Friday, April 21, 2006

New STAR TREK movie news - and some Trek continuity geek comments on eonline.com

From cnn.com and various news sources:
Report: 'Star Trek' set for '08 revival - Variety: J.J. Abrams to take the helm.

This appears to be the real deal, straight from the pages of Variety.

And of course, as with all things Star Trek, there are already people going on about "continuity." This guy Eckert, for instance, from an article on eonline.com.

Hmmm!

They wanted to talk to me because I wrote the web-based (and unofficial, non-Paramount approved) Star Trek Annotated Timeline. According to the hit counter, I'm getting about a hit per minute.

Not a bad deal.

Friday, April 14, 2006

Even MORE Locus News

Gary K. Wolfe did a very nice "Short Take" review of Myths for the Modern Age: Philip José Farmer’s Wold Newton Universe in the April 2006 issue of Locus.

Philip José Farmer fans should really pick up this issue. Wolfe gives a lot of well-deserved space to Farmer, and also reviews the latest Farmerian offerings, including The Best of Philip José Farmer, Strange Relations, and Farmerphile: The Magazine of Philip José Farmer.

Speaking of Farmerphile, issue no. 4 should be out by the end of April. Give it a look!

Friday, March 10, 2006

More Locus news

Myths for the Modern Age: Philip José Farmer's Wold Newton Universe got a shout out in the March 2006 issue of Locus as a New and Notable Book! You can also see it at Locus Online.

Also, the Bison Books website is now listing the new edition of Tarzan Alive as available. It's still not listed as shipping from Amazon, but hopefully soon.

Wednesday, January 25, 2006

Another MYTHS review

Rias Nuninga, of the Philip José Farmer International Bibliography, has kindly posted a snippet of a review of Myths for the Modern Age: Philip José Farmer's Wold Newton Universe from the British SF magazine SFX.

Since this is not on the SFX website, I'll just quote the snippet here:

"Nick Setchfield wrote in his review in the British SF and fantasy magazine SFX: 'There's fun to be had with this bloodline of the gods, and the book immerses itself in sanity-melting levels of minutiae. We learn how HP Lovecraft's Cthulhu have infiltrated the sunlit world, how Mowgli is kin to Tarzan, how a zillion different Zorros can be shoe-horned into one definitive history. It's a dry intense read but if the thought of Sherlock Holmes being great uncle to MacGyver makes you smirk, then this one's for you.' (SFX #139, January 2006)"

Rias himself has nice things to say about MYTHS (scroll down to the bottom of the first page of his site and then click on News & What's new), and you should really check out his site for all the cover scans and info on PJF books around the world.

Monday, January 23, 2006

Locus Online's "Best of 2005"

MYTHS FOR THE MODERN AGE: PHILIP JOSÉ FARMER'S WOLD NEWTON UNIVERSE just made Locus Online's "Best of 2005" list as the best "nonfiction" book of 2005.

The "Best Of" list is also prominently linked from the front page of LocusOnline.

This is a wonderful tribute to Phil Farmer's incredible imagination, and to the amazing inspiration that he has been to all of the book's contributors. My thanks to everyone for their fantastic contributions to the book, and to Chris Roberson and Allison Baker of MonkeyBrain Books for publishing it.

I have sent a note to Mike Croteau of The Official Philip José Farmer Home Page, and am sure that he'll be able to pass on this great news and our thanks to Phil and Bette Farmer.

I think there may just be something to this whole "Wold Newton" business. :-)

Saturday, January 14, 2006

"The Eye of Oran" in TALES OF THE SHADOWMEN 2

A note from Jean-Marc Lofficier of Black Coat Press:

"My friend Steve told me all of the TOTS2 (contributors, review copies, etc.) went out last week as planned.

General reminders: those of you inclined to do so post reviews of our books on Amazon and B&N.com -- length doesn't matter -- 2 lines and 4 or 5 stars will do!

JM"

Like its predecessor, TOTS2 is chock full of Wold Newtonian and pulp fiction goodness.



