (so to speak) from 19th-century authors, to stories from 20th and 21st-century authors, including many younger authors whose works were issued well after the Horror Boom of the 1980s and 1990s. Most of the entries appear to have been newly written for this anthology.

Rather than give capsule summaries of each of the 19 novelettes and stories in 'Folk Horror', I'll simply provide an overview that, hopefully, will give readers an idea of what to expect from the book. 

I will say that in general, the treatments of horror depicted in this collection have a subdued, opaque quality; splatterpunks probably will be disappointed with 'Folk Horror'.

The anthology leads off with Arthur Machen's 1899 novelette 'The White People', about a young English girl whose governess introduces her to pagan practices. The novelette is essentially one lengthy travelogue, rendered in Little Girl-ish, through a fairyland that doesn't contain the expected rainbows and unicorns (and perhaps is better for it). 

Traditional favorites from M. R. James ('Wailing Well') and Algernon Blackwood ('Ancient Lights') give readers new to the genre a grounding in the folk horror ethos. H. P. Lovecraft's vintage story 'The Hound' also somehow finds its way into this company.

The book's other novelette comes from Kim Newman, who first wrote it for a 2005 Science Fiction Book Club anthology, 'The Fair Folk'. 

'The Gypsies in the Wood' features Charles Beauregard, from Newman's 1992 novel 'Anno Dracula', as the lead character. 'Gypsies' deals with malevolent fairies, coming forth to infest a kind of Steampunk Disneyland operating in  Regent's Park. 'Gypsies' is one of the better entries in the anthology. 

Aficionados of horror fiction will find a well-known piece among the entries in 'Folk Horror': 'Sticks', by Karl Edward Wagner, the classic tale of Lovecraftian goings-on in the woodlands of upstate New York. 

I was surprised to see Dennis Etchison's 'The Dark Country' in this anthology. In my opinion Etchison's story fails to qualify as folk horror, or even as a horror story at all. If there is such a category as 'Mexican Noir', then 'Dark Country' belongs there.

Strange, unsettling places in rural England are the focus of well-composed stories from Alison Littlewood ('Jenny Greenteeth'), Mike Chinn ('All I Ever See'), David Sutton ('St. Ambrews Well'), Jan Edwards ('The Devil's Piss Pot'), Storm Constantine ('Wyfa Medj'), and Reggie Oliver ('Porson's Piece').

Ramsey Campbell presents a tale set in rural England. 'The Fourth Call' is about a village tradition that is perilous to ignore. It's a newer story, and thus, for Campbell, a better one: the horror content is more reified than Campbell was wont to do in his older tales.

Supernatural forces loose in the wild are treated in Maura McHugh's 'Gravedirt Mouth', Steve Rasnic Tem's 'Gavin's Field', and Simon Strantzas's 'The King of Stones' (which has the most graphic horror of all the anthology's contributions and, as a result, is memorable).

Folk horror outside Anglophone countries is featured in 'The Offering' by Michael Marshall Smith (you'll think twice about renting an Air BnB in Denmark, especially with a snotnosed teen in your entourage). Christopher Fowler's 'The Mistake at the Monsoon Palace' deals with an Ugly American who finds redemption in rural India; it's more a fantasy tale than a horror tale. 

I finished 'The Mammoth Book of Folk Horror' with a willingness to assign it a Four Star Rating. Every reader will of course have his or her opinion on what stories should, or should not, be included, but I think the only real dud entry is Etchison's. Replacing it with something from Robert Holdstock (such as 'Scarrowfell') would, I think, propel 'Folk Horror' into Five-Star territory. But read it for yourself and see what you think............

Thursday, December 21, 2023

Eddie Mack Live at the Open Face Sandwich CLub

Eddie Mack 
Live at the Open Face Sandwich Club
Penthouse magazine ad, July 1975
Leafing through the pages of old copies of Penthouse magazine, I run across all sorts of odd pop culture ephemera. This includes a full-page advertisement in the July, 1975 issue for a record album by Eddie Mack.
The Open Face Sandwich Club was a lounge in California, someplace, and it was popular with Hollywood actors and other celebrities. The name apparently had 'wink-wink' smutty connotations in the 1960s Mad Men / bar culture. 

