Monthly Archive: October 2010

NYCC Cosplay, Part 1

NYCC Cosplay, Part 1

Holy cow, there were a lot of costumes at the New York Comic Con. We tried to capture them all, and we’re posting hundreds of pictures on our Facebook page. Come join us there!

ALL PULP’S OFFICIAL PODCAST, THE BOOK CAVE IS OUT THIS WEEK!

ALL PULP’S OFFICIAL PODCAST, THE BOOK CAVE IS OUT THIS WEEK!

ALL PULP’S OFFICIAL PODCAST!!!!

10/14/10

THIS WEEK ON THE BOOK CAVE!  James Sutter joins Art and Ric as they talk about the September Book of the Month, BEFORE THEY WERE GIANTS.  Then, Tommy Hancock delivers the ALL PULP news this week, including major PULP ARK announcements and a tease or two.
Check out ALL PULP’S official podcast, THE BOOK CAVE here-
http://thebookcave.libsyn.com/

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INTRODUCING NEW INTERVIEW FEATURE-NINE FOR THE NEW!!!

ALL PULP is proud to debut its newest feature!!  So many interviews, reviews, columns, etc. get done here at ALL PULP and elsewhere that inform you the fan about the established writers and artists, the veteran creators who have made Pulp what it is today!  ALL PULP endeavors to also introduce you to those creators who have joined this Pulp Renaissance or Revolution or whatever you may call it recently and will be a part of the future of Pulp!
NINE FOR THE NEW is a nine question interview format that will focus on creators of Pulp who have only been published within the last 12 months or so. New voices writing new words, new hands drawing new faces for Pulp today and tomorrow!  Have someone you think should get our nine questions (Most of them are the same, with only slight variations concerning specific characters, etc.)?  Then contact ALL PULP at allpulp@yahoo.com, leave a comment, or post on our facebook page!  Now, without hesitation, let’s get on with the first NINE FOR THE NEW!!
CW Russette-Writer/Creator/Artist

AP:  CW, welcome to ALL PULP!  First, can you tell us about yourself, some personal background?
CWR: Sure, I’m Canadian born but have lived in America since I was a teenager. I was in the military for a few years during which I took a writing correspondence course that really got me interested in writing as a profession. I’ve been writing and drawing about my characters and those of others since I was a wee lad. I used to favor drawing monsters and giant robots at a very early age. In high school I started taking my writing seriously but still thought of myself as an artist that writes where as now it’s rather the opposite.
 
AP:  What works have you had published in the pulp field, including any books, short stories, etc.?

CWR: I’ve had two comic books published by Modern Pulp Comics through Rorschach Entertainment (Lucifer Fawkes: Blood Flow and The Blind Ones) as well as a number of short stories through Pro Se Productions’ Peculiar Adventures and the upcoming issue of Pro Se Presents Fantasy and Fear.
 
AP: As a writer, what influences have affected your style and interests the most over the years?  Do you have a particular genre/type of story you prefer to write?

CWR: Music and movies have had a huge influence on my style of writing. I tend to listen to a lot hard rock though not exclusively. I like horror movies, action flicks, historical and science fiction. I like anything with a unique twist and has a pulse, it’s gotta move for me to get into it. I think the main writers that have influenced me are Stephen King, James Clavell and Warren Ellis. What I write kind of fuses those three together on some level. I write a lot of paranormal adventure tales that range from immortal hitmen to werewolves to super heroes. That’s my comfort zone right there.
 
AP:  What about genres that make you uncomfortable?  What areas within pulp are a little bit intimidating for you as an author?

CWR: I think writing the hard sci fi stuff. I’m not too techno savvy so I don’t go that route very often.
 
AP:  What do you think you bring to pulp fiction as a writer?

CWR:  I think all writer’s bring their own perspective to everything they write. No one is going to tell a tale the way I do. I run heavy on physical drama, dark themes, psychologically I think the more complex the characters are the more engaging it will be for the reader.

AP:  You have a recurring character that is a part of the Pro Se Productions stable.  Can you tell us who Virgil is and where that idea came from?

