Monthly Archive for March, 2009

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Trinity of Three Dragons by Orland Nutt


Trinity of Three Dragons from cporridge on Vimeo.

Monday Monster Music: Snake Woman

Raymond Scott (played by the Beau Hunks) * Snake Woman * 1930s

Raymond Scott on Raymond Scott

Weekly Geeks: About Historical Fiction

This week’s Weekly Geeks challenge is to convince a friend that historical fiction isn’t boring. Being a monster, a book reviewer, a crypt keeper and a haunter of basements and attics, it’s a natural that I would be intimately familiar with historical fiction. I have even reviewed an example of historical fiction here: The Stress of Her Regard by Tim Powers, and sooner or later I’m sure there will be more book reviews of this nature. I’ve also mentioned The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova, which I would recommend to anyone. However, to the real die-hard “I hate historical fiction” person I would recommend Devil in the White City by Erik Larson. This book was so good that I still savor the memory of reading it. For the person who wants to read something hilarious, I would recommend To Say Nothing of the Dog by Connie Willis, which is a fine historical piece dressed up to resemble a science fiction novel.

To be honest, however, I really appreciate fiction that was written in its own period and that as a result contains an indelible stamp of the time it was written in. One of my guilty pleasures is reading trashy pulp fiction from the 1960s. Mmmmmmm. In the ’60s, being trashy just seemed so natural.

Here are some books from my OTHER collection. Since the year they were published, some of these books have faded into well-deserved obscurity. In fact, it’s a pretty safe bet that all but two of these books are currently out of print. One of these books sparked an entire genre and is still studied in college classes today. At least one of them was written under a pen name by an author who became famous for writing other books. And then there’s Jim Thompson and Carter Brown. Check out these covers and the cover blurbs.

Beebo Brinker by Ann Bannon

LOST, LONELY, BOYISHLY APPEALING – this is Beebo Brinker – who never really knew what she wanted – until she came to Greenwich Village and found the love that smoulders in the shadows of the twilight world. – Beebo Brinker by Ann Bannon

Drum Beat Erica by Stephen Marlowe

CHESTER DRUM takes the oddest “trip” of his career – with a tall death-dealing blonde and an even taller dose of LSD. – Drum Beat Erica by Stephen Marlowe

Modesty Blaise by Peter O’Donnell

MODESTY BLAISE – Men tremble at the sight of Modesty Blaise. Out of lust… and out of fear. Not only is Modesty a gorgeous hunk of woman, she is also one of the deadliest females this side of Mata Hari. – Modesty Blaise by Peter O’Donnell

The Passionate by Carter Brown

RIVAL FOR A CORPSE – The sizzling brunette collected shrunken heads but she offered Al Wheeler five thousand dollars to bring her the live heart of her ex-husband. – The Passionate by Carter Brown

Pop. 1280 by Jim Thompson

POP. 1280 – 1277 of the citizens were just plain folk – thieves, simpletons, cheats. It was those other 3 – Myra, Amy, and Rose – who made Pottsville the hottest town this side of the Equator – Pop. 1280 by Jim Thompson

Some Like it Cool by Robert Kyle

THE MORNING AFTER – For one thing, the room I was lying in was strange. The bed was strange, the lights were strange – even the telephone was strange. For another, there was a girl in the room. She was sitting on the window sill. She was wearing a slip. And she was nobody I knew. – Some Like it Cool by Robert Kyle

Doctors’ Women by Phillip Sorrell

THE SHOCKING TRUTH – The probing, intimate novel that dares focus public attention on the low moral values of some men of medicine who mix professional practices with excesses in lust! – Doctors’ Women by Phillip Sorrell

Father of the Amazons by Pete Lewis

THERE IS NO BLURB, unfortunately, but with a cover like this, who needs one? – Father of the Amazons by Pete Lewis

Whatever you do, don’t miss the pink mules on the cover of The Passionate.

As a bonus, all but two of these covers were illustrated by the same artist. Extra credit points go to whoever can name the artist. Well, I have basements to haunt and crypts to keep so I’ll catch you on the flip-side. Thanks for joining me for another Weekly Geeks installment.

I want to know: What’s your guilty reading pleasure?

