Thursday, October 22, 2009
pic o' the day
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
CROSSOVERS: A Secret Chronology of the World, Volume 1 -- cover by Mark Maddox!

...And here it is!
Artist Mark Maddox has done a wonderful job bringing my and Black Coat Press publisher Jean Marc Lofficier's vision for the cover to life.
We've already supplied our direction for Volume 2 and have no doubt the results will be equally stunning!
Creative Mythographers On the Move
In Micah S. Harris' THE ELDRITCH NEW ADVENTURES OF BECKY SHARP, the villainess of the Victorian classic Vanity Fair enters the Cthulhu Mythos as an agent of H.P. Lovecraft's Great Race of Yith! Cover, frontispiece, and title page illustrations by Loston Wallace! With a mini-introductory essay by Mark (Xenoxoic Tales, The Coming of Conan the Cimmerian, King Features' Prince Valiant) Schultz!
And the answers to these and other metafictional mysteries: 1) The circumstances of the unheralded first attempted Lidenbrock Expedition to the Center of the Earth! 2) The secret parentage of Ann Darrow, bride of the fearsome Kong! 3) The apocalyptic origins and final fate of Queequeg's fetish and how it went from pagan idol among the wreckage of the Pequod to a dust-gathering paperweight at 221-B Baker Street!
Order from Amazon.com.
pic o' the day
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Green Man Review on THE EVIL IN PEMBERLEY HOUSE
Robert M. Tilendis over at the Green Man Review has some very nice things to say about The Evil in Pemberley House."This one is fun--a good, tight story, enough psychology to keep it interesting, villains galore, characters with eccentricities that only the English can manage gracefully, a rich context, and lots of sex."
Check out the complete review here!
Creative Mythographers On the Move
TALES OF THE SHADOWMEN, VOLUME 1: THE MODERN BABYLON edited by Jean-Marc and Randy Lofficier. Black Coat Press, 2005.This anthology features short stories inspired by French pulp fiction, written by several Wold Newton "creative mythographers," including Matthew Baugh, Win Scott Eckert, Greg Gick, and Rick Lai, as well as wll-known names 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 (aka "Doc Ardan," appearing in Win Scott Eckert's "The Vanishing Devil"), Fu Manchu, Sherlock Holmes, and The Shadow, all make appearances in the anthology (albeit 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 Philip José Farmer's Wold Newton Family theories and concepts. For fans of the monster corner of the Wold Newton Universe, there are stories featuring Frankenstein's Creature, the Cthulhu Mythos, and Erik (Phantom of the Opera).
Order from: Amazon.com.
Order from Black Coat Press.
Order from Barnes & Noble.com.
Monday, October 19, 2009
Creative Mythographers On the Move
Serial Vigilantes of Paperback FictionAn Encyclopedia from Able Team to Z-Comm
Brad Mengel
ISBN 978-0-7864-4165-5
bibliographies, index
softcover (7 x 10) 2009
"Rough justice has often been served in the pages of serial novels, notably beginning with Don Pendleton’s The Executioner in 1969. This is the first overview of the serial vigilante genre, which featured such hard-boiled protagonists as Nick Carter, Mark Stone, Jake Brand and Able Team among the 130 series that followed Pendleton’s novel. Serial vigilantes repeatedly take the law into their own hands, establishing and imposing their own moral standards, usually by force. The book examines the connections between the serial vigilante and the pulp hero that preceded him and how the serial vigilante has influenced a variety of tough guys, private eyes, spies and cops in different media. A complete bibliography for each series is featured."
Order from Amazon.com.
Order from BarnesandNoble.com.
About the Author
Brad Mengel works in Australia’s Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions. He’s contributed critical analysis to Myths for the Modern Age: Philip José Farmer’s Wold Newton Universe and short fiction to Tales of the Shadowmen Vol. 3.
Sunday, October 18, 2009
Creative Mythographers On the Move

"This collection of short stories was inspired by the establishment of an Old West-themed attraction in southern Oklahoma known as Sipokni West, which has doubled as an actual set for several Western film and television productions. These stories were conceived as a sort of spin-off of that project, as a means of presenting some of the fictional community's memorable events and colorful characters as if they were a part of actual history. Some of the stories were originally published in our local newspaper, the Johnston County Capital-Democrat; others were printed individually in slim volumes and sold as souvenirs to visitors at Sipokni West, while several others have never before been published in any form. This collection marks the first time all the Sipokni West stories written to date have appeared together in a single volume."
This neat little collection also contains a few tales with some familiar faces, of the Old West, and perhaps a crossover or three. Check it out, why don't you?
Order from Amazon.com.
Saturday, October 17, 2009
Creative Mythographers On the Move
This the first in an ongoing series of posts highlighting the literary exploits of the contributors to Myths for the Modern Age: Philip José Farmer's Wold Newton Universe (and diverse associates who've also more than earned the sobriquet "creative mythographer").First up is Rick Lai's Chronology of Shadows: A Timeline of The Shadow's Exploits.
"For the first time in print, Rick Lai's Chronology of Shadows (his timeline of the pulp character The Shadow) has been updated & assembled in one easy-to-read volume."
Rick has read all The Shadow pulp novels and has done an immense amount of research. I'm eagerly awaiting the companion volume which will cover Doc Savage.
Order from Amazon.com.
pic o' the day