CWR: Virgil is a hitman that made a deal with something very dark in the 1920’s. That thing gave him the power to resurrect himself should he ever die. Hitmen live a rather dangerous life to begin with but if one had no fear of dying you can imagine how the body count might go up. The problem is the entity that empowered him needs Virgil to keep killing. That’s the deal, kill for me and I guarantee you eternal youth and life. Stop killing for me and there are consequences. Virgil made the deal in haste when he was young and angry. It didn’t take long for him to regret the decision. The story takes place in the present in McQuade, Nevada where Virgil has just landed. It has been a long road and he wants out of the deal. His prey are as plentiful as ever. There’s a lot of backstory I flashback to which allows me to write in different time periods which helps keep things popping for me as the writer. Virgil has rather come full circle now as he is more frustrated than ever to be this otherworldly entity’s slave.

I came up with the character some years ago. He was originally a familiar of a vampire that kept his master chained and weakened in his coffin. Something to use as a food source and the familiar didn’t have to do any labor for his master, he could be his own man. I don’t recall how he made the jump from familiar to lazarus hitman but the original idea must have gotten tired to me and things built on one another and just evolved.
 

AP:  You stepped off into the ‘weird western’ arena with a story that will soon appear in the Age of Adventure anthology “Vampires versus Werewolves.”  Can you talk about that story, including the process of coming up with the concept and how you blended the two genres?
CWR: I watch a lot of discovery channel, national geographic and the like. One day there was a bit on shootists of the old west so I watched as I love a good western flick. Wild Bill Hickok was one of the subjects. I had heard of him and knew he was a fair shot but not to the degree that he is credited. Something about him struck a nerve and that lead me to reading up on the man. There is a point in his past where Hickok gets caught without his guns one night out in the wild. A bear attacks him and Hickok fights the animal off with a knife. That takes some stones, I don’t care who you are. So Hickok wins the fight but gets mauled pretty good because he needs down time in Rock Creek, Nebraska afterward.

For some reason, the idea of something other than a bear mauling him before showing up in Rock Creek hit me. What if it was a werewolf? The idea had merit, I thought. Wild Bill versus a werewolf? What isn’t fun about that? Seems like a fine way to test the gunslinger. Other elements were added later like the Philosopher’s Stone and a vampire but the wolf and Hickok were the nuggets that got my attention. I think werewolves are a natural fit for the old west. Vampires not so much as they have to hide from the sunlight. The Native Americans called the lupines skinwalkers so it’s built right into the time period. It was great fun to write and way out of my comfort zone. Liking western movies doesn’t mean you know how to write a western. It allowed me to stretch some muscles I didn’t know I had.
 

AP: You’re also an artist.  What work have you had published?

CWR: I sold a few tattoo designs recently and a piece to Pulp Works Press but the majority of my gigs have been coming from Pro Se Productions.
 

AP: What’s coming from CW Russette in the future? Any projects you want to discuss?
CWR:  Well I’ve got one book waiting on the desk of a major publisher that I’m hoping to get picked up. Been pondering a second book as well but that’s yet in the planning stages and I can’t talk about that. Virgil will be around for some time thanks to Pro Productions and I’ve a few more short story ideas in various stages of completion. I’d like to get back to some comic book scripting if I can find the right team.
 
AP:  CW, thanks for coming by ALL PULP and we hope we’ll see a lot more of you and your work!

CWR: Thanks for having me!

Reviews from the 86th Floor by Barry Reese: Doc Savage # 7


DOC SAVAGE # 7
DC Comics
Doc Savage – Ivan Brandon, Brian Azzarello & Nic Klein
Justice Inc. – Jason Starr & Scott Hampton

Another month, another issue of DC’s Doc Savage series. At some point, you’d suspect that DC might accidentally stumble onto a formula that works — but there’s no sign of it yet. This one continues the “Belly of the Beast” storyline and has Doc and his aides knee deep in the Middle East, still in pursuit of a friend of theirs that they all believed was dead. There’s a bunch of pointless fighting in this and several pages of decompressed storytelling where Doc and the gang talk about how amazing their friend was. It was during those pages where I hit upon a key problem that I have with Brian Azzarello’s take on the pulp characters in this First Wave universe: pacing. Azzarello is quite obviously “writing for the trade,” which in comic book terms means that he stretches everything out so that it fills 6 to 7 issues, which just so happens to be the standard size of a comic book trade paperback. The problem comes from the fact that this sort of storytelling (typified by pages of talking heads, where the characters speak “naturally” in small bursts of words, as occurs multiple times in this issue) does not fit with the pulp paradigm. Doc Savage was many things but it was never slow, boring or ponderous. It was quick, exciting reading and that’s where all of Azzarello’s First Wave work is falling extremely short.