Eddie Mack was a veteran lounge singer when, in 1965, a performance of his at the Club was recorded and pressed into vinyl. The LP apparently only was available with membership in the Club, as advertised in the 1975 Penthouse.
Biographical information about Eddie Mack (not to be confused with the blues singer of the same name) is scant.  A post at Reddit states:

Eddie grew up to be a talented pianist, singer, and actor. He was married and divorced six times. (The beauty perched on the piano [of the LP] was married to him for a brief period – Eddie was old-fashioned and didn't believe in "shacking up.") In 1969 he was on stage in Toronto as a member of the touring company of There's a Girl in My Soup (starring Don Ameche) when his throat started hemorrhaging during a song. He was rushed to the hospital and diagnosed with throat cancer. Greasepaint was in his blood, though, so even though he couldn't speak while recuperating from surgery and radiation, he got a job leading the orchestra on a cruise ship and communicated with the musicians via gestures and a Magic Slate. By KARA KOVALCHIK 10/10/2011

The full album is available at YouTube. It's not bad stuff, but I get the sense it's best listened to by travelling back in time to 1969, and sitting in some dimly-lit lounge, with a scotch on the rocks and early-stage lung cancer....................

Tuesday, December 19, 2023

Book Review: Night and Demons

Book Review: 'Night and Demons' by David Drake
4 / 5 Stars

David Drake passed away at age 78 on December 10, 2023. He certainly was a familiar writer to many of us who enjoyed science fiction, fantasy, and horror fiction during the era (1968 - 1988) covered by this blog. He played a major role in reviving the genre of military sci-fi after it had fallen into disfavor during the New Wave era. 

Save for Joe Haldeman and 'The Forever War' (1974), few works about war and combat in the sci-fi milieu, that were anything other than thinly coated diatribes against militarism, were published when I was a teenager. Indeed, the only anthologies to deal with the subject were the 1975 anthology 'Combat SF', edited by Gordon Dickson, and Haldeman's 1977 anthology 'Study War No More'. Drake's short story 'The Butcher's Bill' was one of the standout stories in 'Combat SF'. 

I've had a review of 'Night and Demons' banked away in my draft pages, and it seems condign to post it at this time.

‘Night and Demons’ is a thick chunk of a mass market paperback, at 768 pages (though the last 68 pages are a bibliography of David Drake’s published works). It was published by Baen Books in December, 2013 and features cover art by Alan Pollack. 

Multiple anthologies of Drake’s short fiction have been issued over the years, most notably ‘From the Heart of Darkness’ (1983) and ‘Balefires’ (2007), but ‘Night and Demons’ is the most comprehensive, as almost everything appearing in the earlier anthologies is accounted for in ‘Night and Demons’.

Each entry in ‘Night and Demons’ features an introductory remark by Drake in which he imparts a personal reminiscence of how the story was composed and its initial fate when submitted to the editorial world of fantasy / horror publishing in the 1970s and 1980s.

My capsule summaries of the stories in ‘Night and Demons’:

The Red Leer (1979): sometimes Indian burial mounds are better left alone. A decent 'monsters on the loose' tale.

A Land of Romance (2005): a humorous treatment of the mythic Storyland of childhood.

Smokie Joe (1977): the only horror story I am aware of that features a particularly unpleasant venereal disease as a major plot point. Is it Proto-Splatterpunk ? I'd like to think so !

Awakening (1975): short-short story about an elderly couple with an interest in the occult.

Denkirch (1967):  a deranged scientist investigates Cosmic Mysteries. There are consequences.

