home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1995-04-10 | 85.9 KB | 2,546 lines |
-
-
- **************************************************************
- * *
- * R E A D I N G F O R P L E A S U R E *
- * *
- * Issue #4 *
- * *
- * August 1989 *
- * *
- * *
- * Editor: Cindy Bartorillo *
- * *
- * *
- **************************************************************
-
-
- CONTACT US AT: Reading For Pleasure, c/o Cindy Bartorillo, 1819
- Millstream Drive, Frederick, MD 21701; or on CompuServe leave a
- message to 74766,1206; or on GEnie leave mail to C.BARTORILLO; or
- on one of the "home" boards listed in the Distribution Directory.
-
-
- NOTICE: Reading For Pleasure is not copyrighted, but excerpts
- from copyrighted material are contained within. When copying or
- otherwise reproducing any part herein, please give appropriate
- credit, whether it be to Shakespeare or Reading For Pleasure.
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- I myself would never work in film. It would be too frustrating.
- When I'm writing a novel, I have complete control over how
- everything turns out. Once it gets into the hands of filmmakers,
- it invariably changes into something different. That's why I
- never let others adapt my novels for film unless I'm reasonably
- sure they're going to do things my way.
- --James Herbert
-
-
- I enjoy filmmaking. It's a different experience entirely from
- writing prose. It's rather fun, actually, so long as you go into
- it with the understanding that you're part of a team, and you
- can't do it all yourself. You have to surrender yourself to the
- process, but if you do, you can get amazing things done. Besides,
- if you've got fantastically talented people working with you,
- you'd be a fool not to make use of those talents.
- --Clive Barker
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
- Distribution Directory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91
- Editorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157
- What's News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 218
- Recent Awards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 410
- Good Reading Periodically . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 479
- Random Reviews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 515
- New From Dark Harvest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 745
- About Hollywood . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 834
- SILVER SCREAM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1063
- Fiction Into Film . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1193
- Joe Bob Briggs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1408
- The Hollywood Mystery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1479
- Featured Author: Fredric Brown . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1544
- THE DARK FANTASTIC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1718
- Guest Reviewer: Darryl Kenning . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1840
- August Birthdays . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1920
- Number One Fan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2004
- Trivia Quiz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 324
- Trivia Answers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2043
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- CONTRIBUTIONS: We're just ecstatic when we get contributions. Of
- course we can't pay, but if you'd like to send us a paragraph or
- two (or even an article), we'd be delighted. Any book-related
- ideas or opinions are suitable. See masthead for addresses.
-
-
-
-
- COMING NEXT MONTH:
- Actually, nothing (see Editorial). The next issue will be the
- October Halloween issue, due out at the end of September. With
- any luck, there will be at least several terrifying suggestions
- for your autumn reading.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- DISTRIBUTION DIRECTORY
-
-
- Here are a few bulletin boards where you should be able to pick
- up the latest issue of Reading For Pleasure. See masthead for
- where to send additions and corrections to this list.