That and the fact that the plots don’t make sense. That’s a pretty big one, too. After all the issues of First Wave and seven of Doc Savage, I find “The War” to be a muddled mess that should either be better defined or ignored and the characters seem like pale reflections of their actual selves. Really — is anybody reading this Doc Savage series and coming away with a clear view of who Doc or his aides are? I can’t imagine how, since the storytelling leaves no room for characterization. I know — how can there be pages of talking heads but no characterization? Pretty easy. People talk and talk but they don’t say anything that illuminates them as people. And aside from Monk and Ham’s snarky comments towards each other, most of the dialogue could be cut and pasted between characters and nobody would notice. The end of the main story sees the arrival of the Siamese twins we were teased with earlier in the arc and I assume we’re supposed to be excited by their arrival but given the fact that they, like everyone else in the book, has been given no personality, I was like “Oh, they’re finally doing something with them” as opposed to “Wow! Can’t wait to see what happens when Doc fights a pair of Siamese twin children.”

Yeah, it’s pretty dumb.

In the back-up, Smitty continues to track down a murderer and rapist, intending to kill him at some point. Now, Smitty is still never identified by name which continues to be an awesomely stupid writing mistake. If this was your first issue, you would not know who this character was. Hell, I’ve been reading for seven issues and I don’t know who this character is — because it sure isn’t Smitty.

Anyway, Smitty tracks the bad guy for days and — get this — never once disguises himself. Oh, he says he’s trying to be cool about it, but he’s following the man for days. Without disguising himself. So is it a shock when the bad guy says “Hey, that fella over there — I think he was at the Track. And the so-and-so. And the so-and-so. Isn’t that weird?”

A member of Justice Inc. just follows a guy for days without disguising himself. He follows him to clubs, to a racetrack, even to the freakin’ bathroom… Without. Disguising. Himself.

Needless to say, he gets ambushed and arrested by some cops on the take. Benson (you remember him? The star of Justice Inc.? He’s here for one page) finally arrives but doesn’t bail Smitty out of jail because he’s so angry that one of his gang would plan a murder.

Sigh. I can’t express to you how much this sucks. On the plus side, the art is real pretty.

This issue gets a whopping 1 out of 5 stars.

National Graphic Novel Writing Month, Day 13: Even if you don’t wanna…

National Graphic Novel Writing Month, Day 13: Even if you don’t wanna…

Even if you’re sick…

Even if it’s only a sentence…

Write something.

After all, one sentence may turn into two sentences.

And two sentences may turn into a paragraph.

And before you know it, you might have written a panel. Or two panels. Or even a page.

No, it might not be good. It might even be lousy and you may need to rewrite the entire thing. But it might be good. It might even be brilliant. Particularly if you’re on those really good meds that will knock you out and give you all those really fun hallucinations. (Hey, if it works for Grant Morrison and Jamie Delano…)

And writing short stuff is more useful than you think it is. We’ll come back to that later.

Remember: you can follow all the NaGraNoWriMo posts here!

INTERVIEW WITH RON FORTIER!!!!-Creator/Writer/Publisher/Reviewer




Ron Fortier (on left) and Rob Davis

 AP: Ron, ALL PULP really appreciates you putting all those irons you have in the fire down for a bit to answer some questions for us. First, tell us about yourself.

RF: I’ll be 64 born on Guy Fawkes Day, Nov.5th. A post war baby who grew up reading comics in the 50s and 60s and fell in love with them. Enough to want to pursue a career as a comics writer, while at the same time working for a local GE Plant in New Hampshire and raising a family of five (three boys and two girls) who in turn gave us six wonderful grand kids (four girls and two boys). Retired from the day job with a full pension almost eight years ago now and devote most of my time to the family and my writing. We recently sold the home in N.H. and moved to west to Fort Collins, Colorado where I am just now setting up my new office.

AP: Now, although this is an interview about your work in the pulp genre, you also have a background in writing in other fields, both past and present. Briefly, tell us what other mediums you’ve written and work in?