Dragon, The Book (1999): written as an entry in the Martin Greenberg and Andre Norton Catfantastic V anthology, this is the tale of the wizard Hardin and his cat companion. For reasons that are unclear, Drake smothers this story in pulp prose and a surfeit of adverbs, adjectives, similes, and metaphors. Maybe that's what's expected in contributions to a Catfantastic anthology ?

The False Prophet (novelette; 1989): this features Drake’s recurring character Vettius, the Roman soldier. Here, Vettius and his friends investigate a mysterious holy man who has enthralled Rome’s wealthiest and most influential citizens. The initial pages are filled with conversation and are quite boring, but the story closes with sufficient energy to justify the early investment. 

Black Iron (1975): Vettius and his friends hear the tale of a magic sword.

The Shortest Way (1974): Vettius and his friends decide to take a shortcut that the locals take care to avoid. An atmospheric tale, and one of the best entries in the collection.

Lord of the Depths (1971): Greek sailors come upon a deserted city, where lots of treasure is lying about. This may be too good to be true……..another of the better tales in the anthology.

The Land Toward Sunset (1995): Robert E. Howard’s characters Cormac Mac Art and Wulfhere the Skullsplitter find themselves cast away on an island ruled by wizards with ulterior motives. There is much sword-and-sorcery action. 

Children of the Forest (1976): who knew Bigfoot roamed German forests ?!

The Barrow Troll (1975): Ulf Womanslayer, a Viking warrior, gets wind of buried treasure and decides it should be his, even though it's guarded by a very nasty troll............

Than Curse the Darkness (1980): Lovecraftian hijinks in deepest, darkest Africa. The prose is painfully stilted; this is the first time I ever have encountered the simile '......like an ant run blown by carbon disulphide.'

The Song of the Bone (1973): in Viking Land, Gage the herdsman is an enigmatic figure.

The Master of Demons (1975):  a short-short story about a medieval mage who seeks to master Arcane Forces; this never is a good idea.

The Dancer in the Flames (1982): Lieutenant Schaydin is troubled by disturbing hallucinations.  

Codex (2003): first written in 1967, but not published until 2003 when it appeared in a chapbook, this is the tale of some University students who decide to translate a Medieval text from Latin into English. What they learn from the translation offers access to otherworldly wealth and power. 

Firefight (1976): U.S. soldiers fighting in Vietnam choose a bivouac location with a disturbing history.

Best of Luck (1978): Another story set in wartime Vietnam. Dog Company seems to be getting the worst of it in firefights.

Arclight (1973): In wartime Cambodia, an encounter with an ancient artifact leads to problems for an armored unit.

Something Had to Be Done (1975): a US Army team sets out to deliver bad news to a soldier's family. A much-anthologized horror story from early in Drake’s career, and one of his best.

The Waiting Bullet (1997): first composed in the early 70s, Drake later completed this story for inclusion in the final issue of Whispers magazine. It’s a story about a violent death in the piney woods of North Carolina. For reasons unclear to me, Drake uses the adverb (?) ‘shudderously’, which I cannot find in any online dictionary.  

The Elf House (2004): Cashel the barbarian comes to the aid of a servant girl who insists on venturing into dangerous places.

The Hunting Ground (1976): people are disappearing from an urban neighborhood in North Carolina. Lorne, a Vietnam veteran with post-traumatic stress disorder, decides to investigate. Another of the better stories in the anthology.

The Automatic Rifleman (1980): some anarchists are up to no good. 

Blood Debt (1976): overly purple prose weakens this story about Judson Rigsbee, who lives in the suburbs and practices black magic.

Men Like Us (1980): in post-apocalyptic America, not all settlements are particularly welcoming to strangers.

A Working Bibliography of David Drake's Writing, by Karen Zimmerman: a listing, current as of 2012, of all of Drake’s published stories, novelettes, books, and essays and nonfiction pieces.