-
-
- The Annex Dayton,OH John Cooper 513-274-0821
- Beginnings BBS Levittown,NY Mike Coticchio 516-796-7296 S
- Billboard Chicago,IL Gary Watson 312-289-9808 P
- Boardello Los Angeles,CA Bryan Tsunoda 213-820-4527 P
- CC-BBS ManhattanBchCA Chuck Crayne 213-379-8817 P
- Channel 1 Cambridge,MA Miller & Heder 617-354-8873 P
- CompuNet Venice,CA Karen Zinda 213-306-1447 P
- Death Star Oxon Hill,MD Lee Pollard 301-839-0705 P
- Diversified Prog PacPalisadesCA Jean-Pierre Denis 213-459-6053 P
- Eclectic BBS San Jose,CA Dave Hunter 408-268-9453 P
- Flying Circus BBS Tempe,AZ Andy Woodward 602-437-1301 P
- Future Tech Boston,MA Napier & Moran 617-720-3600 P
- Futzer Avenue Issaquah,WA Stan Symms 206-391-2339 P
- HeavenSoft Dayton,OH John Wampler 513-836-4288
- Heath UG Boston,MA 617-237-1511 P
- Home DBA Support Seattle,WA Mark Findlay 206-789-9302 P
- IBMNew CompuServe Library #0
- Inn on the Park Scottsdale,AZ Jim Jusko 602-957-0631 P
- Invention Factory New York,NY Mike Sussell 212-431-1273 P
- JETS Philadelphia T.A. Hare 215-928-7503 P
- JForum CompuServe Library #8
- KCSS BBS Seattle,WA Bob Neddo 206-296-5277 P
- Litforum CompuServe Library #1
- Micro Foundry San Jose,CA Tom Nelson 408-258-3484 P
- Nostradamus Los Angeles,CA Al Menache 213-473-4119 P
- Oak Lawn Oak Lawn,IL Vince & Chris 312-599-8089 P
- Quantum Connec. PacPalisadesCA Richard W. Gross 213-459-6748 P
- Riverside Premium Chicago,IL 312-447-8073 P
- Science Fiction GEnie Library #4
- SF & Fantasy CIS Hom-9 Library #1
- Suburban Software Chicago,IL Chuck Valecek 312-636-6694 P
- Technoids Anon. Chandler,AZ David Cantere 602-899-4876 P
- Writers Happy Hr Seattle,WA Walter Scott 206-364-2139 P
- Writers' RT GEnie Library #1
- Your Place Fairfax,VA Ken Goosens 703-978-6360 P
-
-
- RFP Home Boards:
- Baudline II Frederick,MD the Bartorillo's 301-694-7108
- New Micro Connec Buckeystown,MD Doug Burg 301-698-0212
-
-
- RFP is also available on any board that participates in the
- RelayNet (tm) system (request from NetNode).
-
-
- P = PC Pursuit-able
- S = StarLink-able
-
-
- NOTE: Back issues on CompuServe may have been moved to a
- different library.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- You could fit all the sincerity of Hollywood into a flea's navel
- and still have room left over for two caraway seeds and an
- agent's heart.
- --Fred Allen
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- EDITORIAL
-
-
- So now I finally understand why magazines have such long
- lead times. It has always been, and I'm sure will continue to be,
- a source of irritation to me, because so often a magazine's
- "news" is stale -- all because of the long lead time. (Lead time
- is the time between the writing of an article and the audience's
- reading of that article.) But now I appreciate that magazines
- don't get put together overnight, and that "putting together"
- can't happen until AFTER the articles are turned in.
-
-
- You see, it takes me most of the month to write/assemble
- Reading For Pleasure. After that, where do I fit the 2-3 weeks
- necessary to typeset the written edition? And don't forget the
- electronic edition needs formatting too. Of course, I don't do
- all of this myself, but all of these are jobs that have to get
- done. The question is: when?
-
-
- The answer is that we have decided to put Reading For
- Pleasure on a more conventional schedule: a two month schedule.
- RFP will still be a monthly, but each issue will have taken two
- months to prepare. During August I will be getting down the words
- for the October issue. During September, I will be assembling the
- words for the November issue while the October issue is being
- formatted and typeset. It's just a matter of thinking an extra
- month ahead. And as you can see, it means there will be no
- September issue.
-
-
- Meanwhile, enjoy this Hollywood issue; we worked some long
- hours putting it together. And we hope you'll be interested
- enough to keep an eye out for our Halloween issue in late
- September. Halloween is our favorite holiday of the year, and we
- take it very seriously. The October issue will be chock-full of
- shocking recommendations of horrifying fiction and nonfiction.
- Keep reading!
-
-
- *-Cindy
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- NEW! NEW! NEW! NEW! NEW!
-
-
- Talk to SYSOP Doug Burg and RFP editor Cindy Bartorillo in a
- brand-new Horror Conference on The New Micro Connection. Lots of
- good conversation devoted to the world of horror. See you there.