Here is just a partial list of characters or references in the anthology: Arsène Lupin, Fantômas, Harry Dickson, the Phantom of the Opera, Sherlock Holmes, Zenith the Albino, Doc Ardan (Doc Savage), D'Artagnan, Doctor Omega (Doctor Who), Irene Adler, Doctor Natas (Fu Manchu), the Nyctalope, Violet Holmes, the Sâr Dubnotal, Judex, John
Devil, Frankenstein, Countess Cagliostro, James Bond, the Moonstone, the Lovecraftian Mythos, and more.

While one can order directly from the link above, TOTS2 is also available at
Amazon and B&N.com.

My story, "The Eye of Oran," was a bit of an experiment for me and the SHADOWMEN anthologies in a couple ways. It's set against the backdrop of another, larger story, a novel by Albert Camus, although one need not have read Camus' novel to follow my story (one hopes). Second, while the story does use previously established characters (that's what a SHADOWMEN anthology is about, after all), Jean-Marc Lofficier did allow me to branch out a bit and create some original protagonists, both of whom I've become quite fond of and intend to use in a continuing cycle of stories. One of them, at least, will play an integral if secondary part in "the novel."

Of course, nothing ever turns out exactly as one plans, so we'll see how all this goes.

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

More MYTHS listings and TARZAN ALIVE update

Ain't It Cool News has listed MYTHS FOR THE MODERN AGE: PHILIP JOSÉ FARMER'S WOLD NEWTON UNIVERSE as one of five cool (well, what did you expect from AICN?) selections on Prof. Santa's Best Christmas List Ever. Who am I to disagree?

Locus Online has listed MYTHS on its new books for early December. It's great to be noticed.

Amazon.com has listed the new, definitive Bison Books edition of Philip José Farmer's seminal "biography" TARZAN ALIVE, the book that gave rise to the Wold Newton mythos and "game" in which characters are treated as real persons interacting in a real world. I have contributed the Afterword to the new edition, which also includes an introduction from veteran SF writer Mike Resnick, as well as two Farmer pieces never before collected with TARZAN ALIVE: “An Exclusive Interview with Lord Greystoke” and “Extracts from the Memoirs of ‘Lord Greystoke.’”

University of Nebraska's Bison Books, has also updated their website with more detailed information about the new edition of TARZAN ALIVE, which is scheduled for April 2006.

Friday, November 25, 2005

Taking a cue...

... from some other pals:

Jess Nevins

Chuck Loridans

Chris Carey


I've gone ahead and indulged myself.



Me and Pete Coogan with the ARC, San Diego Comic Con, July 2005




Here's me at the Tattered Cover bookstore in Highlands Ranch, Colorado. They were kind (or smart) enough to use precious shelf space with the book cover displayed






What the hell, you only get your first book published once, right?

Monday, November 07, 2005

A Wold Newton book review from the editors at the Barnes & Noble Review

Paul Goat Allen of the Barnes & Noble Review has just posted a review of Myths for the Modern Age: Philip José Farmer's Wold Newton Universe which is lovely, just lovely.

"Informative, witty, and endlessly fascinating."
"[Appeals] to literary scholars, genre aficionados, and lay readers alike."

I couldn't ask for more. I am so glad that people are getting this book.

Monday, October 24, 2005

Several bits of good news to take note of…

According to Chris Roberson, intrepid publisher of MonkeyBrain Books, “MYTHS FOR THE MODERN AGE: PHILIP JOSÉ FARMER'S WOLD NEWTON UNIVERSE was mentioned in this week's Publishers Weekly, in the SF/Fantasy/Horror Notes section. Not a review, but nice to be noticed!”

Folks who ordered direct from MonkeyBrain are starting to receive their copies. Apparently Barnes & Noble is also starting to ship.

And I’ve made my second pro fiction sale. Jean-Marc Lofficier of Black Coat Press has accepted my story, “The Eye of Oran,” for TALES OF THE SHADOWMEN, VOLUME 2: GENTLEMEN OF THE NIGHT. The story takes place in Oran, Algeria, during the 1946 events of Albert Camus' THE PLAGUE.

So all in all I’m fairly pleased right now.

Wednesday, October 19, 2005

MYTHS FOR THE MODERN AGE Has Arrived!

