Monthly Archive: September 2010

Drive Your Very Own Batmobile!

Drive Your Very Own Batmobile!

Do you know what $150,000 can get you? It can get you your very own Batmobile. One you can actually drive.

No kidding. DC Entertainment has licensed a company to produce functioning life-sized Batmobiles. And not just any Batmobile, but the really cool one: the one from the 1966 teevee series. They build them from a 1970s Lincoln Town Car.

The name of the company is Fiberglass Freaks, and they claim both the interior and the exterior will identical to the original, right down to the now-iconic rocket exhaust flamethrower.

I’ve never been very much of a wheel nut, but if I could afford a real Batmobile, one that will allow me to fry all of the tailgating idiots on the road, then I’m gonna start saving my spare change.

I wonder if that damn lizard will insure it. I also wonder if it comes as a hybrid. You gotta be concerned about the environment, you know.

NEWS RELEASE-CAPTAIN ACTION AT NYCC

Captain Action’s NYCC Exclusives    
Collectors’ specials offered only at convention

New York, NY September 30, 2010: Captain Action Enterprises, LLC announces limited edition New York Comic Con exclusives for sale at booth #2380.

  • Captain Action & Dr. Eville NYCC 8” Action Figures   


A Cast-A-Way exclusive, packaged in “retro” box style, reminiscent of the original Captain Action Ideal toys from the 60’s. $25.00 each.

  • Captain Action Exclusive NYCC Trading Card Set


Packaged in a unique CA triangle container (styled after the chest emblem) this fifty-card set also includes a unique 51st Chase Magnetic Card.   $50.00 each.
(Regular sets will be available for $25.00 each.)
  • Lady Action First Appearance & Special Collector’s Card   


Captain Action (Season 1) #3 includes a special trading card and NYCC sticker. Lady Action writer Tony Lee will be on hand for a signing, as will Lady Action. $5.00 each.
  • Savage Beauty Limited Edition Prints


Suitable for framing, these prints are $10.00 each. (Captain Action and Zeroids also available.)
Also available will be the two items from TwoMorrows:  “Carmine Infantino-Penciller, Publisher and Provocateur” by Jim Amash. This book will be offered in hardcover and softcover.  As a tie-in with the new Savage Beauty preview, Back Issue #43, showcasing Jungle girls, will also be on sale at this booth, #2380.

About Captain Action Enterprises

Captain Action Enterprises, LLC is dedicated to creating new character experiences for both the collectible/nostalgia market and passionate fans of adventure toys and fiction through licensing, re-creations and creative innovations.  More information is available at www.CaptainActionNow.com.

Captain Action, Lady Action, Savage Beauty and The Zeroids and related characters are ©2010 and ™ Captain Action Enterprises, LLC.


For all the latest on Captain Action visit www.CaptainActionNow.com and  www.MoonstoneBooks.com

PRESS RELEASE-GETTING WILD WITH SAVAGE BEAUTY

 

New Jungle Girl Series SNEAK PEEK at NYCC 
New York, NY October 1, 2010 Moonstone Books and CAE, LLC are pleased to announce their new series, Savage Beauty, a re-imagining of the jungle girl comic genre, with a modern twist.  
New York Comic Con will offer attendees a generous sneak peek as Moonstone invites readers to take a walk on the wild side with Savage Beauty. This new comic series tells the stories of sisters Lacy and Livvy Rae and their adventures traveling across modern-day Africa.
Savage Beauty will take readers on an exciting journey as the Rae sisters discover their purpose and strive to contribute and make a real difference in the world.
After graduating from a UCLA, a crisis in Kenya opens up their eyes to a world of problems and possibilities beyond the college life they so enjoyed.  Their “day job” is as reporters for African Adventures Online, but the Rae sisters are guided by the mysterious Mr. Eden to assume the identity of the mythical goddess Anaya. Disguised as this “Savage Beauty”, the two girls fight Somali pirates, Ugandan warlords, rebel armies, corrupt politicians, and various other real-world adversaries torn from today’s headlines.

And the comic book series intends to make a difference too – each issue will donate a full-color advertising page to partner causes such as Oxfam, Just A Drop, and Invisible Children, among others.