-
-
- The New Micro Connection 301-698-0212
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- FILM NOIR -- A French term for the dark, brooding movies made in
- the 1940s and 1950s, often starring John Garfield, frequently
- adapted from Cornell Woolrich stories. This is most appropriately
- expressed in French, for though the movies came from America,
- they were most popular in France.
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- WHAT'S NEWS
-
-
- * DEEP QUARRY by John E. Stith (see RFP #3) won the Colorado
- Authors' League Top Hand award for best original adult fiction
- paperback.
-
-
- * Tom Clancy's new novel, CLEAR AND PRESENT DANGER, is about a
- covert military campaign to fight drug smuggling, and Publishers
- Weekly says it's his best work since THE HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER.
- Out this month for $21.95 from Putnam.
-
-
- * J.A. Jance (Judith Ann) writes police procedurals, but not many
- know how she comes by her interest and knowledge of cops. In
- 1970, she and her then husband worked as teachers on an Indian
- reservation in Arizona. One night she worked late and her husband
- had to hitchhike home, accepting a ride from a stranger in a
- green car. Later the Jances realized, from descriptions, that the
- stranger was wanted for three murders, the last committed minutes
- before picking up Mr. Jance. Once he was caught by police, the
- murderer admitted that he had been stalking the Jances, planning
- to kill them before they could tell the police anything. Watching
- the police building the case against the man provided her
- education on police methods.
-
-
- * Looks like there will be something called "Dean Koontz Suspense
- Theater" on CBS in the near future. DK's film rights agent
- Patricia Karlan sold the idea to Greg Mayday, VP of movies of the
- week and miniseries at Warner Bros, who turned the project over
- to Lee Rich. THE FACE OF FEAR, EYES OF DARKNESS, NIGHT CHILLS,
- and DARKFALL have already been optioned for "Suspense Theater",
- two of which are assured of an airing in the first season. Four
- more books have just been optioned, but I don't have the titles.
- Feature film interest in MIDNIGHT, DK's latest bestseller will
- prevent it from being part of this deal. Mr. Koontz is writing a
- teleplay adaptation of DARKFALL and will serve as executive
- producer on all productions.
-
-
- * Last month Tale Weaver Publishing released THE RUBY SLIPPERS OF
- OZ: The Pursuit, Power and Passion of the World's Most Famous
- Shoes by Rhys Thomas. Just another 50th Anniversary of The Wizard
- of Oz book, yes, but this certainly has the narrowest focus. Also
- good if you have a foot fetish.
-
-
- * Universal TV has optioned THE EIGHT (the critical hit by
- Katherine Neville) for a miniseries.
-
-
- * Did you notice that the TV ads for the movie DEEPSTAR SIX were
- eerily reminiscent of the recent Michael Crichton novel SPHERE?
- We've had a real rash of underwater suspense/horror since the
- bestselling book, when you stop to consider it: DEEPSTAR SIX,
- LEVIATHAN, LORD OF THE DEEP, and THE ABYSS. Michael Crichton has
- said: "Some people have suggested that I ought to be taking a
- close interest in this from a legal standpoint. But that's not my
- inclination."
-
-
- * Dame Daphne Du Maurier died in her sleep on April 19, 1989 at
- her home in Par, Cornwall, England. She is best known for novels
- like REBECCA (1938), MY COUSIN RACHEL (1951), and THE HOUSE ON
- THE STRAND (1968). She once said: "I can't say I really like
- people; perhaps that's why I always preferred to create my own."
-
-
- * Klaus Maria Brandauer was supposed to play the Russian sub
- commander in the movie version of Tom Clancy's THE HUNT FOR RED
- OCTOBER, but, due to a "scheduling conflict", he has been
- replaced by Sean Connery. Also in the movie are: Alec Baldwin,
- Scott Glenn, James Earl Jones, Sam Neill and Rip Torn.
-
-
- * There is a movement afoot to make the first Saturday of
- November Booklover's Day, when bookstores would have special
- events and (they hope) just EVERYBODY would buy loads of books.
