
Sarah Covert over at She Never Slept.com has reviewed The Evil in Pemberley House!
Check it out, won't you please?
- All new fiction set in the World of Tiers, the origin of the Wold Newton Family, Khokarsa (from Farmer's novels Hadon of Ancient Opar and Flight to Opar), and the worlds of Flesh, "The Lovers," and Greatheart Silver.
- Parallel universe and time travel stories about Philip José Farmer himself.
- A classic story, never-before-published stories, and a speech by Philip José Farmer!
"To the outside world, this man, seemingly immortal, has always worn the mask. As the legend grew, it transcended the life of any one mortal. And that legend became THE PHANTOM!
High adventure and intrigue in the African jungle, on the high seas, and in the streets! There is always justice that needs to be served, whether it’s in the present…or the past.
With an introduction by the Phantom creator’s Lee Falk’s daughter Diane Falk."
Longtime fans of Philip José Farmer’s Wold Newton Family are by now well aware of the meteor which struck near the small hamlet of Wold Newton on December 13, 1795. Two large coaches with fourteen passengers and four coachmen were within a few yards of the strike, exposing all present to ionized meteorite radiation, and causing a beneficial mutation of genes in those present. Their descendants included an extraordinary number of great crime fighters, scientists, explorers, and even criminal masterminds. As Farmer has said, “…Most of the passengers came of stock which had been producing extraordinary men and women for many generations. Some of their descendants were more than extraordinary; they bordered on, and in some cases attained, the status of superman.”
What followers of the Wold Newton mythos have long wondered is, what were those passengers and coachmen doing at Wold Newton, so far off thebeaten path, on a cold December day in the waning years of the 18th century? Was it a twist of fate, or was such a gathering inevitable?
“Is He in Hell?” takes on that question and sets up what promises to be an ongoing series of tales about these extraordinary men and women, and the origin of the Wold Newton Family.
As a bonus feature, a short note follows the story, detailing the Scarlet Pimpernel family tree and reconciling information from Baroness Orczy's Pimpernel books with Phil's fictional biography Tarzan Alive.
And for you book collectors out there, The Worlds of Philip José Farmer will be a numbered limited edition trade paperback. The release date is June 26th, during Farmercon V. We will only be printing 50 to 100 copies more than are pre-ordered, so to be sure you get a copy of this book, send an email to mike @ pjfarmer.com and reserve your copy today. You don't have to pay for the book when you pre-order and if you request, the book will be signed by those contributors who happen to be at FarmerCon V, which is also acting as a launch party for the book.Copies are limited and already going fast, so contact mike @ pjfarmer.com and reserve your copy now!
In addition, we’ve just bought a few other new titles:
– The Evil in Pemberley House (Philip José Farmer and Win Scott Eckert) — a darkly erotic novel that is part of Farmer’s Wold Newton canon. The limited edition will include a chapbook with a whole host of unpublished background material.
The promotional image to the right is by the extraordinary Keith Howell.... This Played in Peoria?
- by Art Sippo
A Whale of a Time
- by Leo Queequeg Tincrowdor
Tongues of the Moon
- by Philip José Farmer
--- illustrated by John Streleckis
The Voice of Farmer in My Vermiform Appendix
- by Rhys Hughes
Creative Mythography: Excessively Diverted, or, Coming to Pemberley House
- by Win Scott Eckert
Farmerphile Interviews Win Scott Eckert
Excerpt from The Evil in Pemberley House
- by Philip José Farmer & Win Scott Eckert
--- illustrated by Keith Howell
Say, What's the Big Idea?
- by Michael Carroll
The Doc Ravage Presidential Campaign
- by Rick Lai
Bibliophile
- by Paul Spiteri
Boris the Bear: Wold Newton and Philip José Farmer
- by Steve Mattsson
Oh the Humanity
- by Dennis E. Power
Greartheart Silver
- by Philip José Farmer
Doc Wildman's Coat of Arms
- by Philip José Farmer
--- illustrated by Keith Howell