The contributor copies of MYTHS FOR THE MODERN AGE: Philip José Farmer's Wold Newton Universe arrived today, and they look great! As I have notified the contributors, I will be sending them their copies ASAP.

In terms of when it will actually ship to customers, book stores, etc., the MonkeyBrain folks told me today that the books should start showing up in book stores the middle of next month, or thereabouts.

This is a Big Deal and everyone involved -- Rick Lai, Pete Coogan, Matthew Baugh, Mark Brown, Loki Carbis, John Small, Jess Nevins, Dennis Power, Chuck Loridans, Chris Carey, Cheryl Huttner, Brad Mengel, and Art Bollmann -- as well as Phil & Bette Farmer, Mike Croteau of the Official Philip José Farmer Home Page, and Chris & Allison at MonkeyBrain Books, has my thanks and my Congratulations!

Wednesday, October 12, 2005

2 more Black Forest 2 reviews which mention the Wold Newton article...

... and they both even managed to spell "Wold" correctly!

For fans of the Wold Newton Universe, this is an encouraging comment, I think: "The explanation of the Wold Newton Universe provides a certain authentication of both stories [THE BLACK FOREST and THE WICKED WEST], making them that much more intense."

http://www.silverbulletcomicbooks.com/reviews/112857310779388.htm


I don't necessarily agree with the next reviewer's take on the BLACK FOREST 2 story itself, although I should mention that one definitely needs to read the first BLACK FOREST graphic novel for a better understanding of what's happening in the second. On a brighter note, the reviewer gets what the Wold Newton Universe is all about, which means that my article "The Black Forest and the Wold Newton Universe" did its job in 1,000 words or less. And I don't mind one bit that the reviewer called it "non-comics-based continuity geekery" and "metablivion."

http://www.comicbookgalaxy.com/breakdowns_415.html

Sunday, September 25, 2005

Another Wold Newton book review & a review of Black Forest 2

Ron Fortier, modern pulpster extraordinaire (NOW Comics’ THE GREEN HORNET, TERMINATOR 2: THE BURNING EARTH, BROTHER GRIM; HOUNDS OF HELL (The Moon Man vs. Dr. Satan), etc.) has posted a very nice review of MYTHS FOR THE MODERN AGE: PHILIP JOSÉ FARMER’S WOLD NEWTON UNIVERSE.

Also, here is a review of THE BLACK FOREST 2: CASTLE OF SHADOWS, which is a great sequel to last year’s smash BLACK FOREST graphic novel, and which also features a backup article by yours truly on the Black Forest and the Wold Newton Universe.

Okay, the reviewer calls it the “World” Newton Universe, but whatever. :-)

Friday, September 09, 2005

Cover art to new edition of Philip José Farmer's TARZAN ALIVE

A month ago I turned in my Afterword to the new edition of TARZAN ALIVE (Bison Books, 2006). I didn't hear much back, and became worried that perhaps they didn't care for it. (Usual writer's insecurity, so what else is new?)

The link to TARZAN ALIVE on the Bison website has been updated, and the cover art is now up. It's the art from the 1972 Esquire magazine article featuring Phil Farmer's "Exclusive Interview with Lord Greystoke" (which is also included in the new TARZAN ALIVE edition).



I love this cover, for a variety of reasons. Click on the cover image see an enlarged version.... I guess they liked my Afterword. I'm pretty happy about this. :-)

Win

Monday, August 29, 2005

Final WOLD NEWTON book cover

John Picacio and Chris Roberson did a bang-up job... It came down to the quote from Philip José Farmer, or the Wold Newton meteor seen in previous versions of the art, and they chose the quote. As much as I love the meteor, I think they made the right choice!



Farmer's quote is hard to read in this image, so click on it for a larger view.

Sunday, August 21, 2005

Another Wold Newton book review

So I'm suffering a bit of exhaustion from working too many weekends, and I finally have a weekend to completely vegetate and get re-energized. I settle in to finally watch more of the Universal horror legacy collections I got last Christmas, plus a couple more episodes of Star Trek: The Original Series on DVD.