- At best it could benefit the cause of literacy, libraries, and
- bookstores, all dear to the heart of a reader. Booklover's Day
- will fall on November 4 this year. Stay tuned.
-
-
- * A city ordinance enacted in April would prevent the sale of any
- used merchandise (except cars) in San Carlos, a suburb of San
- Francisco. Tim Christensen, owner of a store that sells used
- books, plans a First Amendment suit. Good for him, and shame on
- San Carlos.
-
-
- * I just heard about SCARE CARE (June Tor hardcover, $19.95), an
- anthology of new horror stories, edited by Graham Masterton, all
- of whose profits are being donated to the Scare Care Trust, an
- organization dedicated to raising money to help abused and needy
- children everywhere. Authors represented include: Ramsey
- Campbell, Harlan Ellison, James Herbert and Charles L. Grant.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- ZOOM vs. TRACK -- Here you have two ways of following a moving
- subject with a camera. When the camera zooms, a lens is used that
- refocuses for the varying distance of the filmed subject; and
- when the camera tracks, the camera itself follows the subject.
- During a zoom, the camera doesn't move; during a track, it does.
-
-
- BOOM -- This is a long arm used to hold a microphone over the
- heads of the actors, and is famous for occasionally dropping into
- the shot so it can be seen by the audience.
-
-
- What in the world is a GAFFER? --The head electrician.
- How about a GRIP? --The person in charge of props.
- And BEST BOY? --An assistant to the gaffer.
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- TRIVIA QUIZ
-
-
- Part One: The following movies were novels first. Can you name
- the authors?
-
-
- 1. The Accidental Tourist
- 2. The Agony and the Ecstasy
- 3. All Quiet on the Western Front
- 4. All The King's Men
- 5. Around the World in Eighty Days
- 6. Ben Hur
- 7. Blade Runner
- 8. The Bridge on the River Kwai
- 9. Butterfield 8
- 10. The Caine Mutiny
- 11. The Carpetbaggers
- 12. The Color Purple
- 13. Doctor Zhivago
- 14. East of Eden
- 15. Exodus
- 16. The Exorcist
- 17. Fahrenheit 451
- 18. Frankenstein
- 19. From Here to Eternity
- 20. Giant
- 21. The Godfather
- 22. Gone With the Wind
- 23. The Hunchback of Notre Dame
- 24. Lost Horizon
- 25. Love Story
- 26. The Maltese Falcon
- 27. Mutiny on the Bounty
- 28. Of Human Bondage
- 29. One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
- 30. Quo Vadis
- 31. The Robe
- 32. Rosemary's Baby
- 33. Sophie's Choice
- 34. The Terminal Man
- 35. Tom Jones
- 36. War and Peace
- 37. Wuthering Heights
-
-
-
-
- Part Two: Can you answer these REALLY trivial questions?
-
-
- 1. What was Alfred Hitchcock's personal explanation for why THE
- BIRDS attacked?
-
-
- 2. In GREMLINS there is a theater marquee advertising A BOY'S
- LIFE and WATCH THE SKIES. What is the significance of these
- titles?
-
-
- 3. In RAIN MAN Dustin Hoffman memorizes a phone book up to and
- including Marsha and William Gottsegen. Why Marsha and William
- Gottsegen?
-
-
- 4. Paul Le Mat's 1932 deuce coupe in AMERICAN GRAFFITI has a
- license plate that reads THX-1138. Why?
-
-
- 5. In WILLOW the two-headed moat monster was called Ebersisk.
- Why?
-
-
- 6. Blake Edwards cast his real-life doctor in a small part in his
- film S.O.B. Which part?
-
-
- 7. In 1978, at the age of 22, screenwriter Sam Hamm (BATMAN)
- earned $42,000 in 5 days. How?
-
-
- 8. What is Michael Keaton's (AKA Batman) real name?
-
-
- 9. In what movie did Humphrey Bogart say, "Play it again, Sam"?
-
-
- 10. Who "received" the first posthumously awarded Oscar?
