Saturday, June 17, 2023

Installing Google Analytics 4
As you probably have heard, on July 1, 2023, Google's Universal Analytics, aka GA-3, app will be discontinued. If you want to collect information on traffic to your website, then you will have to install Google Analytics 4 (GA-4).

There is much criticism of GA-4, criticism I find warranted. Google took something that was working fine, i.e., Google Analytics (aka GA-3), and broke it till it wasn't working. But there's no choice: starting July 1 you have to install GA-4 (or rely on some other app) to track visits to your website.

I don't monetize my blog, nor do I operate an eCommerce website. So tracking visits to my blog is not a life-or-death function, it's simply a way of seeing if anyone is paying any attention to what I write. But obviously, people who operate monetized websites are going to have to install GA-4. 

Earlier this month I installed GA-4. It was kind of a pain in the ass, and took me about 45 minutes. Below is a screen clip of GA-4 data for The PorPor Books Blog:
If you're selling auto parts, or widgets, or nudies, or handcrafted pot holders, online, then this type of data analysis and presentation may be of use to you. I can't say the GA-4 data presentation panels are very user-friendly or informative to me, but like I said, I'm not charging advertising rates based on how many visits, over 30 seconds in length, from url addresses in continental Europe, I get on an hourly basis.

ANYWAYS, if you Google 'install Google Analytics 4' you'll get no shortage of instructional pages and videos. I looked through quite a few of these. The ones from Google itself are kind of useless, as they simply give an overview of the process and then tell you to ask your IT manager to do the dirty work. Yeah...........like I have an IT manager. According to one Comment I have seen at YouTube, 

My dev team tried to charge us $7800 to upgrade our GA to GA4. Unbelievable

Of the do-it-yourself videos I consulted, one of the most helpful and easiest is by 'Matt the WP Doctor'. Also of value is this one by 'Analytics Mania'. 
Good luck !

Friday, June 16, 2023

Book Review: Systemic Shock

Book Review: 'Systemic Shock' by Dean Ing
0 / 5 Stars

'Systemic Shock' (298 pp.) was published by Ace Books in June, 1981. The cover art is uncredited. This is the first volume in the so-called 'Ted Quantrill' trilogy, the other volumes being 'Single Combat' (1983) and 'Wild Country' (1985).

I'm not very familiar with the works of Ing (1931 - 2020) who was quite prolific in the 1980s and 1990s with both his own novels, and his entries in the 'Man-Kzin' franchise.

After struggling with 'Systemic Shock' I'm not inclined to try additional novels by Ing. 'Systemic' was so bad, I gave up after page 52.

The novel is set in 1996, and alternates between a technothriller narrative, detailing a war between the US-Russia bloc and the 'SinoInd' coalition, and a storyline involving the adventures of a young man named Ted Quantrill in the post-apocalyptic America generated by the war.

From the opening paragraph I found 'Systemic' to be tough going. The technothriller segments of the novel are related by the author in a clipped, breathless prose overstuffed with awkward metaphors, similes, slang, and jargon. 

Here's an example, dealing with a U.S. military installation that manages satellite defenses:

“Stay at your post or go on report,” Mills snapped, then spoke softly into his throat mike as the chief leaped back to his post. “With enough power, you may be able to get Arctic coverage from echo soda module, I say again echo soda. That’s an awfully shallow angle to penetrate that deep in sea water, but it’s your lasers, Commander. I’m just an elf……Affirm; grid test programs running and green, we’re ready when you are.”

Mills turned the level, heavy-browed stare on the chief. “Pull the test programs, ready ELF grid for main-trunk use at-my-mark-mark ! Chief, we’re losing too many orbital modules, too many bogies are getting through.”

The segments of the novel dealing with Ted Quantrill suffer from stilted prose, too. 