I hadn't intended to do another week of Philip José Farmer covers so soon, but since I sort of inadvertently kicked it off yesterday with the sole French edition of Tarzan Alive, what the heck.The first is the 2003 edition of A Feast Unknown, which I was fortunate enough to pick up at the Musée du quai Branly in Paris last July.
Then I decided I might as well add the 1970s French Chute Libre edition to my collection, and it arrived a few weeks ago.
Friday, October 16, 2009
pic o' the day

Apologies for the lateness of today's pic o' the day--the time somehow got away from me.
Here's a special pic: the French edition of Tarzan Alive, scan courtesy my friend Rias' Philip José Farmer International Bibliography website... although I do own my own copy, as of last week.
Thursday, October 15, 2009
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Monday, October 12, 2009
Sunday, October 11, 2009
Saturday, October 10, 2009
Washington Times review of PEMBERLEY HOUSE...
"When super heroes are conflicted"...Ron Capshaw at the Washington Times has reviewed The Evil in Pemberley House. Choice quotes include: "It is safe to say that Patricia Clarke Wildman has sufficient baggage before she ever sets foot in the Pemberley House of Jane Austen fame" and "'Pemberley' is clearly a love letter rescued from the grave by co-writer Win Scott Eckert to Farmer's aged fans. It is replete with interrelated heroes and perverted sex scenes."
Check out the complete review here, won't you?
Friday, October 09, 2009
Thursday, October 08, 2009
Wednesday, October 07, 2009
Writing update - two stories finalized



Got word yesterday that two stories are considered absolutely final and ready to go:- "No Ghosts Need Apply" in The Phantom Chronicles, Volume 2 (Moonstone Books)
- "Is He in Hell?" in Tales of the Shadowmen, Volume 6: Grand Guignol (Black Coat Press)
It's good to have these in the can, as it were. From here on through the end of the year, my exclusive focus will be on Crossovers: A Secret Chronology of the World, Volumes 1 & 2.
Tuesday, October 06, 2009
The Evil in Pemberley House - Limited edition
I have a strong feeling that the Limited Edition of
Subterranean Press' The Evil in Pemberley House (which includes a Wold Newton Family tree in the endsheets and a chapbook packed with bonus materials) is very close to selling out. If anyone out there hasn't gotten a copy, and intends to, now is probably a very good time.
I'm just sayin'.
Will Murray's tribute to Philip José Farmer

Will peppers the article with a ton of quotes from Phil from prior interviews, and spends a lot of time on the Wold Newton Family, Doc Caliban, THE MONSTER ON HOLD, etc., as well as the two faux-bios, TARZAN ALIVE and DOC SAVAGE: HIS APOCALYPTIC LIFE.
Monday, October 05, 2009
Sunday, October 04, 2009
Saturday, October 03, 2009
Friday, October 02, 2009
Thursday, October 01, 2009
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Monday, September 28, 2009
Sunday, September 27, 2009
New Blog review of PEMBERLEY HOUSE...
Saturday, September 26, 2009
Friday, September 25, 2009
Writing review - 2009 and beyond...
Publications to date, 2009:
- "Iron and Bronze," Tales of the Shadowmen Vol. 5: The Vampires of Paris (with Christopher Paul Carey), Black Coat Press, Jan. 2009.
- The Evil in Pemberley House (with Philip José Farmer), Subterranean Press, Sept. 2009.
- "Philip José Farmer in the Wold Newton Family" Farmerphile no. 15, Jan. 2009.
Forthcoming:
- "No Ghosts Need Apply," The Phantom Chronicles Vol. 2, Moonstone Books, Sept. (?) 2009.
- "Is He in Hell?" Tales of the Shadowmen Vol. 6: Grand Guignol, Black Coat Press, Jan. 2010.
- "Zorro's Rival," More Tales of Zorro, Moonstone Books, 2009 (?).
- "Captain Midnight at Ultima Thule," Captain Midnight: Declassified, Moonstone Books, unknown publication date.
- "Fang and Sting," Green Hornet story for Moonstone Books; pitch approved, story written and submitted for approval. Fingers crossed....
- Foreword to Sherlock Holmes und das Uhrwerk des Todes by Christian Endres, Atlantis Edition, Nov. 2009.
- Short tribute piece on Philip José Farmer and Doc Savage for The Big Book of Bronze #2, Nov. 2009.
- Short piece on Philip José Farmer and Tarzan for Burroughs Bibliophiles, Dec. 2009.
- Crossovers: A Secret Chronology of the World, Volume 1, Black Coat Press, late 2009.
- Crossovers: A Secret Chronology of the World, Volume 2, Black Coat Press, early 2010.
- Foreword to Behold, "The Night Wind" by Christopher R. Yates, Wildside Press, unknown publication date.
2010 promises several fiction projects which I'm excited about, but it's premature to talk details. Hopefully soon, stay tuned.