Writer and co-creator Mike Bullock says, “Savage Beauty allows me the opportunity to continue exploring the themes I worked with in the pages of The Phantom. Combine that with an opportunity to work with some really brilliant artists on a property I helped build from the ground up, and the appeal for this series is not only relevant, but personal.”
Artists Jose Massaroli (pencils and inks) and Bob Pedroza (colors) join Bullock to bring to life this on-going series. 
Savage Beauty #1, on sale February 2011, a 48-page over-sized debut issue, includes the first Savage Beauty adventure, a classic reprint of the original jungle girl, Sheena, and Special Features including lost promotional art to a 60’s Raquel Welch jungle girl movie pitch, and a golden age cover gallery.  All this for the retro-rollback price of only  $2.99!
“We’re really excited for this series –and we want to provide fans with a great value from the get-go. And with engaging covers, a killer story and cool extra features – we know retailers will love it”, said retropreneur and marketer Ed Catto.
“I’m amazed and thrilled at the positive feedback we’ve already been receiving on the Savage Beauty Facebook page. If this feedback is any indication, this book will have a bright future”, said CAE’s Joe Ahearn.
The first issue sports a “Movie Poster” cover by Thomas Yeates and two  “Welcome to the Jungle” variant covers spotlighting the girls, Lacy and Livvy, by fan favorite, Dave Hoover
Future covers boast strong talent, including Paul Gulacy, Mark Wheately and Newsweek’s Chris (Zeroids) Short. 
A special collectible ashcan of Savage Beauty #1 will be available at NYCC via the Captain Action’s booth #2380, specially priced for $1.00.
* * *
For all the latest on Savage Beauty and Captain Action, visit www.CaptainActionNow.com and become a fan on Facebook.
Information on Savage Beauty Comics can also be found at www.MoonstoneBooks.com
ALL PULP, THE PULP NEWS SITE, JOINS FORCES WITH THE PULP PODCAST!!

ALL PULP, THE PULP NEWS SITE, JOINS FORCES WITH THE PULP PODCAST!!

When the concept for doing ALL PULP was being formulated, an obvious aspect to consider was a podcast.  These modern takes on radio shows have proven beneficial to many fields, hobbies, and areas of interest.  The discussion was of course had about ALL PULP’s own Spectacled Seven putting together a podcast show of our own.  That discussion was a short one, though, as we already knew that a great Pulp Podcast already existed.  What? You haven’t heard of the excellent work being done by Ric Croxton and Art Sippo to bring Pulp goodness each and every week to the listening public?  Well, shame on you!  But don’t worry about it, because now that the Book Cave has graciously accepted the Seven’s request to serve as the official podcast for ALL PULP, you’ll hear plenty about the show, guaranteed!

Beginning with the 9/30/10 episode (#94) featuring an interview with Adam Garcia, author of the soon to be classic Airship 27/Cornerstone Publishers novel, GREEN LAMA UNBOUND, The Book Cave will be ALL PULP’s official Podcast.  What Ric and Art do week to week will not change in any way, but an addition to the show will be one of the Spectacled Seven joining the guys with a brief collection of news bits, soundbytes, and glimpses even further into the World of Pulp!  Derrick Ferguson kicks off this awesome period for ALL PULP on this episode, covering all the Pulp that is news!!   Watch this page for all the fun exciting information that will be pouring like bats on their way to a belfry out of the BOOK CAVE!!

Check out the debut of THE BOOK CAVE as ALL PULP’s official podcast here-
http://thebookcave.libsyn.com/  (And catch up on 93 other episodes of Pulpy goodness)!

Calling All Superheroes: Megamind Attempts To Break Guinness World Record– With Your Help!

Calling All Superheroes: Megamind Attempts To Break Guinness World Record– With Your Help!

Not happy with just being one of the funniest actors in the last few years, Will Ferrell wants to do more than make you laugh. He wants to set world records. But, just like Ricky Bobby needed Cal, and Ron Burgundy needed Brick, Champ, and the Bri-Man… Megamind needs you!

In his attempt to set the world record for the most superheros assembled in a single spot, Will Ferrell and DreamWorks Animation are asking all willing and able-bodied cosplayers in the L.A. area to come out. If Will can assemble 1,501 participants to show up in recognizable super-hero costumes (that means Batman, Superman, Spider-Man… not your indie character ‘Can’t-Get-A-Date-Man’ or his sidekick ‘Emo, the Kid Crier’) he will set a new world record. Will knows it takes time to assemble all those bits to your utility belt, and drop a few pounds to fit into your leotard… but you only have days. Saturday, October 2nd, at the L.A. Live Complex, at 10 AM is the call. Will you answer it?