After a whole weekend of geeking out on:
“The Return of the Archons”
“A Taste of Armageddon”
Werewolf of London
She-Wolf of London
The Invisible Man
The Invisible Man Returns
The Invisible Woman
Invisible Agent

and Revenge of the Invisible Man

…I finally go upstairs to a quick check on e-mail before bed, and I find this in my Inbox, a review from the Agony Column of Myths for the Modern Age: Philip José Farmer’s Wold Newton Universe.

Very nice. It’s been a good weekend.

Friday, August 12, 2005

Afterword to TARZAN ALIVE

Oh yeah... I also turned in the Afterword to Bison Books' new edition of Farmer's Tarzan Alive this week.

http://unp.unl.edu/bookinfo/5028.html

What the Bison Books website doesn't yet note is that the new edition will also include Farmer's "Interview with Lord Greystoke," and "Extracts from the Memoirs of Lord Greystoke." So this really is a definitive edition, worth picking up even if you have a previous edition.

Hope they like the Afterword. Now back to furiously doing the final proofing Myths for the Modern Age: Philip José Farmer's Wold Newton Universe.

Press Release: FARMERPHILE: The Magazine of Philip José Farmer

FARMERPHILE: The Magazine of Philip José Farmer

Issue No. 1 - July 2005 - On Sale Now

FARMERPHILE is a quarterly digest devoted to making available previously unpublished writings by Hugo Award-winning author and SFWA Grandmaster Philip José Farmer.

The first ten issues of FARMERPHILE will serialize the first-time publication of Up from the Bottomless Pit, Philip José Farmer’s “lost” novel about the ultimate ecological disaster in the oil industry. Each of the initial ten issues will also feature a heretofore unpublished short story or article by Farmer, as well as a regular column on Creative Mythography by Wold Newton scholar Win Scott Eckert, editor of Myths for the Modern Age: Philip José Farmer’s Wold Newton Universe. Future issues are scheduled to include articles on PJF & Tarzan, Ancient Opar, Riverworld, The World of Tiers, and tributes from the top science fiction authors of our day. Fabulously illustrated by such talented artists as Charles Berlin, Keith Howell, and Karl Kauffman.

----------------------------------------------------

Contents for Issue No. 1 - July 2005:

The Roller Coaster Ride with Phil Farmer
by Bette Farmer

The Face that Launched a Thousand Eggs
by Philip José Farmer
illustrated by Charles Berlin

Creative Mythography: A Nova of Genetic Splendor
by Win Scott Eckert

Bibliophile: Inside Outside
by Paul Spiteri

Daring to be Farmer
by Joe Haldeman

Up from the Bottomless Pit
by Philip José Farmer
illustrated by Keith Howell

-----------------------------------------------------

Complete ordering information for FARMERPHILE may be found at:

http://pjfarmer.com/farmerphile.htm

Wednesday, July 20, 2005

Philip José Farmer - Trip Report

Earlier this month, on very short notice, I was invited to visit Philip José Farmer and his wife, Bette. Fortunately I was able to accept the invitation.

It was a pleasure meeting Art Bollmann on my Chicago layover and I am glad that we had almost two hours to chat, non-stop.

Peoria was great. The Farmers are extremely gracious people. When they heard I was willing to travel there just for a 4-hour visit on July 5 (but arriving in Peoria on the night of July 4), they revised their invitation, suggested I come in a little earlier on July 4... And stay over at their house. Which Mike Croteau (of www.pjfarmer.com) and I, of course, gladly accepted. :-)

The original plans called for taking Phil and Bette out for dinner, or at least for Mike and I to get to take-out and bring it to their house. Instead, we arrived to discover that Bette had cooked a full meal for us. (!)

Phil really appreciated the card that some folks contributed to – thanks again to those folks who sent something on very short notice. Phil very carefully read the card with all the comments, and Bette was very pleased: "Is this for us to keep?"

After arriving to Bette's surprise dinner, we all sat down to chat a bit. Phil is a very quiet man, but he was obviously interested in our conversation. Bette is talkative and vivacious.

I noticed that most of their DVDs were of classic comedy (Marx Bros, 3 Stooges, etc.), so when Mike gave them a complete set of the Jeeves & Wooster television episodes, they were thrilled. We watched the first episode, and Phil had a grin on his face the whole time.