Summing up, ‘Night and Demons’, like practically any anthology, has its share of worthy, and less worthy, content. There is enough of the former to justify giving the anthology a Four Star Score. Drake fans will of course want to have a copy in their possession. Those with a fondness for fantasy and horror literature of the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s may find it appealing, as well. 

Saturday, December 16, 2023

Book Review: The High Crusade

Book Review: 'The High Crusade' by Poul Anderson
3 / 5 Stars

'The High Crusade' first was published in 1960 in hardcover by Doubleday. That same year it was serialized in Astounding / Analog. It has been issued in mass-market paperback format since 1962. My copy of the novel was published by Berkley Books in March, 1978, with the cover artist uncredited.

The novel opens in 1345 in the English countryside. Sir Roger de Tourneville of Ansby has assembled his soldiers for participation in King Edward the Third's campaign in France. As the troops await orders and occupy themselves with drinking, wenching, and squabbling in Ansby's muddy streets, suddenly a spaceship descends from the sky. Blue-skinned, humanoid aliens - known as the Wersgorix -  step out of the airlock and immediately try to intimidate the assembled throng. This proves to be a mistake, as the English archers respond........and the aliens are cut down. 

In due course, assisted by the first-person narrator, Brother Parvus, Sir Roger takes possession of the craft, piles his soldiers, their wives, and livestock on board, and orders the alien pilot, Branithar, to fly all of them to France. This is to be the first step on Sir Roger's crusade to introduce the beneficence of English rule to those otherwise disinclined to accept it.

Although forced to operate the ship under duress, Branithar is not stupid, and he sets the autopilot for the star system ruled by the Wersgorix Federation. Once Sir Roger, Brother Parvus, and the noblemen of Castle Ansby realize what has taken place, it is too late to intervene and the party finds themselves set down on Tharixan, an Earth-like planet where the Wersgor hold the populace in thrall. 

The remainder of the novel relates the adventures of Sir Roger and his compatriots as they confront the Wersgor, who are dumbfounded that a tribe of medieval humans should have the audacity to defy the Wersgor's military capabilities. But as the aliens are to discover, beneath his primitive exterior, Sir Roger has a cunning and calculating mind, one that will serve him well in the conflict with the Wersgor forces on Tharixan. Well enough, to eventually mount a challenge to the Federation itself........

Poul Anderson was one of the more capable science fiction and fantasy authors of the postwar era. While Anderson wrote for a living and certainly was prolific, he was as good as, if not a better, prose writer than many of his contemporaries (such as Isaac Asimov, Murray Leinster, Clifford Simak, and Keith Laumer, among others) and 'The High Crusade' is a competent example of sci-fi on the cusp of the New Wave.  

In a novel that only is 167 pages in length, Anderson keeps his characterization concise, his dialogue believable, and the action flowing. The novel is in many ways a satirical / comedic portrayal of technologically superior aliens stymied by the craftiness of the enterprising Terrans, but it does have moments of pathos that keep it from getting overly glib.

The verdict ? 'The HIgh Crusade' retains its status as one of the better sci-fi novels of the early 1960s and while I wouldn't necessarily recommend searching it out, if you're in a secondhand book shop and see a copy, it's worth picking up.

Wednesday, December 13, 2023

Penthouse December 1981

Penthouse magazine
December, 1981
It's December, 1981, and the top single in the land is Olivia Newton-John's 'Physical'.
Let's all gather around the Christmas tree and open our presents.........including the December issue of Penthouse magazine !