Dust off your favorite codpiece and cape combo, and go party with (hopefully) 1,501 other costumed vigilantes. Sources close to ComicMix assure you this isn’t a plot by Megamind (of the upcoming DreamWorks movie) to capture heroes and remove potential threats. It’s just a friendly get together. There even might be punch and pie. But don’t quote us on that.

Tip of the hat to AICN for turning our heads.

REVIEWS FROM THE 86TH FLOOR- Reviews by Barry Reese

FIRST WAVE #4

DC Comics
Brian Azzarello & Rags Morales

The fourth issue in the First Wave “kick-off” limited series is finally here, despite the fact that the line has progressed far beyond it at this point. As with the first three issues, the art is stellar — Rags Morales is one of the best working in comics today and I enjoyed his interpretations of Doc Savage, The Spirit, Rima and The Bat Man quite a bit.

Unfortunately, the story is still a bit of a mess, with an unclear plot-line and some unlikeable characterization along the way. How does Doc Savage know the Golden Tree is evil? Because they claim to be interested in promoting peace but they haven’t invited him to be a member, and he’s practically the face of fighting for peace! I’ve seen some reviewers online who seem to like that reasoning but it stopped me in my tracks and made me wonder just how big Doc’s ego is supposed to be. They must be evil because they didn’t invite me to join? What?

I did enjoy The Bat Man’s internal narration at the end and there is an undeniable thrill to seeing Doc alongside The Spirit and Bat Man but if this is the best DC can do with these characters, I think the First Wave isn’t going to be around much longer.

INTERVIEW WITH SEA WITCH AUTHOR JOEL JENKINS!!!!


AP: Who is Joel Jenkins?

JJ: I’ll have a story addressing that question appearing in the upcoming The Gantlet Brother’s Greatest Hits book slated to be released next year through Pulp Work Press.  Some old enemies of Matthias Gantlet go gunning for him and they figure they can get to him through the writer that’s been chronicling his adventures. This story is inspired by a couple of real life occurrences.

AP: You’ve had a long love affair with Pulp.  How did it start?

JJ: When I was eight or nine I did janitorial work on Saturdays at a downtown office.  On lunch I’d go get a triple scoop ice cream cone for 65 cents and I’d finish it off while I was walking to the end of the town with the bookstores.  There was a new bookstore and a used bookstore within a couple blocks and I discovered Tarzan, Conan, Doc Savage and a myriad of other pulp era stories in those establishments.

AP: And how did that evolve into what you write today?

JJ: More than any other writing style, I enjoyed the fast-paced action and unfettered imagination that burst out of the pulp age.  I try to incorporate both of those things into my own work.  Character development and plot shouldn’t slow a story down, they should help move it along.

AP: And while we’re on the subject; what do you think about Pulp today?

In the 1930’s pulp fiction had a reputation for pushing the envelope, but most authors used some subtlety and restraint. Eighty years later almost anything goes and so some authors proclaiming to write pulp-style fiction lack the finesse (or the desire) to make their stories accessible and acceptable for reading by both youth and adults.  I started reading pulp stories at age eight and I sometimes have children between the age of eight and twelve approach me and tell me that they enjoyed one of my novels.  This being the case I prefer to leave some things as subtext so a more perceptive reader might pick up on them, but it won’t interfere with a youth’s enjoyment.

JJ: However, there is some great pulp being published today that it is accessible to both young and old.  A lot of the Clive Cussler stories fit into this category and he’s had great success, and Airship 27 puts out a great line of books reviving old and sometimes forgotten pulp characters with modern writers.  There are a number of other small presses putting out pulp-style books and Rage Machine puts out periodic issues of Dark Worlds magazine which focuses on pulp-style stories of all genres. 

AP: You ran a website for a long time devoted to Pulp called ELECTRONIC TALES.  Tell us about it.

JJ: I was one of the pioneers of the e-serial, where authors sent out stories a chunk at a time, via email, to a mailing list of readers.  Five times a week I sent out a page or two of story that usually ended in a cliffhanger of some sort.  At one point the mailing list was over 2,600 readers.

This was a lot of fun and forced me to get a lot of writing done.  However, like many companies in the internet boom there wasn’t enough revenue flow to keep it going indefinitely.  It did seem to make an impact, though, since one storyline was lifted wholesale and converted to be used in a major motion picture franchise—not that I ever saw a penny of royalty money.