RF: Well, I mentioned the 30 yr. comics writing career which had me writing such diverse licensed characters as Popeye, Peter Pan and Rambo and my own inventions like the every popular Mr.Jigsaw Man of a Thousand Parts. I’m most known for my work on the Green Hornet for Now Comics and having written the first comic script ever illustrated by Alex Ross; Terminator – Burning Earth. About ten years ago I started writing pulp fiction and with Texas fantasy writer, Ardath Mayhar, wrote three paperback fantasy adventures. About the same time I wrote a play; a romantic comedy called Where Love Takes You that was performed by a local theater company. So I’ve dabbled in lots of various venues with this writing thing.

AP: How and when did your heavy involvement with pulp start? Were you a diehard fan like so many writers and artists in the genre now or did this interest and obsession come to you later in life?

RF: I’d always been aware of the pulps as having been genre of fantastic literature that spawned the comics. As my comics career grew, I kept learning more and more about those amazing magazines that entertained an entire generation during the Great Depression and that fascination led to my studying pulps and quickly becoming a devoted fan. So although I came to them late, my interest and passion for them has grown steadily over the years.

AP: You are one of the men behind Airship 27 Productions. What are the origins of Airship 27?

RF: Five years ago only a very few publishers were actively publishing new pulp adventures. Most outfits were content with reprinting the old originals over and over and over again. Wild Cat Books was one of these and I suggested to Ron Hanna the idea of publishing new material. He agreed to take a stab at it and I created Airship 27 Productions as a label for those all new books to be released under the Wild Cat book imprint. I wanted them set apart from his reprints. Hanna saw that these titles were selling extremely well and opted to do more of them himself. Whereas that would have meant we’d be competing against each other under one banner, we both agreed Airship 27 should divorce itself from Wild Cat Books and go it alone as an entirely new pulp publisher. Now along this journey, my old comic pal, artist Rob Davis, had joined me as Art Director and when we launched, he agreed to stay on as my partner in the venture wherever it took us.

AP: How would you define the mission and purpose of your publishing company. What are Airship 27’s plans and intentions?

RF: Airship 27 Productions’s mission is a simple one, to keep the pulp genre alive and healthy by publishing the best new pulp fiction and art available on the market today.
Over the past two years we’ve broadened our line up to include classic characters like Sherlock Holmes and Dr.Watson. We are bringing out brand new 30s pulp heroes created by our stable of talented writers and at the same time still shining the light on the classic heroes ala the Green Lama, Jim Anthony and Black Bat. In the coming years we hope to continue this diversity of books across an even wider spectrum of pulp titles.

AP: Airship 27 is partnered with Cornerstone Publishers. How did that come about and exactly what is the arrangement between the two companies?

RF: Initially Rob and I were going to self-publish our titles via print-on-demand like Wild Cat and all the others out there. Cornerstone Book Publishers is a traditional book publisher out of New Orleans run by Michael Poll. Michael learned what we had in mind with Airship 27 and offered to become our “real” publisher. Ergo, Rob and I produce the books and Cornerstone publishes them. Note they do so traditionally through their printer and get them out to all reputable book distributors while at the same time, they also offer print-on-demand edition on all our titles for those fans looking to save some pennies via an Airship 27 Lulu store. This is our way of thanking of pulp fans by allowing them to get our books through several different options.

AP: Airship 27 publishes pulp novels. What sort of properties are you currently working with, both of the public domain and original variety?

RF: Well I mentioned several of our classic public domain series such as Jim Anthony Super Detective and Green Lama. To date we’ve done books featuring these characters and have lots more on the way. At the same time we released B.C Bell’s Tales of the Bagman, a pulp hero he created in the classic mold of 30s adventures. Bell puts a nice spin on an old style of writing. At the moment we are gearing up to do another Secret Agent X, which will be our fourth in that series at the same time looking to debut several new heroes and a brand new anthology of such called Mystery Men now in production.

AP: What does it take to be a writer or artist at Airship 27? What are you looking for in staff members?

RF: There is no staff per se, just yours truly and Rob. As for how does one get to work for Airship 27, that’s an easy question to answer. All creators need do is send me a sample of their work. With writers I ask to see two pages of fiction focusing on high speed action, whereas artists have to impress me with their level of skill and understanding of what it means to illustrate a scene. It is not comic drawing and many artists really can’t do it. The same applies to those artists wanting to do our covers. They need to understand the differences between a comic cover and a fully painted pulp cover.