After Quantrill and the boy scouts get too close to the highway, where vehicles don’t slow down when drawing abreast of roadside hikers:

It was much easier to hear your radio estimate megadeaths than to see and hear and smell and – Quantrill swallowed against a sourness in the back of his mouth – taste a single death. Big hearty Tom Schell: one moment a mixed bag of vices and companionable virtues, the next a flaccid bag of skin leaking away into imperturbable gravel, one eye winking as though it had all been a grotesque joke. But the dirt would soak up Tom’s blood without qualm or shudder. Lucky dirt; you die for it, and it doesn’t give a damn. 

'radio estimate megadeaths' ?! Gravel that is 'imperturable' ?! And dirt that is 'lucky' ?! I've read better prose in fanfic.............!

The verdict ? 'Systemic Shock' fails both as a technothriller, and as a sci-fi novel. You're much better off reading John Hackett's 'The Third World War' (1979) or Tom Clancy's 'Red Storm Rising' (1986).

Tuesday, June 13, 2023

At Bargain Books, Richmond

At Bargain Books, Richmond
I've made a couple of trips now to Bargain Books, a used book shop located at 7228 Hull Street Rd. in western Richmond. 

Located in a shopping plaza, off of Wayside Drive, this is a big store, with long aisles of shelving.

Prices are reasonable:
The store does accept trade-ins for store credit, but the trade-in value is quite low (as compared to, say, McKay's Books in Manassas, Virginia).

Bargain Books has dedicated shelving for vintage paperbacks, which impressed me. These titles are quite affordable.


They have a large section devoted to sci-fi, as well as for mystery, and general fiction. The books tend to be in the Acceptable - Good range, occasionally the Very Good condition, but Like New is rare.

I was able to get an Edge / Adam Steele team-up (!), surely a major milestone in the 'Piccadilly Western' genre. 

Then there was a vintage Bantam copy of Kingsley Amis's James Bond novel 'Colonel Sun'. An old-time Gold Medal title about a 'World Without Women', and 'The Wild One', a teen motorcyclist adventure from 1970. 

I'm not familiar with the Dan Morgan novel, but I have heard that 'On Wheels', the John Jakes novel, is a worthy read (Science Fiction Ruminations gave it a 3 of 5 Star review).
I also found some vintage paperbacks about hot rods, the Vietnam War, a novelization of a low-budget, drive-in, 1977 CB / Trucker film, and......... when 'Me and Jim Luke' tangled with the Ku Klux Klan - ! 

(I had to Google the 'Klan' in order to spell their name right, so I guess Google now has my IP address flagged as belonging to a possible 'extremist' personality).

'Me and Jim Luke' apparently is fetching very steep asking prices on the web, with copies at amazon priced at $31. I was lucky to find a Good / Acceptable copy for under $5.

Anyways, if you find yourself in the Richmond area, you may want to stop in at Bargain Books  !

Saturday, June 10, 2023

High Life

Celebrating Pride Month, June 2023

'High Life' by Dennis Parker
from the album Like An Eagle, 1979
Here at the PorPor Books Blog, we like to celebrate Pride Month by shining a light on some of the undeservedly neglected aspects of the LGBTQ experience, during the interval from 1968 to 1988. Here, we look at the disco singing career of Dennis Parker.

Dennis Posa was born on October 28, 1946, and grew up in Freeport, Long Island. As an adult he moved to New York City and tried his hand at a variety of professions and occupations, including acting. In the mid-1970s he built on a past history of appearing in gay loops and photo shoots to appear in high-profile adult films, under the stage name 'Wade Nichols'. 

The best-known of Nichols's appearances likely is the 1979 film Love You, starring Annette Haven. The film was directed by the well-known actor John Derek, whose wife Bo Derek assisted with many aspects of the shoot. 

In 1976 or 1977 he met the flamboyant French record producer Jacques Morali, who would later create the disco stalwarts The Village People. In 1978 Morali signed Posa, now using the stage name 'Dennis Parker', to a record deal with Casablanca Records. In 1979, the disco album Like An Eagle was released.

