Wednesday, February 21, 2024

Glug by Harlan Ellison

'Glug' by Harlan Ellison
from Adam, July 1967
courtesy of vintage girlie scans
Adam magazine was one of a number of publications that came in the wake of Playboy and, as compared to that magazine, featured somewhat more risque exhibitions of female beauty.
The girls posing in Adam were more down-to-earth, and the advertising a little more louche.....
Adam always had quite a bit of fiction pieces interspersed with its portfolios. Either under a pseudonym, or using their actual name, quite a few high-profile authors were contributors of these pieces.

So it was, that in the July 1967 issue, were have 'Glug', short story from Harlan Ellison. Accompanied by a photograph of a well-endowed young woman !
But....just wait a minute.........

It seems 'Glug' actually is a reprint of a story that Ellison first published in the science fiction digest Imagination in August, 1958 - !
So a story that Adam readers might well consider to be a contemporary tale from one of the hottest writers at work in the US in 1967, was in fact a reprint of a nine year-old story. What a ripoff ! 

But then, no one bought Adam for the stories..........

Sadly, according to the ISFDB, the only way you can access 'Glug' either is from Adam or Imagination. The story didn't make its way into any of the 5 billion Ellison anthologies that have been issued over the decades.

Interestingly, Imagination was published by William Hamling, who during the late 1950s founded an empire of sleaze paperbacks, among the editors / authors of which was none other than Harlan Ellison. Inevitably, Ellison had a confrontation with Hamling, and was expelled from Hamling's enterprise (the whole sordid story is available here; warning, Harlan comes across as a self-centered, nasty little shit). 

Adam went on to be retitled Adam Film World in 1969, and experienced success well into the 1990s.

Sunday, February 18, 2024

Book Review: Beyond the Occult

Book Review: 'Beyond the Occult' by Colin Wilson
1 / 5 Stars

'Beyond the Occult' (381 pp.) was published in hardback in 1989 by Carrol and Graf.

In his Introduction, Wilson states that his interest in the occult began in the late 1960s when he was contacted by a publisher eager to capitalize on the success of the book 'The Morning of the Magicians', by Pauwels and Bergier. 'Morning' was a bestseller upon its release in France in 1960 and it went on to do equally well with its English-language translations. Wilson was sufficiently intrigued by the topic of the occult to agree to write a book about it. 

That book was 'The Occult', and upon its publication in 1971, it was very well received, coinciding as it did with the rise in the early 1970s of interest in supernatural phenomena.
advertisement from a 1974 issue of National Lampoon

For Wilson, 'The Occult' was not a catalogue of spells and instructions in magical practices, but a recounting of the 'scientific actualities' that constitute supernatural activities. These 'actualities' confirmed his belief that man possesses 'hidden powers', lumped under the rubric of 'Faculty X', which are otherwise unavailable to the great, unwitting mass of Homo sapiens.  
Wilson saw 'Faculty X' as a component of his philosophy of 'New Existentialism', which he introduced in 1966 in a book titled 'Introduction to the New Existentialism.'

'Beyond the Occult' is simply a recapitulation of the ideology of Faculty X, as it was outlined in 'The Occult', using examples from what is known as the 'paranormal'.

In the first two-thirds of 'Beyond the Occult' Wilson chronicles - primarily using examples from the 19th and 20th centuries - paranormal phenomena such as (among other things) psychometry, clairvoyance, precognition, astral bodies, 'second sight', multiple personalities, possession, and synchronicity. 

The book's closing chapters are a rather labored manifesto for the world to acknowledge the existence of Faculty X, which will, in turn, expedite the movement of the world's peoples into a sort of humanistic Singularity.  

From the opening chapters it will be very apparent to the reader that in his zeal to collect anecdotes about the paranormal to support his thesis of Faculty X, Wilson exaggerates and misleads about all manner of alleged psychic phenomena and practitioners. To give two examples from the many presented in 'Beyond the Occult':

 On page 165, Wilson alludes to the novel 'The Wreck of the Titan, or, Futility', published in 1898 by the American author Morgan Robertson, as an example of 'precognition', in that Robertson's novel deals with the lethal collision of an 'unsinkable' ocean liner, christened the Titan, with an iceberg. Wilson remarks that Robertson claimed to be an 'automatic' writer who composed his novels while in something of a trance-like state. This state, Wilson claims, allowed Robertson to subconsciously open his mind to the 'information universe', which in turn imparted to him knowledge of the sinking of the liner Titanic in 1912. 

However, Wilson does not disclose that throughout his life Robertson strenuously denied that his novel was an example of precognition, insisting that his familiarity with nautical matters gave him insight into the circumstances of a hypothetical disastrous accident at sea.

 On pages 231 and 232, Wilson alludes to the Fox sisters of Hydesville New York, who in March 1848 claimed to a neighbor that a spirit had invaded their house, and was communicating via knocks and raps. The sister claimed the spirit was the ghost of a peddler who had been murdered by the home's previous occupant, and buried in the basement. By late 1849 the sisters and their encounters with the supernatural had triggered a national frenzy of interest in 'mediums' and 'spiritualism'. Wilson references the discovery, made in 1904, of human bones in a secret room in the basement; this discovery was deemed proof of the murder, and interment, of the peddler. 

Wilson fails to mention that in 1888, Margaretta Fox publicly declared that the rappings were fraudulent, the product of the sisters cracking their ankle and foot joints. And a physician who examined the bones in the secret basement room concluded that the bones (which included chicken bones) were nothing more than a prank.