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- I do not want actors and actresses to understand my plays. That
- is not necessary. If they will only pronounce the correct sounds
- I can guarantee the results.
- --George Bernard Shaw
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- RECENT AWARDS:
-
-
- THE EDGAR AWARD WINNERS
-
-
- The Mystery Writers of America presented the 1989 Edgar
- Awards, for works released in 1988, to:
-
-
- Best Novel: A COLD RED SUNRISE by Stuart M. Kaminsky
- Best First Novel: CAROLINA SKELETONS by David Stout
- Best Original Paperback: THE TELLING OF LIES by Timothy Findley
- Best Fact Crime: IN BROAD DAYLIGHT by Harry N. MacLean
- Best Critical/Biographical Work: CORNELL WOOLRICH: FIRST YOU
- DREAM, THEN YOU DIE by Francis M. Nevins
- Best Young Adult: INCIDENT AT LORING GROVES by Sonia Levitin
- Best Juvenile: MEGAN'S ISLAND by Willo Davis Roberts
- Best Short Story: "Flicks" by Bill Crenshaw
- Best Episode in a Television Series: "The Devil's Foot" by Gary
- Hopkins (MYSTERY)
- Best Television Feature: MAN AGAINST THE MOB by David J.
- Kinghorn
- Best Motion Picture: THE THIN BLUE LINE by Errol Morris
- Robert L. Fish Award: "Different Drummers" by Linda O. Johnston
- Grand Master Award: Hillary Waugh
- Ellery Queen Award: Richard Levinson and William Link
- Special Edgar: editor Joan Kahn
- Raven Award: Bouchercon
-
-
- Bouchercon is an annual mystery writers convention in honor
- of the late mystery editor and writer Anthony Boucher.
-
-
- Speaking of Bouchercon, the next one (Bouchercon XX) is
- being held October 6-8, 1989, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The
- Guest of Honor will be Simon Brett and registration is now $40.
- For registration and information, write: Bouchercon XX, P.O. Box
- 59345, Philadelphia, PA 19102-9345.
-
-
- If you're REALLY into planning ahead, Bouchercon XXI will be
- held September 21-23, 1990, in London, England. For more
- information, write: Bouchercon XXI, Ming Books UK, 1 Penrose
- Avenue, Carpenders Park, Watford, Herts WD1 5AE, England.
-
-
-
-
- STOKER AWARD WINNERS
-
-
- The Bram Stoker Awards are given out by the Horror Writers
- of America to honor excellence in the horror field.
-
-
- Novel: THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS by Thomas Harris
- First Novel: THE SUITING by Kelley Wilde
- Novelette: "Orange is for Anguish, Blue for Insanity" by David
- Morrell (from PRIME EVIL)
- Short Story: "Night They Missed the Horror Show" by Joe R.
- Lansdale (from SILVER SCREAM)
- Collection: CHARLES BEAUMONT: SELECTED STORIES (from Dark
- Harvest)
- Life Achievement Awards: Ray Bradbury & Ronald Chetwyn-Hayes
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- We see Reading For Pleasure as a sourcebook of ideas for readers.
- Since you can't read 'em all, it's important to make choices, and
- the better your choices (better for you, that is), the richer
- your life will be. We try to help out by passing along some book
- information for you to add to your overall storehouse.
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- GOOD READING PERIODICALLY
-
-
- CINEFANTASTIQUE -- Do you remember the movie magazines of
- yesteryear? Remember the dark, grainy photos and the crummy
- newsprint paper? Well, we're all grown up now, and so are our
- magazines. They're made with slick paper and the photos are razor
- sharp and in glorious color. Just like CINEFANTASTIQUE, complete
- with a cover price high enough to make you wince: $4.95 (the July
- 1989 issue was 62 pages). But inside it's the same superficial,
- catty, faintly sleazy coverage; the overall magazine persona has
- its nose in the air and its voice drips sarcasm. The movie
- magazine is skewed toward science fiction, fantasy, and horror
- films, particularly those with lavish special effects. The lead
- time on CINEFANTASTIQUE articles (there are 5 issues a year)
- seems to be very long, because much of the timely information is
- inaccurate.