While Parker was a novice at singing, the album had considerable musical talent associated with its production, and it deserves greater recognition as one of the best disco / dance albums to emerge in the late 1970s.


Like An Eagle was Parker's only foray in music. In 1979, he was cast as Police Chief Derek Mallory in the soap opera The Edge of Night, and remained on the show until October 1984, when increasing ill-health forced him to retire. He died of AIDS on January 28th, 1985.

Thursday, June 8, 2023

Book Review: The Camp of the Saints

Book Review: 'The Camp of the Saints' by Jean Raspail 
2 / 5 Stars

The Frenchman Jean Raspail (1925 – 2020) was a prolific author of nonfiction and fiction books, only a few of which were translated into English.

‘The Camp of the Saints’ first was published in France in 1973 as Le Camp des Saints. Several editions of an English translation of ‘Camp’ have been published over the decades, including a hardcover edition in 1975, from Scribner; mass market paperback versions in 1977 from Ace Books and Sphere; and a trade paperback version, issued in 1994 from Social Contract Press. 
All of these editions are out of print and have exorbitant asking prices, partly because the book nowadays is very politically incorrect and no publisher will touch it. For my part, I was fortunate to pick up the Social Contract Press edition for under $20 back in ’94 (it’s currently available at amazon for $113 on up).

I should state at the outset that ‘The Camp of the Saints’ only mildly is science fiction. It is not a near-future eco-catastrophe or overpopulation novel like other early 70s books, such as Christopher Priest’s Fugue for a Darkening Island, or Don Pendleton’s Population Doomsday, or D. Keith Mano’s The Bridge. ‘Camp’ is much more of a polemic wrapped in a ‘what-if’ scenario. Even making allowances for the translation from French to English, the narrative is wordy, and leans heavily on sociopolitical musings.

The plot is simple; in the near-future (i.e., late 20th century) the Third World, ever more squalid and desperate, decides to invade Southern France as the first step in a conquest of Europe. 

The catalyst for this event is the decision by the conscience-stricken Belgian consulate in Calcutta to allow a cohort of impoverished Indian children to take up permanent residence in Belgium. When a mob of rioting Indians besiege the consulate, thrusting babies through the consulate gates, the Belgian government has second thoughts about their seemingly generous act; this ignites a furor among the Indian population. 

In Calcutta, a physically imposing Indian man, known as the ‘turd eater’, allies himself with a malformed dwarf; this duo has sufficient charisma to convince a million impoverished fellow Indians to board a flotilla of decrepit vessels on the Ganges river. In a kind of Hindu version of the wanderings of the Hebrews, the flotilla sets out for the Mediterranean and France, the land of succor and salvation.

As the flotilla makes its slow and utterly wretched transit to its destination, the liberal elites of Europe are torn between acknowledging that the arrival of the ships will be a demographic and economic disaster for France; and their desire to present themselves as ‘woke’ (the term didn’t exist in 1973), and obliged to welcome the starving million. Raspail’s intent clearly is to savage the actions of the liberal elite and their complicity in what is essentially Europe’s suicide.

Interestingly, a character in ‘Camp’ is a Third World immigrant to France, who, as an ‘outsider’, can see through the strictures of political correctness to recognize the disaster to European civilization that will ensue from a decision to allow the flotilla to land. His attitudes are contrasted with the willful blindness of his native-born neighbors, who, cowed by the rhetoric from the political and cultural elites, can only helplessly dither as the flotilla draws ever closer. 

I won't disclose spoilers about the conclusion of 'Camp', save to say that it is in keeping with the book's goal of acidulous satire.

Should you be willing to invest in a copy of this book ? My advice is, no, not at the prices currently being sought by bookjackers and speculators. If an eBook edition ever is issued then that may be the best choice for access. But if you do decide to read 'Camp', be prepared for a novel that is a political tract rather than an 'action' novel. 

