Archive for the 'Memes' Category

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Meme: A Peculiar Quote a Day

I took a break last week from the Weekly Geeks. Mostly because the topic was social issues. Social issues are difficult for monsters because very often they lead to angry mobs of villagers with pitchforks and torches. So one minute you feel like you’re advancing the rights of monsters everywhere, and the next you’re climbing up the side of the Empire State Building with Fay Wray in one hand, and swatting down airplanes with the other. Not that there was anything wrong with Fay Wray. Quite the opposite. It’s the airplanes that worry a monster. And the torches. And the pitchforks. So… Without further ado, here is today’s quote!

Life is intrinsically, well, boring and dangerous at the same time. At any given moment the floor may open up. Of course, it almost never does; that’s what makes it so boring.” ~Edward Gorey (Author, Artist 1925 – 2000)

See my favorite Edward Gorey couplet here.

Buy Edward Gorey Collectibles on eBay

Weekly Geeks: Interview with Cthulhu

In this week’s Weekly Geek the assignment is to interview a character in a book or story. Today I have the honor to interview Cthulhu, who many of you know is the subject of stories by H.P. Lovecraft among others. In particular, his adventures as a horrible monster are detailed in Lovecraft’s 1926 masterpiece “The Call of Cthulhu” first published in Weird Tales. In the 83 years since then Cthulhu has gone on to be a menacing media sensation. So without further ado:

cthulhu-top

Welcome Cthulhu and thanks for agreeing to meet with me and not squish me like an insect. Can I call you Cthulhu?
Yes. Although I prefer an unintelligible word which translates to “That which must awaken soon and devour the stars and the Earth.”

Wow that’s great. First I want to ask you: You have enjoyed an increase in popularity of late. To what do you attribute your undying popularity?
Well it’s simple marketing 101, really. You need to have a compelling story. Something people can relate to, or maybe something that changes the way they see the world around them. Perhaps tell them something that adds meaning to their brief, pitiful, worm-like existences.

We just had a much-watched election in the United States and, as usual, there were a lot of “Cthulhu for President” bumper stickers. How do you feel about those?
I want the people of Earth to know that it is only when the stars are aligned that my terrible time will come and my minions and I will reshape this puny planet. In the meantime, my lawyers are working to stop these people. I feel that they are diluting my brand.

I have to stop a moment and admit that you’re one of my heroes. Do you have any recommendations for monsters who are just starting out?
I think one of the best decisions a monster can make early on is to be an undying evil. Things like vampires, ghosts, the headless horseman, Jason out at Crystal Lake, and up until recently, Voldemort. They all get the importance of not dying.

Where do you think Voldemort went wrong?
Voldemort first got into trouble when he decided to mess with children. Children are easier to menace, and you get a bigger reaction in the short term, but eventually children become teenagers, and then they get crushes on each other and have all this petty drama going on. A monster can end up feeling pushed aside. And then it’s hard to keep going.

Very interesting. So I’m going to ask you some quick “either-or” questions.
OK.

Good vs. Evil or Chaos vs. Order?
I really think that it’s more complicated than that. A monster needs an inner compass to guide him or her or it. Whether it be devouring hapless victims in a cave, stalking teenagers, or making doomed artists go insane, a monster really needs to listen to that inner voice. What do YOU want to do with your night?

King Kong or Godzilla?
King Kong, definitely. Oh Godzilla has his destructive side, and the lizard has a charming victory dance, but King Kong is a tragic story and I think it’s very moving.

Morticia Addams or the Beldam (a.k.a. the “other mother”) from Coraline?
Morticia all the way. (Laughs horrifyingly) Although there is something about the Beldam. I’d like to show her how to thread a needle, if you know what I mean.

Ha ha. Yes. OK. I’m going to say a word and I want you to say whatever comes to your mind:

Blue.
Black.

House.
Black.

Dream.
Black.

Um. Flower?
Black.

Fairy dust.
Black.

Wow thanks. I’m learning so much here. It’s like being in a monster master class. Do you get on the internet? And if you do, do you have any favorite things?
Yes recently the old ones figured out how to get satellite internet to my ruined city under the ocean. I just discovered this YouTube video of a cat who plays the piano. I play it over and over. (Editor’s note: We think Cthulhu is talking about this clip.)

I’m going to take a page from “Inside the Actor’s Studio” and ask, what is your favorite curse word?
I would love to share that but, if you could express it in print, it would most certainly make your readers go insane. If it didn’t kill them instantly, it would snuff their tiny minds out like candles.

Wow. Well we only have time for one more question and I’ll let you go. Well, Cthulhu, we all know you lay in wait under the ocean in R’lyeh…
Yes. Dreaming.

What do you miss most about the surface?
Depending on how you look at the ocean, it is always Spring or Fall under the sea. I miss a good Winter.

Wow well thanks again. It’s been a real pleasure talking with you. Thanks for answering my questions.
The pleasure is all mine, really. Thanks for having me.

cthulhu-bottom

Book Reviewer Meme

yipyipphone

Like most monsters I remember a time when I felt all alone in the world, especially when I was small. I felt like maybe I was the only monster in a whole wide world of… of… gingerbread men. Today, thanks in part to the efforts of the Sesame Street Martians, I know that I don’t have to feel alone.