-
-
- PREMIERE -- This is a difficult magazine to dislike. First, it's
- a good value at $2.25 for a single issue (the July issue was 100
- oversized pages), $18 for 12 monthly issues. Second, the content
- is intellectually a cut above the other fan magazines. Third, the
- content is varied; there's something for everyone in every issue.
- PREMIERE is neither heavy treatises on the Meaning of Film, nor
- is it a treasury of bitchy gossip, but it is a fun and
- interesting read for those who care about the current American
- film scene.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- Studio heads have foreheads by dint of electrolysis.
- --S.J. Perelman
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- RANDOM REVIEWS:
-
-
- DON'T WORRY, HE WON'T GET FAR ON FOOT
- The Autobiography of a Dangerous Man
- by John Callahan
- (William Morrow, 1989)
-
-
- John Callahan is a cartoonist with a macabre sense of humor
- who lives in Portland, Oregon. He also just happens to be
- quadriplegic with vast reserves of ambition and determination.
- The challenges he's faced since the automobile accident in 1972
- constitute the majority of his story, which is told with an
- astonishing lack of sentimentality. He's climbed higher mountains
- than most of us have ever seen, yet he still has his sanity, and
- enough objectivity to create sharp-edged cartoons highlighting
- the problems people have just being people.
-
-
- This is NOT a depressing book, though it sure could have
- been. It's not even what you'd call inspirational, in the
- traditional sense (I did it! And you can too!). DON'T WORRY, HE
- WON'T GET FAR ON FOOT is John Callahan's way of letting us know
- that we're all a lot more like each other than most of us have
- the courage to admit. John is funny, and he's quite an education.
- You'll be glad you read this book, and you won't soon forget it.
-
-
- "If you're going to read one book this year about an adopted
- quadriplegic recovering alcoholic cartoonist from Portland, this
- should probably be it...well, most likely...I guess. Sort of.
- Yeah. Just buy it, will you?"
- --Bruce Feirstein (REAL MEN DON'T EAT QUICHE)
-
-
- "I loved this book. It's a compulsively readable chronicle of the
- resilience of the human spirit, unblemished by even a smidgen of
- mawkishness. This book has enough trenchancy and wisdom in it to
- sink a ship full of self-help books. Most important of all, it's
- the funniest damned thing I've read in a long, long time."
- --Jonathan Kellerman (THE BUTCHER'S THEATER)
-
-
- "I view my career as having passed through three periods. First
- came my "black" period. Then as I developed, I entered a "black"
- period. Now my horizons have widened, and I feel myself to have
- passed through to a third or "black" period. God knows what comes
- next.
- --John Callahan
-
-
-
-
- THE MAKING OF THE AFRICAN QUEEN
- or How I went to Africa with Bogart, Bacall and
- Huston and almost lost my mind
- by Katharine Hepburn
- (1987)
-
-
- Even if you can get away this summer, you can always spend a
- few hours in the 1951 jungles of Africa with Katharine Hepburn
- and company. She's a rare lady with an unusual point of view, and
- she adds an interesting twist to the usual travelogue material.
- You'll learn some interesting details about the making of the
- movie -- like the fact that they couldn't actually get in the
- water in Africa. All the scenes in the water had to be shot in
- London. It seems the water in Africa is very dangerous, as just
- about everyone in the company found out when their bottled water
- became contaminated. Everyone, that is, except for Bogart and
- Huston, (big drinkers of bottled drinks, just not water). But
- just so you won't be disappointed: this is the story of the
- making of the movie and of Africa, not a Hollywood confessional.
- Katharine Hepburn is a fascinating lady, and I thoroughly enjoyed
- trekking through Africa with her. I bet you will too.