I gave Bette and Phil the new Zorro novel by Isabel Allende on CD, and Phil was fascinated reading the cover description. When I told him that Zorro had been incorporated into the WNU, he said, "That's a good idea!" and then half-jokingly grumbled, "I should have thought of that."

Of course, Mike and I are younger guys, so after Phil retired for the evening, we stayed up about another hour talking with Bette. After that, Mike started going through material in the basement, looking for the odd gem here or there.

(This is all with Phil and Bette's knowledge and blessing -- she told him which boxes to look in. Whatever Mike finds of interest, he works with Phil and Bette to determine what to do with it; post it on www.pjfarmer.com, put it in the new upcoming fanzine, FARMERPHILE; list it for sale; etc. Farmer fans can always find items of interest on Mike's website; just check regularly at www.pjfarmer.com.)

Meanwhile, I was let loose in another part of their basement, the room that has all Phil's books, and originals or prints of his various book covers.

We finally crashed about 2:00 am, and roused around 8 or 9 (I was too groggy to note the time with any degree of precision).

The morning saw us chatting us bit more with Phil and Bette. The flow of conversation didn't really allow me to address specific questions, and most of Phil's answers are open-ended anyway. ;-)

One that I did have a chance to ask, was the Lois Lane reference his DOC SAVAGE biography. Did he really mean to incorporate Lois Lane, Clark Kent, and even Superman? Answer: it was a joke.

Speaking of jokes, Phil has a very sharp sense of humor, and even though many of his answers were, short, or cryptic, they were almost universally humorous. We also discussed how, in the end, the bios are a grand example of tricksterism, in that TARZAN ALIVE starts out very seriously, drawing the reader into the Game ("this is all real"), and by the end of DOC SAVAGE: HIS APOCALYPTIC LIFE, we have a talking dog in the Wold Newton Universe (WNU). Phil got a chuckle out of that.

I learned that Phil was one of the sci-fi writers approached by Gene Roddenberry to help shape STAR TREK. Unfortunately, Phil's ideas were *too* realistic. According to Roddenberry, TREK still needed to be accessible to the "grandmothers in Iowa," and Phil's concepts would not have "made it so."

However, both Phil and Bette acknowledged that STAR TREK turned out pretty well, all things considered (network issues, ratings, mass appeal considerations, etc.).

We also got on the topic of some of our favorite British TV, both comedy and genre. When I mentioned that THE PRISONER was very well done, and one of my all-time favorites, Phil nodded vigorously in agreement.

That, along with a letter Phil wrote to the BAKER STREET JOURNAL back in the early '70s in which he indicates his familiarity with, and some degree of fondness for, THE MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E., was personally gratifying, since I put in THE PRISONER and U.N.C.L.E. in very early rounds of the WNU Crossover Chronology.

After heading back to the basement for another round of looking for goodies, Bette made us lunch, and we spent the rest of our time talking on the enclosed back porch. Phil graciously signed my TARZAN ALIVE and DOC SAVAGE: HIS APOCALYPTIC LIFE, and before we knew it, it was time to go.

When it came time to leave, we had one stop to make on the way to the airport (well, not quite "on the way" :-). We went by Phil's alma mater, Bradley University, as apparently there was a trophy in the Field House that Phil had won. We found the trophy (second place for the track team, 1940, along with a group picture in which we found a youthful image of Phil).

It was the trip of a lifetime.

Monday, June 27, 2005

Meeting Philip José Farmer

I'm headed to Peoria in July 4-5 to finally meet Philip José Farmer in person. Needless to say, I'm fairly nervous, and hopefully my conversation won't be punctuated by too many "uhs" and "ers."

Hopefully I'll have some interesting conversations to report back on, and some neat pictures too.

Oh, and there is another interview with me online, this time courtesy of the fine folks at Intempol. The interview is here.

Anyway, if anyone has any burning questions that they'd like me to ask Mr. Farmer, please let me know. This is not an interview, and I'm not going to be sitting there, pen in hand, taking notes. But I'll do my best.

Friday, June 17, 2005

The Black Forest 2

There an article/interview here with Todd Livingston, one of the
creators of THE BLACK FOREST 2. It's about 3/4 down on the page.