Well before the halfway point of 'Beyond the Occult', Wilson's habit of assigning credulity to these and all manner of paranormal phenomena began to pall. No anecdote or experience was too preposterous for Wilson to endorse in the name of 'Faculty X'. Indeed, in the chapter titled 'Visions', Wilson breathlessly relates the antics of one Stylianos Atteshlis, aka 'Daskalos', a Cypriot 'magus' who, in July 1979, claimed to have telepathically persuaded 'flying saucer entities' to alter the orbit of the Skylab space station so that it crashed into the southern hemisphere rather than the (more populated) northern hemisphere !

I finished the book more out of a sense of duty, than enthusiasm. In my opinion, only the most fervent of Wilson aficionados will enjoy 'Beyond the Occult'. For everyone else, it has some slight value as a compendium of observations of some of the most 'woo-woo' entries in the global catalogue of paranormal phenomena. 

Thursday, February 15, 2024

Paul Neary R.I.P.
The U.K. artist Paul Neary passed away on February 10, at the age of 74, after a long illness.

Neary was a well-regarded penciller and inker in the U.S. and U.K. comics enterprises. In the early 1970s he illustrated the 'Hunter' series in Eerie magazine. Neary's artwork was imaginative and carefully crafted, and represents some of the best black-and-white art to appear in a comic format.
As Mike Richardson of Dark Horse comics states in his Forward to the 2012 volume 'Eerie Presents: Hunter', 

The strip was made memorable by the striking artwork of Paul Neary. Combining pen-and-ink with heavy doses of Zip-A-Tone, Neary made sensational use of the black-and-white format, creating a unique look that separated Hunter not only from the magazine's other features, but also from the competing comics of the day.

Neary did additional, memorable work for Eerie, Vampirella, and Creepy.

Sadly, 'Eerie Presents: Hunter' is long out of print and those copies that are available have high prices, but there is a Kindle version available. Anyone with an appreciation for graphic art will want to take a look at Neary's work for the Warren magazines.

Wednesday, February 14, 2024

Joys of Fantasy

 Celebrating Valentine's Day 2024 !

Joys of Fantasy: The Book for Loving Couples
by Siv Cedering Fox
Stein and Day, 1977
Here at the PorPor Books Blog, we like to celebrate Valentine's Day by showcasing a book (fiction or nonfiction) that deals with love. For Valentine's Day 2024, we're looking at a quintessential work of 1970s 'erotica'.

In the Summer of 1976, film producer and editor Ed Rothkowitz and photographer Joseph Del Valle arranged for some of New York City's best-known porno actors and actresses to pose for a series of photographs, taken in the studio of 'adult film' film director Toby Ross.

Rothkowitz combined the photos, which epitomized the soft-focus 'erotica' of the 70s, with various 'sensual' poems and prose pieces, most of which were authored by a woman named Civ Cedering Fox. 

Cedering Fox (1939 - 2007) was born in Sweden and later moved to San Francisco, where she grew up. She gained notice as a poet, novelist, children's book author, artist, and songwriter during the 1970s and 1980s.

The photo and poem combination, titled Joys of Fantasy to channel the runaway success of The Joy of Sex, was published by Stein and Day in 1977 in both hardcover and softcover editions.
There are products of the 70s that are so cheesy and kitschy, or so sublime and transcendent, at the same time and point in space that any attempt to analyze them is futile; so it is with Joys of Fantasy. I'll simply present selected, carefully cropped photos from the book and let readers come to their own conclusions.
Of note is the fact that one of the male models used in the portfolio is none other than Dennis Posa, aka 'Dennis Parker', whose 1979 LP 'Like An Eagle' is one of the touchstone records of the disco era ! Can you get any more Seventies than that ?!

Although it's long out of print, copies of the paperback edition of Joys of Fantasy can be had for affordable prices. I recommend perusing it accompanied by a bottle of Boone's Farm Strawberry Hill, incense, an Emerson Lake and Palmer record, and shag carpeting........in an Earth Tone.

Monday, February 12, 2024

National Lampoon February 1975

National Lampoon
February 1975
February, 1975. On the Billboard Hot 100, the top-selling single in the USA as of February 15 is 'You're No Good' by Linda Ronstadt.
Let's open up the latest issue of the National Lampoon, which has a 'Love and Romance' theme. This is one of the better mid-70s issues of the magazine.

The letters column offends with faux missives from bigoted rednecks, and serial killer Juan Corona (!).
The advertising in this issue includes Earth Shoes (very 70s), and a new Yes album, which is accompanied by bad poetry. 

Other album advertisements include an LP from Kenny Rankin (a YouTube video of Silver Morning is here). I can't say Rankin's album is all that impressive - rather tame 70s singer-songwriter stuff (folies should not scat-sing, and what folkie didn't, at some point in his / her career, do a cover of Paul McCartney's 'Blackbird' ?!). 

There's also an album from George Carlin, whose brand of comedy was thriving in the mid-70s. I can't say that the Carlin catalogue has aged well, but then, not much from the mid-70s really has, when you think about it...........
An ad for something called the 'Great American Song Festival' features the late, great, Suzanne Somers, adorned with some strategically placed sheet music !
The color comic in this issue is a satire of romance comics, featuring.....Nazis ?! Yep, this sort of thing probably would not be allowed nowadays..........
One of the funniest features in this February issue is a parody of Modern Bride magazine. 
This 'Lake Innuendo' spoof of the advertisements for the Poconos honeymoon suites (like the Birchwood) that were common in the 70s, is spot-on:
The comics section has the usual strips. Because this section of the magazine was printed on newsprint rather than 'slick' paper, even at 300 dpi, the scans are not crisp and require much fiddling in order to be legible.
And there you go with Lampoon humor, as it was early in '75............