AP: Are there any long term plans for Airship 27 that go beyond publishing quality pulp collections and novels or are you and company just pleased to be doing what you’re doing?

RF: I don’t really see us expanding the books department. Being basically a two man operation, we’d like to continue releasing between 10 and 12 books a year. But at the same time we have also started putting together pulp themed comic books that will tie in with our prose books. We’ve a Captain Hazzard graphic novel in the works and another starring Secret Agent X. So in that regards, Airship 27 will expand to some degree.

AP: You are a publisher, but you came into this field a writer. What are some of your writing credits in the pulp field?

RF: Hmmm, okay. I created and wrote the Brother Bones character/anthology. Co-wrote the Hounds of Hell with Gordon Linzner wherein the Moon Man battles Doctor Satan and of course my four Captain Hazzard novels. I’ve also contributed shorts stories to many of Moonstone’s Chronicles series to include the Spider, the Phantom, Domino Lady, Green Hornet and the Avenger. I am also writing a comic strip pulp series for their Return of the Original lines starring I.V. Frost with art by Jake Minor.

AP: Captain Hazzard is one of your credits. You’ve written one novel and have another in the works. But Captain Hazzard’s original lifetime in the pulp lasted all of one issue of one magazine. What appeals to you about this character so much that you breathe life into him again in the modern era?

RF: I’ve actually written four Captain Hazzard novels, starting with my re-write of the one and only 1938 magazine adventure, Python Men of the Lost City. Then with Martin Powell, co-wrote Citadel of Fear, followed by Curse of the Red Maggot and finally Cavemen of New York. And yes, I am currently writing Captain Hazzard # 5 which I hope to have finished by the end of the year. Hazzard appealed to me because he very much a clean slate. Having only appeared in that one story, most of the potential inherent in the concept was never realized and I saw an opportunity to do that. To take the series in whatever direction I wanted to and make it mine. Something that would have been impossible doing pastiches of licenses stars like the Shadow and Doc Savage. Apparently the fans like what I’ve done with Captain Hazzard and want to seem more. I’m only happy to oblige them.

AP: Tell us a bit about your original characters you’ve created for pulp. Can you give us five or so sentences on any Fortier original pulp characters?

RF: Brother Bones is a former mob assassin who is sent back from the dead to atone for his sins by avenging the innocent victims of crime in the dark city of Cape Fear. He’s a zombie avenger and his stories deal with the supernatural. Whereas John Lazarus is the leader of the Ghost Squad that I created with a writer Andrew Salmon. He appeared in their debut novel, Rise of the Black Legion. He is the Lazarus from the bible and is immortal. He has led various teams throughout history in combating Satan’s legions and in this new pulp series, he puts together another team in the late 1930s to fight Hitler and the Nazis. Andrew and I hope to get a second book done in the near future.

AP: You’re also a reviewer of pulp fiction. Do you have a particular process you go through when doing a review? Do you just read the material, then write your opinion or do you have a checklist that you use when you read something, looking for certain things, or any other techniques you use in doing reviews?

RF: I have no set formula for writing my reviews. I merely read the book, allow my reactions to settle in and then write my honest thoughts about what I’ve read. Obviously for me to label anything pulp, be it a western, crime novel or sci-fi, it has to meet certain requirements ala fast pacing, exotic locales and heroic characters. If those are present, then I feel justified in reviewing the book as a pulp. Currently my Pulp Fiction Reviews are being posted on four different websites beside my original blog page. Guess you could say I’m net syndicated. Ha.

AP: You are founder and a member of the Pulp Factory? Just what is the Pulp Factory and what are the Pulp Factory awards?

RF: The Pulp Factory began as just another Yahoo Web Group for pulp fans. Thing is it just got bigger with more and more members. Two years ago, two of them suggested we create some kind of award to support and promote “new” pulp art and fiction. That year, at the Windy City Pulp Con, ten of us from the PF got together over breakfast one morning and hashed out the creation of the Pulp Factory Awards. Rob designed an actual statue and proceeded to find a sculpture to get them made. I, in turn, worked up the nomination and voting process and we created four categories to include Best Pulp Novel, Best Pulp Short Story, Best Pulp Cover and Best Pulp Interior Art. These to be awarded for material published the previous year. There were other parameters which we explained to the membership. Only members of the PF can nominate and vote on the final ballot awards. Then we contacted Doug Ellis, one of the promoters of Windy City and asked if we could make our first every presentation at their show this past Spring.