The story sounds absolutely fantastic, and we get a bonus WICKED WEST tale too!

As far as I know, this is the first mention of my Wold Newton essay which is a backup feature.

I like what he has to say about it. ;-)

Thursday, June 02, 2005

Tarzan Alive - the new edition

I received a copy of Philip José Farmer's Doc Savage: His Apocalyptic Life and about 10-15 Doc Savage paperback reprints from a family friend when I was nine years old, in 1975. The first Doc I read was, I think, Meteor Menace. Farmer's book was a great introduction to the character, but the crossover with the Wold Newton family tree probably scarred me for life, but in a good way. I was so young and impressionable at that age that I couldn't help but think of the characters in the terms in which Farmer presented them, i.e., that they were all related through this cosmic event (the Wold Newton meteor strike).

Unfortunately, I was not able to locate a copy of Tarzan Alive (with the other half of the family tree) until it was reprinted in 1981, but of course once I read it, I became more entrenched than ever in the Wold Newton concept.

Unfortunately, these books have been out of print for almost 25 years. So I'm very pleased to announce that Bison Books (University of Nebraska Press) is reprinting Tarzan Alive, currently slated for publication in Spring 2006. Bison Books has recently published other genre books, including ERB titles from the Venus, Mars, Pellucidar, and Caspak series, as well as Edwin Arnold's Gullivar of Mars.

More details on the reprint of Tarzan Alive are on the Official Philip José Farmer Home Page, including science-fiction writer Mike Resnick's involvement in writing an Introduction to the new edition.

And I am not too humble to neglect mentioning something else that has not yet been announced on the Official Philip José Farmer Home Page (but will be soon). I have been asked to write an Afterword for the new edition, which is probably the greatest honor and thrill I can think of, other than the upcoming publication of Myths for the Modern Age: Philip José Farmer's Wold Newton Universe.

Now I (and Mike Croteau of the Official PJF Home Page, who has been an immense help) need to get working on Bison Books for a new edition of Doc Savage: His Apocalyptic Life.

Tuesday, April 26, 2005

Who's Going to Take Over the World When I'm Gone?



Since some other contributors to MYTHS FOR THE MODERN AGE: PHILIP JOSÉ FARMER'S WOLD NEWTON UNIVERSE (now available for Pre-Order from Amazon), have seen fit to post briefly about their essays, I thought I'd do the same.

"Introduction: Myths for the Modern Age: Farmer’s Wold Newton Family and Shared Universe" introduces the Wold Newton concept, provides a complete listing of Farmer's Wold Newton works (and some peripheral ones), and discusses how various Wold Newton "Game"-players have gone about expanding upon a shared universe.

"Who's Going to Take Over the World When I'm Gone? (A Look at the Genealogies of Wold Newton Family Super-Villains and Their Nemeses)" builds upon a few key facts provided in other articles included in MYTHS, and then along the way we learn more about the genealogy of Professor Moriarty(s), Fu Manchu and his daughter Fah Lo Suee, Doc Savage, and the Smiths (as in Sir Denis Nayland, not Morrisey's band). And what would this excursion be without some references to James Bond, U.N.C.L.E., Master of Kung Fu, and Kerouac. Yes, Kerouac.

If you haven't seen it yet, here is the cover to MYTHS by Hugo-nominated artist John Picacio. Amazing.

Monday, April 25, 2005

Sunday, March 20, 2005

Wold Newton book contents

I can finally announce the contents for MYTHS FOR THE MODERN AGE: PHILIP JOSÉ FARMER'S WOLD NEWTON UNIVERSE (formerly titled CREATIVE MYTHOGRAPHY) (pre-order here)