AP: Tell us more about your Pulp inspired works.

JJ: One pulp-inspired fantasy series that doesn’t get as much play as some of my other works is the City of Bathos series, which includes Escape from Devil’s Head and Through the Groaning Earth. These draw from a Howardian influence, but really that’s just the starting point.  I mix in an unhealthy dose of well-founded paranoia and Lovecraftian elements, and tell the stories of various denizens of the city.  Mostly these arre just folks trying to survive the best they know how, but their agendas are much different and when their paths cross nasty things are bound to happen.

The first book is written from the perspective of insiders—people intimately familiar with the city of Bathos.  The second book, Through the Groaning Earth, focuses more on outsiders who have been shipwrecked on the reefs outside Bathos and on a handful of characters from the previous book that thought they had escaped Bathos’s pervasive influence and discover how wrong they are when the long-reaching hand of the Assassins Guild follows them to their haven.

AP: Before we get into THE SEA WITCH, tell us about Max Damage and Damage, Inc.

JJ: Olympic hopeful Max Damage inherits his father’s company, Damage Inc, when he receives news of his father’s untimely demise. He finds the books a horrible mess and begans secret compartments and secret company projects.  When a long-legged Russian woman breaks into the office one night looking for information on one of those projects Max realizes he’s in over his head. 

AP: What fascinates you about Max Damage?

Max is the anti-Doc Savage.  Doc Savage is the pinnacle of human mental and physical achievement.  Max has many amazing abilities but for every outstanding ability he has a drawback.  He possesses amazing strength and musculature but he has to eat like a horse to maintain his physique.  He has amazing eyesight but his ocular nerve is so sensitive that bright light effectively blinds him.  He can withstand extraordinary amounts of pain, but his sense of touch is blunted.  He has a photographic memory but is dyslexic.

AP: So why should we read THE SEA WITCH?

JJ: Primarily for an action-packed read with a trio of misfits as the heroes.  Secondarily, pulp fans might find Max Damage an interesting twist on the superhero archetype.  In no way, however, is this a parody of pulp.  I love the pulp esthetic and incorporate it into nearly everything that I write.

AP: How many stories have you written about Max Damage? What future stories have you got in mind for Max Damage and Damage, Inc.?

JJ: There is of course, the recently released Sea Witch novel.  I’ve also written a pair of novellas called The Sun Stealer and On Wings of Darkness.  Sometime in the next couple of years I hope to make that a trio of novellas and release them in a combined package.  The third story is tentatively titled The Madagascar Hole and will involve prehistoric fish and The Fountain of Life Foundation.  At some point there also may be a cross-over story with Derrick Ferguson’s Regency character.

AP: While we’re got you trapped, tell us about DIRE PLANET.

JJ: American astronaut Garvey Dire is marooned on Mars and while he is wounded and running out of oxygen he sees a repeating vision of a beautiful and strangely-alien woman crossing through a moss-covered structure.  When he interferes with the vision a time loop tosses him into the past and he finds himself in a Mars peopled by savage tribes, beautiful warrior woman, and dark-winged fiends that own the night skies.

This is my homage to Edgar Rice Burroughs, though it is not a pastiche in any way.  This Mars stands on its own and I’ve spent many hours developing its culture and etymology.  There are currently three published Dire Planet novels: Dire Planet, Exiles of the Dire Planet, and Into the Dire Planet.

Strange Gods of the Dire Planet is slated for a 2011 release and Lost Tribes of the Dire Planet is slated for a 2012 release.  I’ve currently finished a draft of Strange Gods and am about 85,000 words into Lost Tribes.


AP: What’s a typical Day In The Life Of Joel Jenkins like?

JJ: It starts at 5 AM and is very, very busy.

AP: What one thing of yours should we read right now?

JJ: Check out my blog at JoelJenkins.com or visit Amazon to pick up my novels in hardcopy and a number of them are also available in Kindle format. My stories are also available in a variety of electronic formats at Fictionwise.com.  Barnes and Noble also carries my books (It looks like they’ve currently got The Sea Witch at only $7.88, which is a 28% discount!) and many of the novels are available for the Nook.

INTERVIEW-TOM JOHNSON, Pulp Author/Creator/Historian!!

