Saturday, February 26, 2022
Coming in August 2022
Thursday, February 24, 2022
New Wave SF Zoom Zymposium
Here is a hyperlink to the website to register for the symposium.
[ The organizers seem to me to be a little over-optimistic in arranging something this large, with speakers in different countries and different time zones, over Zoom, but, well..........guess we'll see........ ]
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Wednesday, February 23, 2022
Start It All Over from February 1982
by McGuffey Lane
Sunday, February 20, 2022
Book Review: If You Don't Buy this Book, We'll Kill this Dog
Thursday, February 17, 2022
Book Review: The School on 103rd Street
Monday, February 14, 2022
Book Review: Playboy's Stories for Swinging Readers
Friday, February 11, 2022
Killerbowl now is PoD
Thursday, February 10, 2022
More Devil's Kisses, Corgi Books, the National Lampoon, and Scotland Yard
[ The glasses also will come in handy if you happen to own a copy of 'The Illustrated Harlan Ellison' (1978). ]
Tuesday, February 8, 2022
Book Review: Be Pure ! Be Vigilant ! Behave !
2000 AD and Judge Dredd: The Secret History
‘Be Pure ! Be Vigilant ! Behave ! 2000 AD and Judge Dredd: A Secret History (255 pp.) was published by Millsverse Books in 2017.
Pat Mills (b. 1949) is of course one of the most well-known representatives of the comic book business in the UK and one of its more iconoclastic figures. As the above quotation shows, excessive modesty and humility are not in particularly abundant supply in the pages of ‘Be Pure !’, which chronicles Mills’s career in comics from the early 1970s up to 2017, the 40th anniversary of the first issue of 2000 AD.
The book consists of brief chapters, arranged in a loose chronological order. Things start in 1971, when Mills and fellow talent John Wagner were living and working in Scotland for D. C. Thompson and its lineup of romance and humor titles. The narrative then moves to London, where Mills was involved with Battle Picture Weekly and Action before being asked by IPC in 1976 to launch a science-fiction title, one capable of exploiting the anticipated boom in the genre associated with the release of an American film called Star Wars.
Mills rightly devotes considerable space to his work developing 2000 AD and his collaborations with other artists and writers to create the memorable characters that made the comic so successful when it launched in February 1977. These are the book's most interesting chapters.
Subsequent chapters describe Mills’s freelance career writing for additional 2000 AD comics, such as Crisis, for which he created ‘Third World War’. Mills also offers vignettes about working for American publishers Marvel and DC; his involvement with the indie comic Toxic in the early 1990s; and his partnership with the French artist Olivier Ledroit on the title 'Requiem: Vampire Knight'.
Throughout ‘Be Pure !’ Mills, as one might expect, freely expresses his opinions about the comic book industry in the UK and its faults (which, as Mills sees them, are myriad). Mills regards anyone who interfered with his creative vision as a cretin, and thus, former 2000 AD editors Steve McManus, Alan MacKenzie, John Tomlinson, and David Bishop (among many others) all are the targets of his animadversions.
Mills’s ongoing antipathy (which has reached pathological levels, in my opinion) for the De La Salle Order and its former faculty at his grammar school, St. Joseph’s College in Ipswich, also comes in for treatment in the pages of ‘Be Pure !’. It seems that the De La Salle Order members Brother James and Brother Solomon, as Mills refers to them, were the inspirations both for Dredd, and 'Torquemada' from 'Nemesis the Warlock'.