Thursday, March 5, 2026
Zardoz portfolio Playboy March 1974
Monday, March 2, 2026
Book Review: The Oxygen Barons by Gregory Feeley
‘Barons’ is set several centuries in the future, at which time the bodies of the inner Solar System have been colonized or exploited for raw materials, which are delivered via mass drivers from one outpost to another.
The Moon has been terraformed and possesses a stable, breathable atmosphere and a network of rivers and large bodies of water. Its government is divided between two feuding factions, the Nearside and the Farside. These polities loosely are confederated with a variety of offworld corporations and trading blocs, who are competing for power among themselves. A particular bone of contention is the extravagant amount of oxygen needed to sustain the operation of the Moon. Some of the offworld corporations are lobbying to divert this oxygen for use in sustaining other colonies elsewhere in the system.
As the novel opens, a Nearside engineer named Galvanix is attempting to prevent an opposing faction from driving an asteroid into the Moon, a decidedly unfriendly action. He finds unexpected assistance in his task from Beryl Taggart, a cybernetically enhanced super-soldier. The first half of the book is one extended chase sequence, as Taggart and Galvanix find themselves stranded on the Farside, fleeing hostile authorities in an effort to retrieve an important database.
The novel then moves to a large space station orbiting the Earth, and from there, to the Earth itself and an entire floating city anchored off the coast of India, as the various entities referred to as the ‘Oxygen Barons’ engage a series of maneuvers designed to bring a hapless Galvanix under their control.
‘Barons’ does have its positives; every few pages another ‘gee whiz’ moment rears its head, and the physics of living and working in low-gravity environments accurately are represented.
The backstory involving the political and economic conflict surrounding the Moon never is adequately communicated to the reader. Indeed, whatever plot underlies the events in the narrative is so poorly outlined that I finished the book with no real idea of why Galvanix was such a pursued character in the first place.
Things aren’t helped by the author’s tendency to use some of the more stilted dialogue I’ve encountered in a recent hard SF novel:
Beryl answered these questions with alacrity. “Cognitive modification is negligible, since it cannot be accomplished without jeopardizing sophic integrity. If your memories and expertise were readily separable from your sense of self, they would have been decanted alone.”
A steady diet of such awkward phrasing tends to wear on the reader, and makes ‘Barons’ a too-hard slog. I only can recommend this novel to those readers with a particular affectation for hard science fiction narratives.
Sunday, March 1, 2026
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
Playboy February 1974
For an article by Malcolm Braly about an upstate New York 'fat farm,' where - gasp - the overweight are treated with fasting (no semaglutide in 1974, folks), George Hirsch provides a brilliant painting that calls to mind the subdued, luminous renditions of George Tooker.
The ongoing series, 'Playboy's History of Organized Crime,' sees Peter Palombi channel the sensibility of a pulp magazine cover to craft one of the more striking images in any Playboy of the decade. And there's also a suitably grim depiction, by George Roth ('after Edward Hopper') of a gangster meeting his end in the electric chair.
Sontag may have contributed a dud of a story, but at less than two pages, Henry Slesar's 'Nothing But Bad News' ably delivers black humor. It benefits from a fine illustration by Kinuko Craft.The cartoons in Playboy could be cruel, especially in those years before the advent of Viagra:The February interview subject is none other than Clint Eastwood, an actor who rarely gave interviews. He comes across as down-to-earth and unassuming.......carefully calibrated.
But let's not forget the nubile young women ! For February they are the 'Girls of Skiing,' and rather than digitally enhance the coloration of these scans of a five-decade-old magazine, I'll retain their rather faded coloration and provide that nostalgic, Kodachrome-style glow.......
Monday, February 23, 2026
Vintage paperback typefaces
Friday, February 20, 2026
Book Review: The Lords of Hell by Sara Harris and Lucy Freeman
Monday, February 16, 2026
Book Review: The President by Drew Pearson
Thursday, February 12, 2026
The Permanent Playboy: romance and domestic life stories
'All Through the Night,' by Nelson Algren, is about a prostitute and her pimp who are living the high life in postwar Los Angeles. Unfortunately they're busted by the police and have to leave the city. Scraping up bail money allows them to escape to Chicago. But once in Chi-town, a withdrawal from smack takes hold. Then their supply of methadone starts to run out......This story is too overwritten to be effective.
'The Marvelous Lover' features a rarity: a female author, Joyce Engelson ! The eponymous lover is named 'Porter Dobey,' which doesn't seem promising, but the first-person female narrator is happy enough with him. The story has a lumbering quality, but it does feature a twist ending.
The romantic comedies 'I Love You, Miss Irvine,' by John Wallace, and 'Thank You, Anna,' by Bill Safire, all present male fantasies very much of their time: making it with swell dames, who aren't Saving Themselves for Marriage.
Darker in tone is 'A Dish of Desire,' by J. P. Donleavy, which (with stilted prose) tells the tale of a woman who did Save herself, only to discover that her suitor, grown tired of waiting for her to 'come across,' has decided to end his pursuit because he's been getting nookie from other broads.
Wry observations about married life are provided by Erskine Caldwell in 'Advice About Women,' and 'The Double Cross-Up,' by T.K. Brown III (the latter tale prefigures, in some ways, Roald Dahl's classic short story 'The Great Switcheroo).


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