Thus we awarded the first ever Pulp Factory Awards for works done in 2009. They were a huge success and got us lots of great publicity and tons of new members, almost swelling our ranks to twice their size. Come Jan. 2011, nominations for the 2010 PFA will begin and by April, we will be giving out four more very cool statues at Windy City.

Note, any pulp fan reading this who would like to join the Pulp Factory and participate just needs to drop me a line. Membership is by invitation only.

AP: Any future projects you want to promote? Your own work? Anything on the horizon from Airship 27?

RF: Our most successful Airship 27 series to date has been our Sherlock Holmes – Consulting Detective which went to number 45 on the Amazon Mystery Anthology list. Bloody amazing. Volume Two sold just as well. I want to let all our SH fans know that we are indeed releasing a Volume Three in Jan. 2011 and the stories are as ever top notch, old fashion Holmes and Watson winners. Don Gates has created a new pulp hero called Challenger Storm and his first novel will soon be coming out and features interior art by one of the finest graphic artist in the history of American illustrations. His identity will surprise lots of people. And writer R.A. Jones has signed on to write a new series of adventure fantasy books for us that I can only describe as the exploits of a Native American Conan in a world where there were no Europeans to invade these shores. It has the potential to be something truly unique and pure pulp magic. Tentative title, Deathwalker. Look for that also in 2011. That and of course lots and lots of other cool pulp stuff.

AP: Ron, it’s been a genuine pleasure sitting down with you!

RF : Pleasure was all mine, thanks a million!

 

CALL ISSUED FOR WRITERS AND ARTISTS FOR ZOMBIE PULP MAG!

This call for creators is taken from http://www.thelibraryofthelivingdead.com/

“Greetings one and all,

I spoke to the good doctor about Deaf Mute Press and The Library putting out a joint venture. What made the most sense would be “These Terrible Times” an anthology featuring the dead.

For some history on what pulps are (or were), they were showcases for some of the greatest sci-fi and horror writers the world has ever known. Pulps were most prominent from the 1920’s through the early 1960’s as the medium died off. Not before Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, R.E. Howard, H.G. Wells and many others first printed original stories and characters that have become icons.

Well, I decided to bring it back. Pulps were developed to be a cheap alternative to books and in the early years, comics.

Guidelines are as follows:

This will be published Quarterly starting in Jan/Feb 2011

There will be 3 “feature” stories each issue. They will compromise about 3-10k words each. Depending on the quality of stories, SERIALIZED stories are strongly requested but not a requirement.
The featured stories will be handpicked from the best submissions, i would like to have at least 1 serialized story in each issue.

Flash is welcome too, about 7-8 flash stories could be included in each issue. Short stories between 500-2k will have space for 3 or 4.

Cover artists are welcome, painted or fully colored line art is requested.

Payment will be .01 per word or an equal # of contributor copies, whichever the writer or artist prefers. Payment of the cover artwork will be negotiated prior to acceptance.

I will have updates weekly to let everyone know what type of story is required to fill the issue. Projected to have between 40-52 pages each issue.

Dimensions will be 6.75″ x 9.75″

The stories? Wide open, there are no types of guidelines, just have zombies in the story.

I know i am missing something but i can’ t think of it, either pm me or post whatever questions you have.

SUBMIT stories to deafmutepress (at) gmail.com starting september 10th.”

NOTED PULP AUTHOR GIVING AWAY BOOKS!


In honor of monsters, October, and the number 13 (okay, ALL PULP added all that hyperbole, but it still works!) veteran pulp writer Joshua Reynolds is giving away copies of his newest work!! From the writer’s own blog-

“…so here’s the deal: seeing as it’s the unluckiest day of the most spooktacular month, I’m offering THIRTEEN FREE electronic copies of Dracula Lives! to the first thirteen people to do a Dracula-related post on their blog, journal, facebook, tumblr or what have you which also links back to my ‘Dracula Month’ posts (just click the tag at the bottom of this post). When you’ve made your post, simply drop the link into a comment on this blog, and I’ll send you your free e-book. How much easier could it get?

If you’re interested in reading the first chapter of Dracula Lives! or giving a gander to MD Jackson’s superlative cover, wander over to the Pulpwork Press website and take a look at the Upcoming Releases page. Too, if you’re interested in helping out with Dracula Month, get in touch with me either via the comments section or through my e-mail. And be sure to come back tomorrow for another daily dose of DRACULA!”