Monday, June 5, 2023

National Lampoon June 1972

National Lampoon, June 1972
June, 1972, and 'Candy Man', by Sammy Davis, Jr., is the number one song on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. On TV, you could watch 'The Brady Bunch', 'The Partridge Family', and 'Love American Style'. A gallon of gas was 36 cents, and a gallon of milk, 89 cents. A new Ford Mustang retailed for $2,510. 
The latest issue of National Lampoon is on the newsstands. This is a 'science fiction' -themed issue. The cover art is done by Frank Frazetta himself, and sends a clear signal that the Lampoon was an established, and profitable, publishing venture

Although some of the ads are what would nowadays be called 'transgressive'...........
Hipsters were cheered by a new album from the group Hot Tuna, who were a sort of cousin to the Grateful Dead. The 'Burgers' album is available for listening on You Tube; the best-known track probably is 'Keep On Trucking'.
The marquee piece in the issue is a four-page color comic, titled 'The Last TV Show', by Doug Kenney and Bruce Jones.

Two fiction entries in this June issue are pretty good. 

Chris Miller's 'Pipe Dream' is about a New York City slacker who finds some truly amazing 'grass'. 'Pipe Dream' mixes stoner and sci-fi themes in a comic fashion. It's a great story that should be an entrant in any anthology covering sci-fi and drugs.

Theodore Sturgeon (aka Edward Hamilton Waldo) contributes 'Pruzy's Pot', one of those few stories that he wrote late in his authorial career. 'Pruzy's' is about a young couple who decide to move to a ramshackle house in the country and get back to nature. However, the landlord insists on installing a most unusual commode. This is a good story, with subtle, but effective, humor. 

Two 'Photo Funnies' pages deliver ........BOOBIES ! 

Modern-day audiences may laugh, but remember that in 1972, as a humor item, the Lampoon was positioned on the racks with other 'mainstream' magazines, while Playboy and Penthouse and other 'skin' periodicals were displayed either in polybags with brown paper covers, or sold from 'under the table'. 

If you were an adolescent male, you could get some nudie action from the June issue of Lampoon !
The last page featured another installment of Vaughan Bode's 'Cheech Wizard'. Printing the strip in color was still a bit in the future, but even in black and white, the message came across....
And that's how it was, in June of 1972.........

Saturday, June 3, 2023

Magazines from Long Ago

Magazines from Long Ago
Via transactions with chainsawdaddy2000, I have acquired quite a collection of Penthouse issues from 1973 and 1974. Look for excerpts of these gems of 70s pop culture in future posts to The PorPor Books Blog !

Thursday, June 1, 2023

Book Review: The Oz Encounter

Book Review: 'The Oz Encounter' by Ted White and Marv Wolfman
2 / 5 Stars

'The Oz Encounter: Weird Heroes Vol. 5: Doc Phoenix' (216 pp.) was published by Pyramid Books in January 1977.

Inaugurated in 1975 by Byron Preiss, 'Weird Heroes' was intended to be a resurrection of the pulp magazine in a paperback book format. 

[ My review of 'Weird Heroes' volume 1 is here.]

Eight Weird Heroes volumes were published before the series was cancelled in 1977. Some volumes were anthologies, while others were novels intended to focus on one among a cast of characters. So it was that volume 5 was devoted to 'Doc Phoenix', a super-psychologist who, via exotic instrumentation, can enter the minds of the mentally ill and effect a cure. This concept is not novel to 'The Oz Encounter', as John Brunner used it as the basis of his 1964 novel 'The Whole Man'.

In 'The Oz Encounter', Doc is treating a ten year-old girl named Patricia Wentworth, who lies in a coma, its cause unknown. Patricia's father, an ambitious and well-connected politician named James Wentworth, is anxious to see his daughter recover so that he can embark on a campaign for re-election.

Upon entering Patricia's subconscious mind, Doc Phoenix learns that her love for the Oz novels by Frank Baum has populated her dreamscape with characters and landscapes from those novels. However, the trauma that has rendered Patricia unconscious is manifested in her dreamscape in disturbing ways; fear and violence have come to Oz and one individual, in particular, known as the Shaggy Man, has malevolent ambitions. 

