'The Texts of Festival' first was published in 1973; this Avon Books paperback edition was issued in November, 1975, with the cover artist uncredited.
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
Book Review: The Texts of Festival by Mick Farren
'The Texts of Festival' first was published in 1973; this Avon Books paperback edition was issued in November, 1975, with the cover artist uncredited.
Saturday, June 13, 2026
Penthouse June 1976
There are some good articles in this issue. Anthony Pearson's 'A Conspiracy of Silence' examines the destruction of the U.S. spy ship Liberty at the hands of the Israelis in June, 1967. Lyndon Baines Johnson, the President at that time, suppressed reporting about the attack in order to avoid turning American opinion against Israel in the Seven Day War.
The Interview is with Vincent Bugliosi (1934 - 2015) who gained fame for prosecuting the Manson Family for the 1969 Tate - LaBianca murders. Bugliosi's greatest talent was in self-promotion........
The fiction piece in this June issue is a neat little tale, set in the USA of 1997, titled 'The Technician.' Author Michael Rogers posits a near-future America where Christian fundamentalists are the major political power. The first-person narrator is a drug dealer who makes a mistake..........a mistake with hazardous consequences. This is the kind of story that would be a little too edgy for Omni (which would debut two years later).A portfolio is devoted to Chelsea Eriksen, a young lady with 'long blonde hair' and 'ice blue eyes,' and a 'free and easy California spirit.' The photos capture the California sensibility of the 1970s - an era now become myth - and the accompanying Earth Tone aesthetic. Quite a package, if you ask me........
Tuesday, June 9, 2026
Book Review: Legion from the Shadows by Karl Edward Wagner
Saturday, June 6, 2026
Wednesday, June 3, 2026
Fernandez also adapted the Isaac Asimov short story, which first was published in 1940. While I'm often less than impressed with Asimov's stuff, 'Callistan' is a good Golden Age tale and one that is well-suited for a 12-page format. Fernandez is skilled at keeping the story from being too wordy, and yet, not too compressed.
It's rare to see this kind of care and craftsmanship in this modern age of comic art. I doubt many writers who work for Marvel, DC, Image, Dark Horse, and other publishers could do as good a job in plotting and composition as Fernandez. 'The Callistan Menace' fits in well with the other content of issue five and lends credence to the magazine's cover blurb, 'The World's Greatest Illustrated Magazine.'
Sunday, May 31, 2026
Book Review: The Mexico Run by Lionel White
May is
No Place for Gringos
Month !
The cover, designed by the masterful Michael Hooks, depicted one of his wild but forlorn red-heads submissive at the feet of a hood with a .45 in his hand....The title was in yellow, as was the medallion in the upper right hand that would virtually change my life.
Gold Medal book number 663 was DEATH TAKES THE BUS by Lionel White.
That was my first Gold Medal book.
So: on to 'The Mexico Run.' It's set in the late 1960s - early 1970s, and features a Vietnam war veteran named Mark Johns as the protagonist. Johns has a scheme to import Acapulco Gold, a potent strain of Cannabis sativa, into the USA from Mexico. As schemes go, it's complicated, one that requires trusting far too many untrustworthy parties, but Johns, confident of a big payoff, is willing to take risks. It's also the case that Johns isn't very bright [the reader is given to understand that Johns's time in Vietnam has imparted a degree of fatalism to his psychology.]
With information imparted by a Vietnam colleague named 'Bongo,' Johns works some connections in the San Francisco area and finds himself a buyer. With the USA end of the op cemented, Johns next heads South of the Border to Tijuana. En route he intervenes on behalf of a lubricious hippie chick named Sharon, who is blonde, attractive, in trouble, and in need of rescue.
As Johns discovers, Sharon is good in bed, but also a magnet for attention from swarthy Mexicanos. One such Mexicano is Captain Hernando Morales, Johns's Tijuana connection and the sort of man who makes everyday, corrupt federales look like choirboys:
There's an old saying that all jails are alike and all cops are alike. This is not true. Jails in the United States are tough, often brutal. But compared to Mexican jails, they're country clubs. A certain number of police officers in the United States are vicious, cruel, and often sadistic. Sometimes they ignore the law as often as they enforce it. Compared to Mexican police, however, they are courteous, considerate, and kind; gentlemen of the old school.
Johns understands that Captain Morales is a muy mal hombre, but Morales has the necessary introductions to the proper people, including some Acapulco Gold growers, and the smuggling operation gets off to a reasonably good start. Flush with cash from his first Run, Johns returns to the Ensenada area, intent on stepping up the volume of his buys. But that's when things start to go wrong......very, very wrong........and Johns learns that Mexico indeed, is No Place for Gringos..........
'The Mexico Run' is a well-written crime novel, with a narrative sparked with episodes of nasty violence, violence with a Special Sauce derived from South of the Border malevolence. The climax of the novel is suspenseful, as Johns is obligated to make a run to a destination north of the border, a run where the slightest error can have lethal consequences.
The only weak segment of 'The Mexico Run' is in the final several pages, where some revelations are trotted out, revelations that seemed to me to be more than a little contrived.
When all is said and done, 'The Mexico Run' is another valid entry in those treatments of the perils going South of the Border holds for gringos, and it deserves a Four Star Rating.
Thursday, May 28, 2026
You can find some pretty good deals on some Marvel '2099' omnibuses in the Late Spring catalog / website, as I did with the 'Spider-Man 2099' omnibuses volumes 1 and 2 (above). If those Marvel comics from the mid-1990s are of interest to you, you may want to see what's available at the website.
Monday, May 25, 2026
Book Review: The Magic Man by Charles Beaumont
The Last Caper (1954): a sci-fi parody of the hardboiled detective story.
Summing up, 'Magic Man' has its share of duds and its share of good stories, making it another Three Star anthology. It's interesting to think of what Beaumont would have done had he not come to a too-early end.



































