The Dark Man, 2015 edition on Kindle

I see that the 2015 edition of The Dark Man: The Journal of Robert E. Howard and Pulp Fiction Studies now has a low-priced Kindle ebook edition for download. Looking at the Contents pages of the 2014-2017 issues, 2015 is the one of that will be of most interest to Lovecraftians — for the award-nominated essay “The Outsider Scholar: Robert E. Howard, H. P. Lovecraft, and Scholarly Identity”. Perhaps also for a detailed account of the writing of a PhD thesis on pulp and mythic politics and its wrangling through the current university system. I see that the same thesis is now available in book form.

Marvel Masterworks: Killraven

I’m pleased to see that the latest Marvel Masterworks volume has just been published. It’s the ‘restored’ 1970s Killraven run from Don McGregor. This was one of the most interesting of Marvel’s original ‘sci-fi’ characters of the 1970s, along with the likes of Deathlok and Warlock. It was an update on H.G. Wells’s The War of the Worlds, Wells being out of copyright in the USA by then. The Martian tripods return in 2001, having genetically engineered themselves to be immune to earth’s bacteria, and successfully take over the earth through mind-manipulation.

Killraven started off marvellously well for the first two issues (#18 and #19), with no less than Neal Adams and Howard Chaykin as artists, and solid sci-fi writing from Gerry Conway. But then it wobbled into rather humdrum ‘villain of the month’ territory, and Marvel didn’t help matters by swopping in different artists and some novice inkers for a few issues. Yet the writing remained solid, if rather uncertain of its direction, and after a few issues Killraven started to become ‘high-concept sci-fi with a fantasy edge’ that actually kind-of worked. It was also ahead of its time somewhat, in terms of the focus on genetic engineering as an underlying technology which enabled the straddling of the two genres and the production of some fine monsters.

After its strong opening issues the title remained unspectacular from #20 – #24. Then #25 popped with some very pleasing layouts and pencils from a one-off stint by the ‘Neal Adams-alike’ Rich Buckler (he created Deathlok). Then it slumped again into filler for the very next issue. The bimonthly title probably looked doomed at that point, to the remaining regular buyers.

But Killraven was then rescued by committing the outstanding artist P. Craig Russell to the title from #27, and also by giving #27 an excellent Jim Starlin cover.

From then on it spiralled up and out into something much more interesting and beautiful and philosophical, and continued for a fairly long run of issues by the standards of the time (Marvel was cancel-happy in the mid-late 1970s). Though, even once the title got rolling under McGregor/Russell, Marvel was still forced to issue two very skippable ‘filler’ issues (#30, #33) which must have put a big crimp in follow-on sales.

Incidentally, I never knew that Don McGregor “was born in Providence, Rhode Island”, and that he grew up there. So there you go, Providence worthies… you have another popular writer to your credit. And since he began his career with a lengthy stint at horror specialists Warren, and then moved to Marvel for many years to work mainly on their horror titles, he was also a horror writer. Many of the monsters and aliens in Killraven are also distinctly Lovecraftian and tentacular.

Anyway, the new Killraven Masterworks collection is now available as a download for the Kindle at a sensible price, and weighs in at 488 pages or about five hours of reading. They’ve all been reprinted in paper before, as the cheap Essential Marvel: Essential Killraven Volume 1 (2005), though in a much less high-grade format than the Masterworks series offers. I already have the issues, so don’t need the new Masterworks, but the free sample looks great.

The new book tells a complete story, and of course includes Don McGregor and P. Craig Russell’s outstanding Amazing Adventures issue #39 — which I was greatly enamoured of as a youth and which still holds up very well today. It’s such a beautiful thing that it’s well worth picking up in its sniff-able original paper form if you can find it, as are the other Russell issues. Sadly #39 was the last of the Killraven run, as Marvel then cancelled the title.

Thankfully, Marvel later relented to fan-pressure and in 1983 gave the same McGregor/Russell team a fine graphic novel. This firmly and satisfyingly concluded the story and is included in the new Marvel Masterworks volume. It changed the design of the characters a little, which may be annoying to some, and the colouring seemed a little garish when read straight after the muted newsprint of the comics. But, with so many changes of artist and inker, by that point in your reading you’ll be used to such changes.

All in all, it’s a coherent if meandering story, has some great ‘pulp sci-fi’ chops, interesting characters and concepts, and superbly evil villains and monsters. Most of all, it has heart.

Art from #39.

There was a later attempt to reboot the character, in a 2002 mini-series of print comics, but despite slick art it fell flat and added little to the original story.

A Decadent dissolving…

I see that the 2013 Kindle edition of H.P. Lovecraft: New England Decadent has vanished from Amazon UK and USA. The extended essay was an early and well-regarded examination of Lovecraft’s ‘decadent’-influenced period (which lasted to about 1926), both in his writing and life.

So it’s just as well I got the ebook when I did, back in 2013. Thankfully I find that it’s still on my Kindle, as the print-on-demand paper price is a bit steep.

Why has it vanished? Well, it was republished in a corrected form for WaterFire Providence in late summer 2013, as a fundraiser. So my guess would be that they were only permitted to offer it for a time-limited five-year period?

The Horror Stories of Robert E. Howard – on sale

The Kindle ebook edition of the Del Ray The Horror Stories of Robert E. Howard is currently at a mere £1.49 in the UK and about $2.49 in the USA.

The Amazon page also links to a downloadable audiobook on Audible, but be warned that in the UK it’s definitely not the same as the proper audio CD which is narrated by Robertson Dean…

Those in the USA can get the proper Tantor Media CD (shown above) as a download at the Tantor website for a current price of just $6.99. It appears that Tantor can’t sell it into the UK or Europe due to copyright on a few of the stories, but you might have some luck via an American friend or via a VPN. Be wary of pushing credit card or PayPal details through a VPN, though.