Unless Doc Phoenix can foil the evil intentions of the Shaggy Man, the likelihood of Patricia ever awakening from her coma is slim at best. And making things worse, someone is trying to sabotage Doc's efforts, someone with an awareness of what is happening in Patricia's dreamscapes. And they have no hesitation about using lethal force to achieve their aims..........

In his Introduction to 'The Oz Encounter', Preiss indicates that Ted White initially was assigned to write the novel, but when circumstances prevented this, Preiss turned to Marv Wolfman, formerly a writer and editor for Marvel Comics. Wolfman in turn composed a manuscript based on White's outline. 

'Oz' suffers from a disjointed, choppy narrative, which is not too surprising given that Wolfman wrote for comics, where transitions between characters and settings are by nature abrupt due to the limited page space allotted for that format. There also are more than a few plot holes that never get filled, and the denouement is so contrived that it takes almost five pages to explain.

One strength of the book is the participation of illustrator Stephen Fabian, who understood what the Weird Heroes franchise was trying to do. Fabian's graytone artwork is ideal for the 'pulp paperback' design concept and played a role in keeping me interested in the narrative's later chapters, when the plotting takes on a strained quality.

When all is said and done, 'The Oz Encounter', like the other Weird Heroes book I have read, is underwhelming. While I sympathize with what editor Preiss was trying to do with the franchise, his editorial policy of closely emulating the diction and style of the Pulp era winds up being too banal to impress the modern-day reader. And for this type of narrative, Wolfman probably was not the best choice to be pinch-hitting as an author. In conclusion, I advise passing on 'The Oz Encounter'.

Monday, May 29, 2023

Wolverine / Nick Fury The Scorpio Connection

Wolverine / Nick Fury: The Scorpio Connection
by Archie Goodwin (story) and Howard Chaykin (art)
Marvel, 1989 
'Wolverine / Nick Fury: The Scorpio Connection' (64 pages) was one of the 75 'Graphic Novels' Marvel issued from 1979 to 1993. It's a nicely produced hardbound volume, printed on glossy paper.
As 'Scorpio' opens, an unknown assailant attacks a SHIELD field team at a site in South America. Among the dead SHIELD staffers is David Nanjiwarra, who happens to once have saved Wolverine's life.
When news of the attack reaches Nick Fury, he is disturbed to learn that the attacker left behind a momento: the sigil of a scorpion. 

Fury once battled a villain named Scorpio, who turned out to be his estranged brother, Jake. And long ago, Jake committed suicide. Who now is posing as Scorpio, and why are they targeting SHIELD ?

As Fury tries to answer this question, he's obliged to work with Wolverine, who is intent of avenging the death of David Nanjiwarra. 
We learn that the 'new' Scorpio has ties to the late Jake Fury.
As the story unfolds, it become clear that the new Scorpio is motivated by longstanding rivalries and betrayed alliances. Ones Nick Fury prefers to forget, for he helped engineer some of the betrayals. But when Wolverine is your ally, there is little room for negotiations and niceties, because for him, it's slice first, ask questions later.......
For me, 'The Scorpio Connection' was a disappointment. Archie Goodwin's plotting has a rushed, haphazard quality, as if he addressed the project in fits and starts, his mind on other things. The melange of 
conspiracies and double-crosses that propel the story are poorly served by a gimmicky denouement.
Howard Chaykin was not the best artist for this graphic novel. His pencils have a rough, blocky quality and the the spectacularly ugly color scheme (by Richard Ory and Barb Rauch) give 'Scorpio' the visual stylings of an awkwardly reimagined 1960s Pop Art production, rather than a late 80s spy adventure. 
Summing up, I can't recommend 'The Scorpio Connection'. Goodwin and the Marvel editorial staff could have done something memorable, but what they came up with simply was pedestrian. 