AP: It’s easy to say that this is truly an honor and privilege for ALL PULP to have a chance to visit with you, Tom. Before we jump knee deep into you and pulp, can you share a bit of personal background with us?

TJ: It’s my pleasure, thanks for inviting me. I was born in a small farm and ranching town in Texas in July 1940. My dad was a cowboy, cook, and drunk, and good at all three. When I was seven, we moved to Wichita Falls (Texas), where I discovered comic books and Skid row theaters. Finding Batman changed my life. We also had a radio, and I listened to all the great dramas, including The Shadow. My dad wanted me to follow in his footsteps, but I had other plans. After High School, I joined the Army and became a military policeman. Upon retiring my wife, Ginger and I started ECHOES, a fan magazine for the pulp enthusiast, and published it for 22 years. I had a serious debilitating stroke in 2002, which slowed me down considerably, but I’m still fairly active. I have never regretted leaving the farm and ranch life behind!
 
AP: When the name ‘Tom Johnson’ comes up in terms of pulp, several titles are attached to you. Before we get into those, tell us how your obvious love affair with pulp started and how its maintained for so long?

TJ: I was an early reader, starting with the juvenile classics around 1950, then SF a few years later. By my teenage years I was reading Spillane and the tough guy P.I.s. While serving in France around 1963, my sergeant turned me on to Edgar Rice Burroughs, and then to Haggard and Howard. In 1964 I was sent to Turkey during the Cypress Crisis, and we were stuck on an Air Force base. It was here that I found Walter Gibson’s “Return of The Shadow”. When we returned to France, I discovered Doc Savage that same year, and have never looked back.
 
AP: You are referred to by many as a pulp historian? Is pulp history something the modern reader and/or writer needs to know? What about these characters and their creators is relevant to an audience today?

TJ: That’s a loaded question (G). I think the old characters are still relevant today, and I don’t see any need in drastically changing them, so I do believe the new writers should be familiar with the stories, and not just a “Bible” of the characters. But I also understand that we are looking at a new generation and market, and what us old timers liked may not be what the reader today wants. Still, I don’t believe the new writers should kill off main characters or change backgrounds to suit them, and I don’t think sex and language are necessary to tell a good story. Times were changing even in the early 1950s, when the hint of sex, and rougher language crept into the stories, but by then readers were expecting it. Perhaps if the pulps had continued, we would have seen even more changes in the later 1950s. Who knows?
 
AP: As a historian, what trends do you notice in the pulp genre that are occurring today that have ties to the heyday of pulps? Are there consistencies or is this just a revival of a genre loved by a few?

TJ: Unfortunately, we are still few in number. With the so-called pulp revival, we’re still struggling to get new converts. I have said in the past that this is a wonderful time for pulp fans to be alive. There is so much available now, considering the POD technology and Internet. And I love the small press, but until the major publishing houses get the pulp fever, I’m afraid we’re still targeting just a few.
 
AP: As a writer, you cover the gamut. Tell us about some of your favorite personal works.

TJ: Mike Avallone once said, “I’m proud of everything I’ve written.” I wish I could say that (lol). Really, though, I had fun with all of my stories. My current publishers, Matt Moring of Altus Press, and Barbara Custer of NTD are great people to work with. Surprisingly, though, I think that three of my favorite stories were actually collaborations. Debbie DeLorme and I coauthored “Hunter’s Moon”, K.G. McAbee and I coauthored “Shadowhawke”, and Teresa Drippe and I coauthored “Crimson Harvest”, all three were exciting tales, and the three young women were wonderful to work with.
 

AP: Some writers find it difficult to cross genres, even in such a broad genre as pulp. Is it difficult for you to write one genre, then another, and what appeals to you about working in multiple genres?

TJ: Well, to be honest, Edgar Rice Burroughs influenced my writing the most. So my earliest attempt was the novel, “Jur: A Story of Pre-Dawn Earth”, which has been favorably compared to ERB’s Pellucidar series. I still try to emulate Burroughs’ style, and genre. On the other hand, my favorite characters are The Shadow and Batman, so I really want to write stories about similar heroes. When writing the old masked hero stories, I try to capture the feel of the original stories from the 1930s and ‘40s. That’s not always easy to do. I recently wrote a Man in Purple story for Altus Press’ upcoming Johnston McCulley volume, and I found McCulley extremely difficult to emulate. The Man in Purple was written in 1920, so that might have something to do with it (lol).
 