We'll see advertisements for the must-have gift for the year: the Atari 'VCS' model gaming system ! (At my household, we didn't get an Atari, mainly because our TV was a modest little 17-inch black and white affair and, at $130, the Atari system was a little pricey).
Additional consumer electronics included a cutting-edge Sharp 'solar' calculator, and another 1980s must-have item, the Boombox.......especially one endorsed by Earth, Wind, and Fire, who happened to have the No. 3 single on the Billboard Hot 100: 'Let's Groove' !
For those of a more sensual bent, we had 'Denim', a macho men's fragrance, and 'Bodylicks' and the 'Original Mink Whip' ! Rowr, nasty !
One of the pictorials features the spectacular Gabrielle Sagan, who sports a vintage Louise Brooks hairstyle and a bronzed body that gleams in the sun.
Interestingly, Gabrielle since has become a Meme, at least, in the artwork of Linda Adair.........or perhaps it's a case of Synchronicity ?!
Champagne and Sunshine, by Linda Adair, 2022

The December issue has some funny cartoons that take advantage of the holiday theme.........
The subject of the Celebrity Interview is none other than Arnold Schwarzenegger, looking for cinematic success with the forthcoming release in 1982 of the movie Conan the Barbarian.
The articles section has some interesting items. There is a piece on Jerry Falwell, who earlier that year had lost a lawsuit against Penthouse.
UK socialite and writer Anthony Haden-Guest pens an article about crime and passion in New York City. The article is an excerpt from his 1983 book Bad Dreams.
There's an examination of the phenomenon of motocross racing, a sport rising in popularity.
There's an ad / article for Omni magazine, which by the end of '81 was a major outlet for science fiction writers. But Penthouse itself continued to showcase science fiction, as Gardner Dozois got a story in the December issue:
Let's close the pages of the December issue with a look at another pictorial, this one featuring a man-woman couple and imaged with such the 'gauzy filter' look that it's an exemplar of the Penthouse approach to photography.
And so we say goodbye to December, 1981................Merry Christmas and Happy New Year, everybody !

Sunday, December 10, 2023

Night and the Enemy

Night and the Enemy
by Harlan Ellison and Ken Steacy
'Night and the Enemy' was a collection of comics, graphics, and illustrated text bundled into an 81-page graphic novel from independent comics publisher Comico, and released in November 1987. 

The stories in 'Night' were adapted from the so-called 'Earth-Kyba' stories Ellison published from 1956 to 1987.
The Comico edition of 'Night and the Enemy' is long out of print, so Ellison enthusiasts were pleased when, in 2015, a trade paperback reprint edition (85 pp.) was issued from Dover. The 2015 edition reprints the entirety of the 1987 volume, and includes some ancillary material in the form of an 'Afterward and Pictures' section.
Canadian artist Ken Steacy (b. 1955) teamed up with Dean Motter to produce the comic, and later graphic novel, of 'The Sacred and the Profane' in the mid-1980s, so he was familiar with the process of composing and rendering science fiction content.
The stories in 'Night and the Enemy' all display Steacy's distinctive art style, both in color, and in black-and-white. Rather than speech balloons, dialogue is presented in a minimalist manner, as typeface with tails to indicate who is speaking.
As I noted in my review of 'The Sacred and the Profane', Steacy is not a traditional comic book artist in the sense of using art that lends itself to dynamic action. The artwork in 'Night and the Enemy' has a static quality, even in scenes of action, and while this works well for some of the stories, it is less effective in others. But the reader is invited to view the book and make their own judgments.
As for Ellison's writing, the Earth-Kyba stories were intended, in that inimitable Harlan Ellison style, to be vigorous repudiations of the sci-fi ideology of the postwar era, where virtuous Terrans battled malevolent alien invaders and won a noble victory. The tales in 'Night and the Enemy' avoid jingoism and remind us all, in a blunt way, that War is Hell.
There are a couple short stories included in 'Night and the Enemy'. 'Trojan Hearse' is a two-pager that gets the job done, while 'The Few, the Proud' takes the theme of the war hero and subverts it with a particularly caustic, 'surprise' ending.
Summing up, 'Night and the Enemy' is one of the better efforts to mingle Ellison's text with graphic art. It's on par with 'The Illustrated Harlan Ellison' from 1978, and superior to the comic book series 'Harlan Ellison's Dream Corridor' from 1996. So, if you're an Ellison fan, you'll want to have a copy of 'Night and the Enemy' in your library.