Book Review: The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman

The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman - illustrated by Dave McKeanHave you ever thought about your place in the universe? Sometimes a monster feels as if there is a greater plan at work and that something that makes no sense today might show a pattern at some time in the future. You might end up feeling like a cog in the giant machine that is the universe. It’s like that time my entire flying monkey army got horrible food poisoning and were grounded for a week. There were sick monkeys everywhere, and there was monkey vomit everywhere. Those were some of the darkest minutes of my life. But then a day into it, a horrible witch showed up at my door. It turned out that she needed monkey vomit for a project she was working on. Lots and lots of monkey vomit. And here I was throwing it out. It’s just things like this that make you wonder about the universe.

What does monkey vomit have to do with The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman? It seems like one of the main themes of the book is destiny. Here’s the basic set-up of the book: An entire family is killed by a mysterious murderer and the only person who escapes is a toddler. The toddler happens to wander into a graveyard, and the ghosts and creatures of the graveyard decide to raise, hide, and protect the toddler. So he grows up in a graveyard. In the graveyard the child has ghost parents and a guardian who is maybe a vampire, although it’s never really said what he is.

The book is made up of several stories that take place while the boy grows up. I have two beefs with this book. Beef number one is the name of the protagonist. His name is “Bod” short for “Nobody.” So it’s Bod like Rod “the Bod” Bodinsky. ‘Nuff said. Beef number two is that half of the stories are the sort of cautionary tales that belong in an Highlights Magazine. Reading a story where the protagonist ignores the advice of his parents, goes somewhere he’s not supposed to be, steals something, ignores the advice of a friend, and is then dishonest with the people he’s dealing with, you know you know you know that there is going to be a disappointed but caring adult delivering a lecture at the end of the story and maybe administering some tough love. *shudder*

Of course, this book IS aimed at adolescents, so maybe they get off on that kind of thing.

I feel like I’m in danger of talking too much about the bad things. The good news is that the writing is awesome. I think this may be my favorite book by Gaiman so far. The thing about Neil Gaiman is that he’s a really excellent writer AND he’s amazingly creative AND he can write creepy AND he likes to play with the narrative form. His writing works on many levels and I really enjoy it. There are a few things that really stand out about this book.

One, Gaiman adds very interesting angles to some tired conventions. The book has werewolves, ghouls, vampires, long lost treasure in buried tombs, and even a secret society. However, Gaiman gives them all a new shine, great deal of depth, and a mythological air. A lot of reviewers have compared this book to the “Jungle Book” by Rudyard Kipling, which Gaiman himself says inspired it, but I think another good comparison would be the original Voyages of Sinbad from the Thousand and one Arabian Nights, but of course written for young adults. These stories have a lot of adventure.

Another great thing is that some really genuinely sad things happen to our protagonist. This adds emotional depth and reality to the book. I think that this might be one of the things I missed in Coraline (see my review of the movie Coraline.) The end of the Graveyard Book isn’t exactly sewn up. It’s actually the beginning of a new adventure, and it left me wishing for more.

Creepy Factor: 3 out of 5
Suspense Factor: 4 out of 5
Weird Erotic Tension Factor: 0 out of 5

Final result: Neil Gaiman keeps getting better and better. I really liked this book. It’s clear why it won the Newberry Award, and I have to say that if Gaiman sees fit to write a sequel, I’ll be among those eager to read it.

Have you read this book? How did you feel about its use of destiny? Do you think there should be a sequel? Let us know in the comments!

The Graveyard Book – Neil Gaiman – Illustrations by Dave McKean – Harper Collins – 2008

View this book on Amazon

Sometimes I almost forget that I do book reviews at this site, what with the Pyramid Head papercrafts, a Cthulhu interview, and a week full of monster quotes. But I did originally set this site up to do horror novel reviews. Thanks for reading another one of my book reviews. See you next time!

Pin up of the Week: Dime Mystery May 1937

Dime Mystery 1937 05

Dime Mystery 1937 05

darkinthedark does not claim copyright on these images. If you are the copyright holder and object to their presence here, please contact me and I will remove them.

* Search for Shudder Pulps on eBay *

The flying monkeys let our technician out for a minute and he snuck away into the light of day. Thanks for your patience during this difficult transition.
I ated Tinkerbell.

Fhtagn Spoken Here.

... the attic, a vast raftered length lighted only by small blinking windows in the gable ends, and filled with a massed wreckage of chests, chairs, and spinning-wheels which infinite years of deposit had shrouded and festooned into monstrous and hellish shapes.
The Shunned House
H.P. Lovecraft




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