In that spirit, I’m joining a book reviewer meme started by John at Grasping for the Wind. Below is a list favorite of book reviews posted by their authors.

The Book Review Meme @ Grasping for the Wind

1. Grasping for the Wind – INFOQUAKE by David Louis Edelman
2. Age 30+ … A Lifetime of Books – A COMPANION TO WOLVES by Sarah Monette and Elizabeth Bear
3. Dragons, Heroes and Wizards – ASSASSIN’S APPRENTICE by Robin Hobb
4. Walker of Worlds – THE TEMPORAL VOID by Peter F Hamilton
5. Neth Space – TOLL THE HOUNDS by Steven Erikson

Dark in the Dark – GHOST STORIES OF AN ANTIQUARY by M.R. James

Weekly Geeks Number 5 – Judging a Book by its Cover

Ah yes. Judging a book by its cover. Oh the irony. You know, a lot of people look at me and judge me by my cover. They see a twisted, horrible monster who might eat children or probably scurries around in his cave when the sun is out instead of doing something wholesome like riding his bike. And in that they’d be half right. If children weren’t so sour I might eat them. But enough about me. This week’s “Weekly Geek” assignment has made me realize that it’s NOT all about me (gasp.) It’s all about the internet and how fun it can be! Here’s the assignment:

This week it’s all about judging books by their covers! Pick a book –any book, really– and search out multiple book cover images for that book. They could span a decade or two (or more)…Or they could span several countries. Which cover is your favorite? Which one is your least favorite? Which one best ‘captures’ what the book is about?

One of my most favorite book covers is the first paperback cover ever done for Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. We’ll get to that in a minute. But first I want to share about the internet. Check this out. There is a whole blog dedicated to all things Frankenstein. Wow! Here is a cover I found at this blog of a book that I actually owned once. Ah the memories.

Norman Bridwell's 1970 How to Care for Your Monster

Norman Bridwell's 1970 How to Care for Your Monster

There are so many cool Frankenstein covers and here’s what they tell me.

Contrary to common opinion Frankenstein’s monster was really sort of more like the Incredible Hulk.

2008 Graphic Novel

2008 Graphic Novel

Frankenstein’s monster liked to hang around at home in the nude.

2003 Penuin Classics

2003 Penuin Classics

Frankenstein’s monster was into the ladies.

1973 Arrow Books

1973 Arrow Books

Frankenstein’s monster liked redheads especially.

1932 Photoplay Edition

1932 Photoplay Edition

Frankenstein’s monster really really liked redheads but maybe didn’t know what to do with them exactly.

1953 Lion Books

1953 Lion Books

This last cover, of course, is my personal favorite and the one that started it all, but I have one last thing to share: The Bride of Frankenstein action figure! Right on!

Wow wow wow

Wow wow wow

Weekly Geek Number 4

I had such a delightful time haunting people last week that I have chosen to join the Weekly Geek meme again this week. Welcome fellow Geeks! Ah HA HA HA HA HA!

#1. What are you passionate about besides reading and blogging? Tell us why you’re passionate about it… Post photos of what you’ve made or of yourself doing whatever it is you love doing.

Past readers of my blog will know that, besides reading terrifying and weird books and reviewing them (and also having my own army of winged monkeys) I love to slave feverishly on paper models. Especially delightful are paper models of monsters, mummies, or antique cars. I guess it combines so many things I love. First there’s the things a monster can build, like bats or robots. Second there’s all the cutting. I can really get into the cutting and cutting and slashing and CUTTING AND HACKING. A-HA HA HA!. Or pretending I’m a scientist in his lab performing experiments with dead pieces of paper that no sane man would attempt. Third, It’s nice having all these paper friends all lined up, staring at me diabolically from their shelves on the walls.

Here’s a picture of a diorama I set up with a paper model of an antique car I made. The original car model template I built it from was actually a Disney car (Donald Duck’s) so I had to get my crayons out and make it scary.

Nosferatu's Ghost Car

Nosferatu's Ghost Car

#2. Get us involved. Link to tutorials, recipes, Youtube videos, websites, fan sites, etc, anything that will help us learn more about your interest or how to do your hobby. Maybe you’d like to link to another hobbyist whose work you admire…

There are many places to get haunted models. Here are two that come to mind immediately:
Ravensblight: Haunted Houses, mechanical bats, evil tomes, and graveyards.
Haunted Dimensions: Paper models by Ray Keim of Disney haunted houses.

For the faint of heart, here are two great not-so-haunted papercraft blogs: Paperkraft.blogspot.com and Jaime Zollars Paper Forest. (Incidentally I’m a big fan of the artwork of Jaime Zollars.)

#3. Visit other Weekly Geeks. Link in your post to other Geeks who’ve peaked your interest in their passion. Or maybe you might find a fellow afincionado among us, link to them.

Nymeth wrote about music, which is one of my great passions.

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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