-
-
- My favorite Hepburn quote: In the course of explaining a
- rather blatant example of selfishness, she rationalizes, "please
- yourself and at least someone is pleased". I think that's lovely.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- IT ONLY HURTS WHEN I LAUGH
- by Stan Freberg
- (1988)
-
-
- Stan Freberg (that's pronounced FREE-berg) has been a
- success in radio, television, music, and advertising, winning 21
- Clios (for advertising) and a Grammy (for music). He's a
- guerrilla-satirist, in case you were wondering. This book takes
- his life from the beginning (before he was born) up to 1963 when
- he created a commercial for Stanley Kramer's movie IT'S A MAD MAD
- MAD MAD WORLD. There are several quasi-apologies for not
- including more of his advertising work, most of which has
- occurred since 1963 (like his controversial airline ads, or his
- much-loved prune ads); a sequel is already promised.
-
-
- No apologies are needed for this autobiography, one of the
- most enjoyable I've read in quite a while. Mr. Freberg is a
- charming man with a fabulous memory for names. Every business
- meeting is recounted in all of its hilarious glory; no one is
- spared, including himself. And there are some great stories here:
- Like the one where David Merrick, producing a stage version of
- Freberg's history of America, insists that he cut Abraham Lincoln
- out of the Civil War because he's "unnecessary". Or the one about
- the big-time PR firm in New York that is being paid for one
- simple job: to pick a date for the publicity party for the New
- York drama critics. You can't pick a date when another play is
- opening, because no one would show up. Well, no one shows up, and
- it turns out they chose the night the New York Drama Critics
- Circle Awards are voted on.
-
-
- Then there's Stan Freberg talking about Jack Webb: "Webb was
- a perfectionist but had a picture on his wall that he said helped
- keep him humble. It was a large black and white blowup of his
- star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame. JACK WEBB, it proclaimed, but a
- dog had left his regards in the middle of the star."
-
-
- There's no WAY I'm going to miss the next volume of Stan
- Freberg's memoirs.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- A CAST OF KILLERS
- by Sidney D. Kirkpatrick
- (1986)
-
-
- What fun this is -- a real-life mystery that spans 60 years:
-
-
- 1922: On February 1, the respected silent-film director William
- Desmond Taylor is shot to death in his Los Angeles bungalow. It
- was said that when the police arrived, the head of Paramount
- Studios was already there, burning a bundle of papers in the
- fireplace. A "well-known actress" was also supposedly there,
- searching for letters she claimed were hers. The police never
- solved the case.
-
-
- 1967: Respected director King Vidor (NORTHWEST PASSAGE, WAR AND
- PEACE, DUEL IN THE SUN, THE FOUNTAINHEAD) decides to make a movie
- about the Taylor murder and realizes that presenting the actual
- solution to the mystery would make a great gimmick for the film
- -- so he investigates on his own. Amazingly, King Vidor solves
- the crime, partially due to his insider status in Hollywood. But
- because of the explosive nature of the solution, he decides not
- to make the film, and hides all his evidence in a box in the
- basement of his office.
-
-
- 1982: King Vidor has died and his official biographer, Sidney
- Kirkpatrick, finds his box of evidence on the Taylor murder.
- Painstakingly, he reconstructs not only Taylor's murder, but
- Vidor's investigation; and you can read about all of it in A CAST
- OF KILLERS. A fascinating story of a real-life murder and an
- actual amateur investigation.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- LUCID DREAMING
-
-
- by Stephen LaBerge, Ph.D.
-
-
-
-
- Have you ever had a dream that you knew AT THE TIME was a
- dream? Maybe your first grade teacher flew by, upside down, with
- green hair and holding a buffalo, and you said to yourself, "This
- isn't right, she wasn't this good looking. I bet I'm dreaming."
- This is called a lucid dream, and studies have shown that most
- people have at least a couple of such episodes.
-
-
- But what if you could have full-length lucid dreams
- regularly? You could have conversations with Einstein, fly to the
- Netherlands without a plane, or frolic on a beach in Tahiti with
- nice-looking natives. You'd only be limited by your imagination.
- Sleep time could be the best part of the day.