Derrick Ferguson reviews one of the best westerns made in the last twenty years at THE LONG MATINEE!

QUIGLEY DOWN UNDER

MGM
1990

Directed by Simon Wincer
Produced by Stanley O’Toole and Alexandra Rose
Written by John Hill
Original Music by Basil Poledouris

I think it’s really a damn shame that Tom Selleck never became as big a movie star as I think he solidly deserved to be. He got jerked out of playing Indiana Jones and despite whatever you may have heard from that friend of yours who knows all about movies or that other friend who claims he knows the “real story” Tom Selleck was the first choice of both George Lucas and Steven Spielberg for Indiana Jones.

Tom Selleck did have a solid movie career, though and he did some really good stuff that I liked a lot. He got to do a couple of 1930’s adventure films such as “Lassiter” with Jane Seymour in which he played a cat burglar operating in London just before WWII and “High Road To China” where he played a boozy barnstorming pilot helping Bess Armstrong find her father who’s been kidnapped by a Chinese warlord. He also did more than his share of westerns and if your cable/satellite provider carried TNT then you know what I’m talking about. During the 90’s it seemed like every other week there was a new western starring Tom Selleck featured on that station. But he did one major feature western that has gone seriously unnoticed: QUIGLEY DOWN UNDER.

Matthew Quigley (Tom Selleck) is a cowboy/sharpshooter from America who travels to Australia with his trusty weapon: a modified 1847 Sharps Buffalo Rifle with which he can hit a man from 1200 yards away. That may not sound impressive but as a way of reference let’s put it this way: the modern football field is 100 yards long. You do the math. Quigley’s been hired by a wealthy and powerful landowner, Elliot Marston (Alan Rickman) for a job. He doesn’t say what the job is but he’ll pay Quigley 50 dollars in gold just to make the three-month trip to his ranch just to hear him out. Quigley finds Marston to be a refined gentleman obsessed with The American West. He even has a matched pair of Navy Colts that he’s become expert at using. Marston is also a sadistic racist who wants Quigley to use his sharpshooting skills to help in cutting down the Outback aborigines. Quigley’s response to this job offer is to kick Marston’s ass.

He would have been much better off just saying no and going on back home. He’s beaten half to death, taken out to the unforgiving Australia desert and dumped along with Crazy Cora (Laura San Giacomo) a woman Quigley has befriended. For some reason Crazy Cora thinks that Quigley is her husband Roy and part of the fun of the movie is that we’re never sure exactly how crazy Crazy Cora really is as even Quigley says to her at one point: “The scary thing is that from time to time you actually make sense.” Quigley and Cora are rescued by aborigines and that sets up the second half of the movie as Quigley goes after Marston and in the process becomes a legend among the aborigines known as ‘The Spirit Warrior’. He also learns the tragic history of Crazy Cora and why she became crazy.

QUIGLEY DOWN UNDER is rarely mentioned when even western fans get together and I don’t know why. It’s got Tom Selleck who is one of the few modern actors who actually looks as if he belongs in The Old West. He’s a worthy successor to Randolph Scott and Joel McCrea, both of who would have slid into this role like you slide into your favorite jeans. He’s tough when he has to be in his scenes with Alan Rickman and tender in his scenes with Laura San Giacomo. Selleck has studied his westerns and he knows that in a role like this less is more. He says only what he has to say and no more. It’s a great old school performance.

Laura San Giacomo is totally terrific. She has to carry the load of being the only comic relief in the movie and she does it by creating a character that has us constantly wondering: “is she really crazy or just playing crazy?” Even covered in dirt she’s mad sexy and she has two really great scenes: one where she softly tells Quigley what happened to make her crazy and the other is where she spends a horrifying night defending an aborigine baby from a pack of dingos.

Alan Rickman is wonderful as Elliot Marston and if you expect to see him playing Hans Gruber In A Western, think again. Rickman’s too damn good for that. Marston’s a separate bad guy and he and Quigley make for wonderfully matched opponents. It helps that Rickman and Selleck look as if they’re having just as much fun going up against each other as Rickman and Willis did.