AP: You’ve made your own contribution to the ‘Lost Land/Primitive earth’ subgenre. Can you tell us a little about your ‘Jur’ novels?

TJ: Around 1965, my duties in France was Desk Sergeant for the MPs. On slow nights, when my units were out on patrol, and I was bored, I would write little plots and create characters, and put them through their paces. One of the plots I stumbled on was to become the Jur novels, but I didn’t do anything with it until a tour in the jungles of Vietnam. Upon returning to the states in 1970, I knew I had to write that story. I wrote the first two novels in long hand (pencil), and hired a professional typist to put it in manuscript format. Basically, my hero was an Army Green Beret just back from Vietnam. He was tough and trained in jungle survival and warfare. But he was angry at our involvement in Vietnam, and got out of the Army to wander around the world. He ends up in Africa where he hears about a young French girl who is missing. He goes in search of her, and falls through the same time portal as the girl, ending up in the Jurassic Period, where they eventually meet and survive the terror and dangers of the jungle. These two people were featured in the first two novels. But the first was never picked up. I still have all the Rejection Slips! I met James Reasoner and he looked at the story, and suggested we drop the Green Beret and begin the story, not in 1970, but just after the Stock Market Crash of ’29, and the main character isn’t all that tough and well-trained. We made the changes, and in 2002, a company named NBI accepted the first novel, and wanted to look at the second one. I had to quickly type the sequel while making the changes. I eventually wrote two more stories in the series. NBI went out of business after book #3. I self-published the fourth novel.
 
AP: You’ve written stories utilizing established characters. What about writing existing characters appeals to you and who are your favorite characters to work with?

TJ: That’s hard to say. I’m an odd ball, I think. I love The Black Bat and Phantom Detective for some reason, so have written a number of their adventures. But sometimes one of the other characters nag at me until I accept the challenge. I wrote a Doc Harker story a while back because I couldn’t get the plot out of my mind until I put it on paper. I aimed at 10,000 words, and it came out at 16,000 words! I recently wrote the sequel to PULP DETECTIVES, featuring ten different characters, several surprises that I can’t divulge yet. That is coming from Altus Press somewhere down the road. But I think it’s better than the first PULP DETECTIVES.
 

AP: You’ve also got original pulp hero creations that you’ve written. Can you share some of them with us and talk about the process of creating original characters?

TJ: Years ago while watching the TV series, The Equalizer, a Christmas episode aired about a little boy with AIDS. Some local rednecks were trying to run them out of the neighborhood. The boy calls The Equalizer for help. That episode hit me hard. I wanted to create a character that would have a child to protect in each story. Thus was born The Masked Avenger, a Phantom Detective type character in the 1930s. The Black Ghost is a contemporary hero, but in the mold of The Shadow and Batman. Both The Masked Avenger and The Black Ghost battle the crooks with blazing automatics, and there is plenty of action to keep the stories moving. There are a few other characters.
 
AP: Pulp is on an upswing, according to many in the field. How do you think the current crop of writers and artists can keep this ‘renaissance’ going instead of just fading away as it has in the past?

TJ: If I knew the answer to that, I would shout it to everyone who would listen. I think the writers and artists are doing their best to do exactly what you’re asking, but as I mentioned earlier, until the major publishing houses give us a hand, it’s going to take a while. All of the small press publishers are striving to achieve that goal, but I don’t know if we’re reaching everyone the big guys could. God Bless all of us in this effort, and I hope that pulps never fade away.
 
AP: You have an aspect to your life that a lot of pulp writers, this one included, wish we had. Your wife is not only a supporter, but an active participant in the pulp genre as well. Can you tell us about how it is working with Ginger and how you came to be lucky enough to find someone as into Pulp as you are?

TJ: Ginger was also a fan of Doc Savage. When Bantam was releasing Doc’s every month, we would hit the stores looking for the latest one. Ginger always got to read Doc first. Whenever I went overseas, she would pick up paperbacks for me and send them over, because in a lot of places I was at, we seldom saw a book! Remember I mentioned Turkey earlier, being a bunch of Army grunts on an Air Force Base meant we didn’t get anything passed down to us. I could tell some stories about that, but I won’t. (lol) But Ginger has always shared my interest in the pulps.
 
AP: So, what’s in the future for Tom Johnson and pulp?