Introduction: Myths for the Modern Age
Win Scott Eckert

Wold-Newtonry
Dr. Peter M. Coogan

The Arms of Tarzan
Philip José Farmer

The Secret History of Captain Nemo
Rick Lai

From Pygmalion to Casablanca: The Higgins Genealogy
Mark K. Brown

A Reply To "The Red Herring"
Philip José Farmer

The Daughters of Greystoke
Chuck Loridans

The Green Eyes Have It - Or Are They Blue?
Christopher Paul Carey

The Two Lord Ruftons
Philip José Farmer

Kiss of the Vampire
John A. Small

Name of A Thousand Blue Demons
Cheryl L. Huttner

The Great Korak-Time Discrepancy
Philip José Farmer

Asian Detectives in the Wold Newton Family
Dennis E. Power

This Shadow Hanging Over Me Is No Trick Of The Light
Jess Nevins

The Lord Mountford Mystery
Philip José Farmer

The Magnificent Gordons
Mark K. Brown

The Legacy of the Fox: Zorro in the Wold Newton Universe
Matthew Baugh

From ERB To Ygg
Philip José Farmer

Who's Going to Take Over the World When I'm Gone?
Win Scott Eckert

Jungle Brothers, Or, Secrets Of The Jungle Lords
Dennis E. Power

A Language For Opar
Philip José Farmer

Watching the Detectives, Or, The Sherlock Holmes Family Tree
Brad Mengel

Fu Manchu Vs. Cthulhu
Rick Lai

Jonathan Swift Somers III
Philip José Farmer

John Carter: Torn from Phoenician Dreams
Dennis E. Power and Dr. Peter M. Coogan

D is for Daughter, F is for Father
Mark K. Brown

The Monster on Hold
Philip José Farmer

Travels in Time
Loki Carbis

A Review of Final Menacing Glimpses
Art Bollmann

Here's the knock-out cover by John Picacio:

Thumbnail cover

Big cover

Phil Farmer's Wold Newtonian essays included in MYTHS are hard-to-find, and appeared in various fanzines or other publications over the years. It is certainly a boon to have them collected here in one Wold Newton-oriented volume. Almost every contribution from the "post-Farmerian" writers has been revised -- sometimes significantly -- for this book. These are the official publication versions. All in all, this is going to be a 400-page book.

Now, going over the list of essays, some folks might be asking, "where the heck is the Crossover Chronology, which Win has been saying will be in the Wold Newton book?"

Like I said, the book is already going to be 400 pages, without the Crossover Chronology.

Therefore, MYTHS FOR THE MODERN AGE: PHILIP JOSÉ FARMER'S WOLD NEWTON UNIVERSE will come out in November 2005, as planned, with all the articles listed above included. And a second volume, another 300-400 page tome, THE CROSSOVER CHRONOLOGY: MORE MYTHS FOR THE MODERN AGE (this is a working title; it could change) is slated for publication in Spring 2006.

So, it's back to work for me! Gotta add in some more crossover entries. I am quickly learning that there is no such thing as "done." Not that I'm complaining.

While I'm at it, I may as well plug my short story in the anthology TALES OF THE SHADOWMEN 1: THE MODERN BABYLON. It's an anthology from Jean-Marc Lofficier's Black Coat Press. It features short stories inspired by French pulp fiction, written by several Wold Newton "creative mythographers," including yours truly, Matthew Baugh, Greg Gick, and Rick Lai, as well as much more established science-fiction writers such as Brian Stableford, Jean-Marc & Randy Lofficier, John Peel, Terrance Dicks, Chris Roberson, and Robert Sheckley, among others.

Nor are the stories limited to only French characters... Wold Newton Family members such as Doc Savage, Fu Manchu, Sherlock Holmes, and The Shadow, all make appearances in the anthology (even if some of them appear in disguise), as do perennial French Wold Newton Family members C. Auguste Dupin and Arsène Lupin. Several of the stories refer to or utilize Phil Farmer's Wold Newton Family theories and concepts. For fans of the MONSTAAH corner of the Wold Newton Universe, there are stories featuring Frankenstein's Creature, the Cthulhu Mythos, and Erik (Phantom of the Opera).

My story, "The Vanishing Devil," is a sequel to Guy d'Armen's DOC ARDAN: CITY OF GOLD AND LEPERS.
I don't think it's giving anything away to say that it features Doc Ardan and the nefarious Doctor Natas in a follow-up confrontation... nor that Doc Ardan might just be a certain Savage pulp hero, as Natas might really be a very long-lived Devil Doctor.

TALES OF THE SHADOWMEN is now available...
-direct from the publisher

-from Amazon

-and is listed in the March 2005 Diamond Previews, so you can order it from your local comic shop that way.