Friday, May 26, 2023

Book Review: Slaying the Dragon

Book Review: 'Slaying the Dragon: A Secret History of Dungeons and Dragons' by Ben Riggs
5 / 5 Stars

'Slaying the Dragon: A Secret History of Dungeons and Dragons' (293 pp.) was published by St. Martin's Press in 2022. Author Ben Riggs is active in chronicling the contemporary RPG landscape in podcasts and articles for a variety of online portals. His blog hasn't posted content since 2022, but contains articles relevant to 'Slaying the Dragon'.

I was a wargamer in the 1970s, and I have only vague memories of 'Dungeons and Dragons' (D&D). I played the games from the major publishers such as SPI and Avalon Hill. As far as I was concerned, D&D was just another one of a number of indie games that floated around the periphery of the tabletop gaming world, buying small ads in The Wargamer's Digest:

D&D advertisement in The Wargamer's Digest, 1974

Little did I know that D&D would morph from a modest, home-made game into a franchise that would come to define Planet Geek like no other properties before or since.

'Slaying the Dragon' tells the story of TSR and D&D from its start in the 1970s to 2022. It all began with Gary Gygax, a man in his mid-thirties who worked as a shoe repairman in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, and who, in his spare time, wrote about, designed, and sold, board games. 

In 1973 Gygax formed 'Tactical Studies Rules' to promote and market his properties, and in January 1974, he began selling an RPG called 'Dungeons and Dragons'. The game was assembled in the basement of Gygax's house in Lake Geneva, and immediately became popular with gaming geeks.

As author Riggs relates in 'Slaying', within a few years, D&D had become a pop culture phenomenon, and Gygax moved his enterprise into the Hotel Clair, a rather dilapidated building in downtown Lake Geneva. TSR's expansion only accelerated in the late 1970s and early 1980s when lurid stories of impressionable youth, led astray by D&D, proliferated in the national media.
William Dear's account of the life and death of D&D fan James Dallas Egbert III

But although outwardly TSR was a thriving enterprise, Riggs shows that in reality, the company based its business strategy on what proved to be an inherently risky arrangement with publisher Random House. And its management had a habit of alienating some of its most imaginative, and commercially successful, creative personnel. By the mid-1990s, TSR was experiencing increasing financial difficulties, and only the intervention of an RPG rival would enable the world of D&D to survive into the 21st century.

'Slaying the Dragon' is a very readable book. Author Riggs avoids getting too bogged down in the minutiae of tabletop RPG gaming, keeps his chapters short, and uses a large body of on-the-record statements from many former and current staff to provide 'insider' perspectives on the history of TSR and D&D.

This allows the book to appeal both to geeks, and to businesspeople. This is a rather unusual conjunction of interested parties, but Riggs does a commendable job of interlacing the actions taken by TSR's creative staffers with the actions of the managerial tiers, emphasizing that the willful separation of these two facets of the D&D enterprise was ultimately to the detriment of the company. 

Riggs does not shy from arguing that many of TSR's business problems originated with Lorraine Williams, who ousted Gary Gygax from the company in October, 1985 and installed herself as CEO. Riggs acknowledges that he was unable to persuade Williams to be interviewed for the book, and thus her side of the story is absent, but he relies on anecdotes and observations from other TSR staff, as well as company documents, to buttress this argument.

The 'hero' in the TSR narrative is Wizards of the Coast founder Peter Adkison, who purchased TSR in April 1997. Riggs portrays Adkison as the sort of boss who inherently understood what RPG gaming was all about, and realized the need to treat employees with consideration and respect. 

[ Its publication date of 2022 means that 'Slaying the Dragon' can't remark upon the current, fractious state of affairs between a reincarnated TSR, helmed by Gary's son Ernie Gygax, and Wizards of the Coast. ]

The verdict ? Whether you are an RPG and fantasy fan, or someone interested in the rise and fall of corporations, 'Slaying the Dragon' is worth reading.