Tag Archive for 'monsters'

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2010 Halloween Costume

This year it’s been tough keeping up with the Halloween festivities. Lately, I’ve barely even had time to read my favorite horror blogs, let alone update mine. So here are, without comment, pictures from the construction of this years Halloween costume.

Pinup of the Week: Thrilling Mystery April 1937

Thrilling Mystery 1937 04

HORROR OUT OF THE DEEP
A Spine-Tingling Novelette
By JAMES DUNCAN

SPIDER ISLAND
A Novelette of Doom’s Web
By JACK WILLIAMSON

DEATH PLAYS HOST
A Novelette of Subterranean Dread
By HUGH B. CAVE

BRIDE OF THE SHINING DEAD
A Novelette of Midnight Terror
By HAL K. WELLS

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 *

Eyewitness Reports – Jaime Zollars

You may or may not be surprised to find out that I collect a little art here and there. There are a couple of artists that I’m interested in and I buy prints mostly, but every once in a while I splurge and buy a piece of original art. What with the economy like it is, we monsters with large savings accounts and/or diabolical ways of procuring our day-to-day needs can afford some art here and there. And I like it. Most of the time original art is way better than prints or photos.

Knowing that, you’ll probably understand that I was pretty excited when a piece by one of my favorite artists, Jaime Zollars, was being auctioned recently to benefit 826LA, “a Los Angeles-based nonprofit writing and tutoring center fronted by a fully-functioning convenience store for time travelers.” When the bidding started, I was ruthless and succeeded in intimidating the other bidders with my persistent bidding, and also my winged monkey army.

I don’t know what it is about Zollars’ art. She has this way of portraying fairy-tale-like heroines in interesting ways. I have a handful of her prints and a few original pieces in my collection. Gallery Nucleus has just started selling prints of one of my favorite pieces by her, Garden Secret. The art on auction was part of a larger group of art by children’s book illustrators inspired by the book Oh No (Or How My Science Project Destroyed the World) written by Mac Barnett and illustrated by Dan Santat. Each auction also included an official police report filled out by the artist, a copy of the book Oh No! (Or How My Science Project Destroyed the World) signed by Mac Barnett and Dan Santat, and an exclusive limited edition print.

After winning the auction, I spent what seemed like months on pins and needles waiting for my delivery. I just had to share with everyone when it finally came.

The Package

Woo Hoo!

A Copy of the Book

Awesome Story and Art

Bonus 826LA Brochure and Letter of Thanks

The limited edition print is really awesome.

The official police report.

And finally, the Zollars piece!

You can see a close-up of the piece here. The book, Oh No, is available here. Here’s the link to 826LA again. Organizations like this are really important both to the communities they serve, and to the world in general (That is the most warm and fluffy thing you will ever read here, ever, I promise.) Those of you without underground tunnels, rat armies, and flying monkeys can procure prints by Jaime Zollars at her online store and also at Nucleus Gallery.

News Bites: Don't Pelican, Corpse Dolls, Japanese Monster Anatomy

Don't, Pelican.

Ha Ha! I love this picture. Found on somebody’s tumbler with no info on source.

Lovely and Strange Dolls

Kamila's Dolls

Fantastic handmade corpse dolls can be found at Kamila’s Dolls – blog here: Kamila’s Dolls. Sadly she currently has nothing for sale at her Etsy site. Her mom has asked her to tell everyone that she had a very happy childhood.

Japanese Monster Anatomy

Check out this cool page of Japanese monster anatomy illustrations by manga artist Shigeru Mizuki.

Book Review: The Drawing of the Dark by Tim Powers

The Drawing of the Dark by Tim Powers - 1979If you’re a regular reader here, you probably know that I’m something of a Tim Powers fan. See reviews here, here, and here. I’m getting near to having read his entire output. Imagine my delight when some members of my rat army showed up with a mint first edition copy of Powers’ 1979 The Drawing of the Dark. What I do when I get a collectible book is I make a paper book cover out of a paper bag and do my best to gentle on the spine. My goal is to leave the book looking like I never read it. Making brown paper bag covers for books always makes me think that anyone seeing me read the book might suspect that I was reading pornography or a romance novel. Luckily I’m a proud book geek and I have to assure you that I’ve read plenty from both those genres and probably will again before it’s all done with. For that matter, the copy of Jim Thompson’s Savage Night that I own has a ridiculous, lurid cover that would really need to be hidden in public. Not that I ever go out in public, considering that I’m a MONSTER and people would try to KILL ME. What was I talking about?

Powers researches real events and produces stories that are as historically accurate as possible, and then puts a major twist on them, and sort of tells a “secret history” of the event. The event being re-framed in The Drawing is the 1529 siege of Vienna by the Ottomans. If you have read and liked The Anubis Gates, the good news is that this book has something of the same flavor. It’s about adventure and strange underworld goings-on in 16th Century Europe. Powers also explores his interest in the Fisher King, which also figured into the plot of his later book Last Call (1993). To give you a summary, The Drawing of the Dark is about an aging mercenary who is hired by a wizard to be a bouncer at a brewery in Vienna. On his way to his assignment from Venice, things start getting weird. Different groups of people try to kill him. Supernatural beings, including a troop of dwarfs, come to his aid at strange times. Once he gets to Vienna he gets pulled deeper and deeper into a struggle between near-mythological forces. He feels like an ordinary mercenary, but it becomes obvious that larger forces are at work.

There is fighting, romance, adventure, and plenty of weird magical realism. The fighting is painful, the romance is complicated and maybe a little sad, the adventure is imaginative and interesting, and the magic is strangely plausible. This book also has a humorous edge to it. Sadly, for me the book really got bogged down about halfway through. Although some of the characters still don’t get what’s going on, the reader will have it figured out, and that tends to water down the tension of the narrative. Also, the ending ended up being a little anti-climactic.

Let’s see those numbers.

Creepy Factor: 2 out of 5
Suspense Factor: 3 out of 5
Weird Erotic Tension Factor: 0 out of 5
Funny and/or Strange Factor: 3 out of 5

Final result: If you’re already a Powers fan and are working your way through his books, you’ll probably like this book. If you’re curious about Powers, I would instead recommend Three Days to Never (2006), or the oft-mentioned-here, Anubis Gates (1983). If you are interested in the One Thousand and One Nights (a.k.a. 1001 Arabian Nights), you will probably find Declare (2001) to be an amazing read. I thought it was really mind-blowing, but a friend of mine couldn’t get through it.

The Drawing of the Dark by Tim Powers – Del Rey – 1979
Buy The Drawing of the Dark on Amazon

Thanks for reading another one of my book reviews. See you next time!

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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