What else can I mention? Oh, yes…the simply magnificent score by Basil Poledouris. If you don’t know the work of this master then shame on you. And for QUIGLEY DOWN UNDER he composed one the most heroic, rousing scores I’ve ever heard for a movie. The location work is beautiful and really gives you a sense of how big Australia is. There’s a scene where Quigley has been already traveling four days to get to Marston’s and asks one of Marston’s men when will they get to his ranch and the man responds: “You’ve been on it for two days.” The look on Quigley’s face says it all. I would have liked to see more of the aborigine way of life but hey, the small bits we do see where they teach Quigley how to find water in the desert and how he teaches them how to lasso are fun and even charming.

So should you see QUIGLEY DOWN UNDER? I give thee a resounding “YES”. If you’re a fan of Tom Selleck in particular or westerns in general then you really ought to do yourself a favor and see this one. It’s got a solid story, some terrific action sequences and strong acting. QUIGLEY DOWN UNDER is a movie that belongs in the library of every movie fan.

PG-13
119 minutes

RON FORTIER REVIEWS SCI FI INVASION ADVENTURE!

PULP BOOK REVIEWS by Ron Fortier

OUT OF THE DARK
By David Weber
Tor Books
381 pages

Alien invasions are nothing new to both the science fiction and fantasy genres. Books like H.G.Wells WAR OF THE WORDS and Ron L.Hubbard BATTLEFIELD EARTH have all demonstrated the horrors of such a catastrophic event. In reading David Weber’s OUT OF THE DARK, it is impossible not to recall these previous exercises in intergalactic terror and the penultimate B-movie experience of INDEPENDENCE DAY.  They are all evoked wonderfully throughout this gripping adventure.

The plot is direct enough. The setting is the very near future, by only a few years. A warrior race known as the Shongairi have been given the permission of a space United Nations known as the Galactic Hemegony to invade and subjugate the Earth, based on early exploratory by other races of the Hemegony. Their reports indicated the planet’s inhabitants were a savage race and as the majority of the alien council was made up of peace loving beings, the Shongairi seemed the perfect choice to handle the Earth situation. Early on in the story, the commanding officer of the invading fleet espouses his own theories on the politics behind his people having been granted this so called privilege. He full suspects the Hemegony are hoping the Earthlings will prove difficult to the point of inflicting enough damage to weaken the Shongairi thus making them easier to handle. The Hemegony are all too aware of the Shongairi’s unbridled ambitions to expand their empire.

Of course the commander and his officers consider this a ridiculous idea as their own hubris is blinding them to the fact that all their previous victories were of Class One civilizations with no technology to speak of. Whereas the Shongairi scouting probes report the Earth has developed to a Class Two status to include nuclear capabilities that suggest other technological advances, particularly in military fields. Still, having never known defeat, the Shongairi launch their invasion by bombarding the Earth’s major capitol cities and within hours decimate a quarter of the world’s population.

Weber is a skilled military writer and he describes the destruction from outer space clearly and economically. Then he begins to introduce us to several strong willed individuals throughout the world who will be the book’s protagonists. A couple of former marine survivalists living in the mountains of South Carolina, an African American Marine Sergeant trapped in Romania with a handful of soldiers, a Russian engineer from Moscow and a U.S. Navy fighter pilot who manages to shoot down the Shongairi troop shuttles within mere hours of their attack. It is his actions that set the tempo for the remainder of the book, as his effective retaliation is the first actual loss the enemy aliens have ever encountered and all too soon pockets of human resistance begin popping up everywhere, striking back at the invaders with effective armament the likes of which they had never encountered before.
Weber lays it on fast and furious all of which leads to a dead road culmination for the Shongairi. If they cannot successfully defeat the human race, then they will merely retreat and bomb the planet to oblivion.

The question then becomes, will the humans survive and is there any way they can possibly turn the tables and actual defeat the invaders? Therein lays the resolution that caught me by surprise because for the most part the book is science fiction and Weber’s solution strays afar into that other genre we alluded to earlier. In a way that some readers may not appreciate and I can sympathize with them. On the other hand, I was delighted with it and applaud Weber for having the literary bravado to pull it off, particularly in his being able to subtlety play on the book’s very title with that particular climax.

Bottom line, OUT OF THE DARK is a terrific read that had me from the first page and kept me enthralled to the very last. If you are willing to have fun with fiction of this type, then hang on and enjoy the ride. It’s a wild one.