TJ: Well, I retired last December, but I keep getting these plots in my head. I still plan on taking some time off. But Debbie DeLorme has been talking to me about another collaboration, so who knows. Maybe one more Black Ghost story. Barbara Custer also wants to put out a couple SF anthologies with a compilation of our stories. Maybe this year, maybe next year.

AP: Again, can’t say enough how great it’s been to talk to you today, Tom!

TJ: Thank you for inviting me, Tommy!

_____________________________________ 
You may hate reading books on screen, but kids don’t

You may hate reading books on screen, but kids don’t

We keep telling you this is going to happen, if not with you then with your kids. From AP:

Children are ready to try e-books, with some thinking that
a bigger selection of electronic texts would make reading for fun even
more fun, according to a new study. But a solid majority of parents
aren’t planning to join the digital revolution.

The 2010 Kids and Family Reading Report, released
Wednesday and commissioned by Scholastic Inc., offers a mixed portrait
of e-books and families. Around six out of 10 of those between ages 9
and 17 say they’re interested in reading on an electronic device such as
the Kindle or the iPad. Around one out of three from the same age group
say they’d read more “for fun” if more books were available on a
digital reader.

Among the books that can’t be downloaded: the “Harry
Potter” series, published in the U.S. by Scholastic. J.K. Rowling has
said she prefers her work to be read on paper.

The e-market has grown rapidly since 2007 and the
launch of Amazon.com’s Kindle device, from less than 1 percent of
overall sales to between 5 to 10 percent, publishers say. But the new
report is also the latest to show substantial resistance. Just 6 percent
of parents surveyed have an electronic reading device, while 76 percent
say they have no plans to buy one. Sixteen percent plan to have one
within the following year.

Of course, the proper response to this is to not market comics to kids. After all, our existing audience for comics will live forever and keep buying the same stories forever in the same printed format they’ve been in forever.

Sci-Fi Fan Favorite Summer Glau is Supergirl in ‘Superman/Batman: Apocalypse’

Sci-Fi Fan Favorite Summer Glau is Supergirl in ‘Superman/Batman: Apocalypse’

Summer Glau knows her audience.

Whether as River Tam in Joss Whedon’s cult classic series and follow-up film, Firefly and Serenity, or as the indestructible android-from-the-future Cameron in Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles, Glau has cornered the market on playing attractive, demure young females with the controlled homicidal power to destroy an opposing legion of trained warriors.

So it was only natural that as her first-ever animated voiceover role, Glau would fit neatly into the role of an uber-powered Kryptonian who falls under the spell of one of Superman’s greatest foes. Glau finds the perfect mix of youthful curiosity, teen angst and alien-turned-Earth-girl aggression as the voice of Kara, cousin of Superman (and ultimately destined to become Supergirl) in Superman/Batman: Apocalypse, the ninth entry in the popular, ongoing series of DC Universe Animated Original PG-13 Movies out this week from Warner Home Video.

Based on the DC Comics series/graphic novel Superman/Batman: Supergirl by Jeph Loeb, Michael Turner and Peter Steigerwald, Superman/Batman: Apocalypse is produced by animation legend Bruce Timm and directed by Lauren Montgomery (Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths) from a script by Academy Award-nominated screenwriter Tab Murphy (Gorillas in the Mist). Produced by Warner Premiere, DC Entertainment and Warner Bros. Animation, Superman/Batman: Apocalypse is now available as a Blu-ray Combo Pack, Special Edition DVD, On Demand and for Download.

Glau’s career has been populated with frequent visits to the fanboy realm, adding regular roles on The 4400 and Dollhouse to her featured gigs on Firefly/Serenity and Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles. The professionally trained ballerina had a seven-episode run on The Unit, and will appear in the upcoming NBC series, The Cape, as well as in the film. Knights of Badassdom.

Following her recording session, Glau freely discussed a number of subjects – from the acting strengths of the Whedon alumni association to her consistent on-set nerves to a strong desire to land more adult roles. Here’s how that conversation went …

QUESTION: Was it easy to find a way to relate to Kara?

SUMMER GLAU:
Kara was a really comfortable fit for me because she’s sort of a girl coming into her own.  A girl becoming a woman and finding out who she is, and so I felt like there were moments when it reminded me of River because she is so powerful, but also young and naïve and a little bit lost. She has this underlying strength that comes from out of nowhere. (more…)