Friday “picture postals” from Lovecraft: Marblehead point

“I came to Marblehead in the twilight, & gazed long upon its hoary magick. I threaded the tortuous, precipitous streets, some of which an horse can scarce climb, & in which two waggons cannot pass. I talked with old men & revell’d in old scenes, & climb’d pantingly over the crusted cliffs of snow to the windswept height where cold winds blew over desolate roofs & evil birds hovered over a bleak, deserted, frozen tarn.” — H.P. Lovecraft, letter to Kleiner, 11th January 1923.

tarn, from the Middle English, a small and usually circular lake located high in bleak moorland hills or mountainous terrain.

The Irish and the Origins of American Popular Culture

Back in February Taylor & Francis published the Routledge book The Irish and the Origins of American Popular Culture. It has a curiously dull and utterly irrelevant front-cover, which it seems that the entire series has been lumbered with. One would have though, for a $100+ book, that they might have made a bit more effort…

[cover image]

But, despite the shovelware cover, the contents page is far more promising and enticing. Two chapters may especially interest some readers of this blog…

* Chapter 3, “The Weird Tales, Spicy Detectives, and Startling Stories of Irish America: Pulp Magazines”:

“This chapter considers the pulp magazines that dominated early American popular culture and evaluates the profound influence they had in the shaping of Irish-American identity. Several notable types of pulp hero (cowboy, detective, G-Man, soldier, athlete, masked hero, fantasy adventurer) were defined in large part by Irish stereotypes and counter-stereotypes. Famous pulp characters like Hopalong Cassidy, Lance Kilkenny, Race Williams, Sailor Steve Costigan, and Super Detective Jim Anthony have roots in the Irish-American experience of the era. These characters played upon notions of the Irish as figures straddling the border between civilization and savagery to evoke an image of a new kind of American who was well equipped for the rapidly changing and chaotic century. Irish-American pulp stories often lack explicitly Irish cultural or historical references and instead focus on describing Irishness as a more generic Americanness. Similarly, the Irish-American character moved further from ethnic stereotype to become a generic masculine ideal. In several ways, the pulp magazines chronicle the formation of an assimilated Irish identity in the United States. This chapter presents a detailed case study of one of the most famous Irish-American pulp writers, Robert E. Howard, and his most famous pulp character, Conan the Barbarian.”

* Chapter 5, “Irish in the Panels and Gutters: Comic Strips”:

“The very first American newspaper comic strip character, The Yellow Kid, was a precocious Irish street urchin living in the tenements of New York. This bald-headed, big-eared Irish-American kid kicked off an era of innovation in American comics. Soon, Americans became enamoured with other Irish comic characters like Happy Hooligan and Jiggs & Maggie. Even later sensations like Dick Tracy and Little Orphan Annie participated in the public discourse on Irish ethnic identity and the assimilation of the Irish into mainstream American society. This chapter traces the development of Irish characterization in comics from the very beginning through the mid-century. Attention is given both to the work of famously Irish-American cartoonists like George McManus, who constructed his Irish characters from a perspective inside the ethnic group, and to non-Irish cartoonists like Harold Gray, who worked from the outside. Whereas many comic strips reveal a familiarity with old Irish stereotypes, some of the most notable comics of the era demonstrate a dynamic reformulation and hybridization of Irish identity in the popular imagination.”

Catalogo Vegetti della Letteratura Fantastica

I see that Catalogo Vegetti della Letteratura Fantastica (beta) is a large online and public bibliography of 1,444 works, published in Italian, by and about Howard Phillips Lovecraft. It also has smaller bibliographies for Robert E. Howard, Bradbury, Clarke, and others in Italy.

They also have a call for contributors, though Andrea Bonazzi states (see comments, below this post) that it hasn’t been updated since 2010 when its author passed away. Looks like it could do with some new contributors, to update with 2009-2019. That would be a nice addition to the C.V. of some aspiring young cataloguer, and (in Italian) it shouldn’t be too big of a job.

It’s presented under the auspices of the Cataloguers’ Guild of Italy, and the newer Catalogo is a CC-Attribution continuation of Vegetti’s older Catalogo della Fantascienza, Fantasy e Horror.

Conan the Barbarian: the Original Marvel Years

The fondly-remembered 1970s Conan comics of Roy Thomas and Barry Windsor-Smith / Gil Kane / John Buscema comics are to get a “full remaster” from Marvel, presumably working from the Marvel archives.

CONAN THE BARBARIAN #1-26 from 1970-1973 – as well as material from 1971’s SAVAGE TALES #1 and #4, CHAMBER OF DARKNESS #4, and CONAN CLASSIC #1-11 … all painstakingly restored to match the beauty of the original editions.

Presumably that means a remaster that has them looking like you just bought them off the news-stand in the 1970s? Once fixed, they’re to be then manfully strapped into a $125 / £85 hardback. Oversize and at 784 pages, you’ll probably need some Conan-style iron wristbands and rippling arms to even lift it!

Pre-ordering now, to ship at the end of January 2019 as Conan the Barbarian: the Original Marvel Years.

Sherlock Holmes and Science Fiction

Restored hi-res artwork by Tom Walker, originally split across two pages for the short article “Sherlock Holmes and Science Fiction”, New Frontiers fanzine, August 1960.

It trailed a forthcoming anthology book titled The Science-fictional Sherlock Holmes, which had the same illustration on its cover and which now appears to be rather rare and collectable…

The authors apparently “Knew Their Stuff about the Holmes conventions and respected them” according to one reviewer, in contrast to later anthology plumpers.