Friday, June 5, 2020

Book Review: All the Time There Is

celebrating Pride Month 2020

Book Review: 'All the Time There Is' by Toby Stein

4 / 5 Stars

Here at the PorPor Books Blog, we like to celebrate Pride Month by highlighting a fiction or nonfiction book that illuminates the LGBTQ Experience. 

For June 2020, our selection is 'All the Time There Is', a novel by Toby Stein.

‘All the Time There Is’ (213 pp) first was published in hardback in 1977; this mass-market paperback edition was published by Bantam Books in July 1978.

I couldn’t find much information about Toby Stein, save that she was born in New York City in 1935, studied history, and was living in New Jersey at the time she wrote ‘All the Time There Is’. Stein published another romance novel, ‘Only the Best’, in 1984.

‘All the Time There Is’ takes place in New York City in the late 70s. The first person narrator is Anne Durham, a 43 year-old widowed for the past 11 years (her husband dropped dead of a heart attack). Anne lives in a nice apartment building in Manhattan, and works as a clerk in a shoppe that sells antique silverware. Aside from her daughter Alex, who always is trying to fix her mother up with one middle-aged man after another, Anne has few personal connections, but remains content with the single life.

Living across the hall from Anne are Charles Robinson, a well-comported man in his late thirties, and his ‘roommate’, a younger man named Raymond Elliott. Anne maintains a cordial relationship with both men.

Within the opening chapters, Raymond dies, and Anne can’t help but notice that Charles, as an outcast from society, is obliged to grieve alone. Moved to compassion, Anne decides to bake and deliver, in person, a chocolate cake to Charles. This starts a friendship that grows as Spring in the city turns into Summer, and then early Fall. 


Whenever one of the middle-aged men that Anne dates turns out to be a self-centered pig, she turns to the understanding Charles for companionship and consolation. And whenever one of Charles’s bleached-blond surfer-boy hustlers dismisses him as an aging Queen, Anne is there to provide comfort and consolation in equal measure.

Anne realizes that Charles is affectionate, sensitive, empathic, cultured, and sweet. Could it be that she has more than just friendly feelings for Charles ? And if she does………what will it take to persuade him to Switch Sides……..?!

‘All the Time There Is’ is a quick and entertaining read, and very much a product of its time and place. So, I would caution against dismissing it as another example of the wish-fulfillment genre of romance novels in which a bourgeoise white woman heroine finds true love with someone who is Different.

‘All the Time There Is’ does succeed as a portrait of New York City in the late 70s and how, even as the city was sinking into decay, the members of its upper-crust white society persisted in their rituals of regularly attending classical music concerts, doing the New York Times crossword puzzle, dining at fine restaurants, patronizing the Film Festival at Lincoln Center, strolling through Chinatown, and going for walks in evening twilight. There is an awareness that things are not right in the city - Anne refuses to walk home alone, after dark - but the lead characters are blissfully unaware of the fact that their city is turning into a crime-infested hellhole.

Summing up, ‘All the Time There Is’ is a reasonably interesting novel and while I can't say it's worth searching out, if you see it on a store shelf it might be worth picking up.

Tuesday, June 2, 2020

Judge Dredd in 'Varks'

Judge Dredd in 'Varks'
Prog 503, January 1987
2000 AD 

'An ALIEN'S eating my MUMMY' !

An immortal line of dialogue to start off this Judge Dredd adventure from January 1987.......featuring art by Kevin O'Neill, long before 1999, and his pencils for Alan Moore's The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen.............

Saturday, May 30, 2020

Book Review: Empire of Two Worlds

Book Review: 'Empire of Two Worlds' by Barrington J. Bayley
3 / 5 Stars

'Empire of Two Worlds' (157 pp) was published by Ace Books in 1972. The cover art is by John Schoenherr.

The novel is set far in the future, thousands of years after Man has settled the planet Killibol. Killibol is not a pleasant place; it's a dimly lit, gray, arid wasteland whose cities resemble giant termite mounds. Within these cities, the residents live out their lives dependent on continuous access to synthetic protein grown in massive 'tanks'. Transgressions are punished by cancellation of ration cards, forcing affected residents to starve, or fend for themselves within the ghettos occupying the bowels of the cities.

The opening chapters of 'Empire' introduce us to Klein, the first-person narrator. Klein, a resident of the city of Klittman, once had been a law-abiding member of society, but an argument with his supervisor had led to the loss of his ration card......and eventual banishment to the ghetto. 

While working in a Mud Street dive named Klamer's, Klein finds himself caught up in a mob-driven takeover. The new owner of Klamer's is a stocky, hardcase criminal overlord named Becmath. Because Klein has brains as well as brawn, Becmath invites him to become his ally in his efforts to take control of Klittman.

At first, Becmath's scheme bring results, but when the city authorities realize the threat he represents, the whole plan falls apart and Becmath, Klein, and an assortment of fellow criminals and eccentrics are forced into exile aboard a big-tired vehicle known as a sloop.

Condemned to wander the wasteland as the supplies of water and food within the sloop run out, Klein regrets allying himself with Becmath. But it turns out that Becmath has a plan: somewhere in the wasteland is the Stargate from which humans first came from Earth to Killibol. And if Becmath can find the Stargate, then travel to Earth is possible. And maybe, just maybe, Earth is not well prepared to deal with a takeover fostered by a syndicate of brutal, clever, and desperate criminals............

Perhaps reflecting the ethos of the New Wave era, 'Empire of Two Worlds' takes an offbeat approach to the action sci-fi genre by featuring reprobates as its lead characters.  Becmath and Klein are willing to visit mayhem on all and sundry, if so doing brings their goals within closer reach. They also are not above making alliances of convenience with other parties of questionable morality. These facets of 'Empire' make it an effective counter to the usual sci-fi trope of the square-jawed, noble hero dedicated to righteousness and the abolition of evil. 

Where 'Empire' suffers is in its short length, which has difficulty accommodating all of the plot developments introduced by author Bayley. The result is an overly compressed narrative in which major plot shifts take place in an almost casual manner. This can't help but lend a note of contrivance to the recounting of the adventures of the outcasts from Killibol.

The verdict ? Those readers who are fans of Barrington J. Bayley likely will want to have a copy of 'Empire of Two Worlds' in their collection. Others can pass on it without penalty.

Wednesday, May 27, 2020

Dragonslayer Part Two

Dragonslayer
Marvel Super Special No. 20, 1981
Part Two

Monday, May 25, 2020

Dragonslayer Part One

Dragonslayer
Marvel Super Special No. 20, 1981
Part One

Written by Dennis O'Neil, drawn by veteran comics artist Marie Severin, with inking by John Tartaglione, this is one of the better film-to-comic adaptions done by Marvel in the early 80s.

The film was notable in that it took a darker, even cynical tone in its approach to an otherwise standard-issue medieval fantasy theme. And although the denouement has a rather whacky note to it, it does avoid the 'brave hero slays dragon' cliche.



'Dragonslayer' was the first in what would be a steady string of fantasy films that lasted throughout the 80s. Just a year later Conan the Barbarian, The Dark Crystal, and The Sword and the Sorcerer all would hit theatres. And then there would be Ladyhawke and Willow.

I'm posting 'Dragonslayer' is two consecutive posts............Part One is below, Part Two will follow.