-
-
- According to Dr. LaBerge's research, lucid dreaming is
- actually a learnable skill, and he's proved it at the Stanford
- University Sleep Research Center. In LUCID DREAMING he tells the
- story of dream research up to the present day -- how deliberate
- lucid dreaming wasn't even believed in the beginning, and yet now
- it's an accepted part of sleep dynamics.
-
-
- There are various methods used to bring on a lucid dream.
- One method involves trying to enter the sleep state without
- actually losing consciousness (unconscious and asleep are two
- different things). This is appropriate only for people who can
- fall asleep VERY quickly, and is only really effective when
- practiced in the morning hours after having woken up briefly. You
- see, most lucid dreams take place during REM sleep, and most REM
- sleep occurs towards the end of your sleep time. So your chances
- of having a lucid dream are much better the longer you sleep.
-
-
- The most common method for encouraging lucid dreams is to
- learn to tell when you're dreaming. Most dreams are accepted as
- reality, at least at the time, because we aren't very careful
- about distinguishing the differences between dreams and reality.
- Get in the habit of questioning whether you're really awake, all
- day long. If you regularly question reality during the day,
- you'll have a greater tendency to question it during the night.
-
-
- One of the best tests is to read something, look away, then
- read it again. If it reads the same way twice, you're awake.
- Dream writing is usually very hard to read at all, and is
- constantly twisting and changing. Another good test is to try to
- fly. If you succeed, it's a good bet you're dreaming.
-
-
- It's also a good idea to take advantage of individual
- quirks. For instance, in reality I have 3 cats but in many of my
- dreams I have more than 3. If I could get in the habit of
- checking on the number of cats, I could learn to recognize that
- whenever I count more than 3, I'm dreaming.
-
-
- Some people are better lucid dreamers than others, of
- course. Generally speaking, if you remember a lot of your dreams,
- you'll probably be good at lucid dreaming. If you don't remember
- your dreams, you can't make any progress because you have nothing
- to work with. Of course, some people have markedly improved their
- dream memory with practice and force of will, so there's hope for
- everyone. (See CREATIVE DREAMING by Dr. Patricia Garfield.)
-
-
- If you're REALLY interested in learning even more about
- lucid dreams, you can contact Dr. LaBerge at the Lucidity
- Institute. They put out a quarterly newsletter, which you can
- subscribe to for $35 a year (you also get discounts on books and
- products, and can participate in their dream research). Write to
- The Lucidity Institute, P.O. Box 2364, Stanford, CA 94309.
- They're hoping to be marketing a Lucidity Kit soon, which will
- probably consist of their DreamLight (a special device to signal
- to yourself while dreaming) and training materials.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- If my film makes one more person miserable, I've done my job.
- --Woody Allen
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- NEW FROM DARK HARVEST:
-
-
- RAZORED SADDLES
- edited by Joe R. Lansdale & Pat LoBrutto
- Illustrated by Rick Araluce
-
-
- -- All New Stories By --
-
-
- Robert R. McCammon F. Paul Wilson
- Joe R. Lansdale David J. Schow
- Al Sarrantonio Howard Waldrop
- Richard Laymon Lewis Shiner
- Scott Cupp Richard Christian Matheson
- Neal Barrett, Jr. Gary Raisor
- Ardath Mayhar Lenore Carroll
- Chet Williamson Melissa Mia Hall
- Robert Petitt
-
-
- The West will never be the same.
-
-
- And for that matter, neither will the other points of the
- compass.
-
-
- RAZORED SADDLES is the anthology that gives the Western a
- black hat and a bad name -- and in this case, all to the better.
-
-
- Dark Harvest, renowned for its horror publishing, has taken
- a bold departure with RAZORED SADDLES. Here is a book not only of
- horror tales, but a wide variety of other types.
-
-
- There are stories inspired by every aspect of the West or
- the Western myth. The Modern West, Country and Western music,
- Futuristic Westerns, Horror Westerns, Humorous Westerns, just
- plain odd Westerns.
-
-
- From the Lone Prairie to today's sidewalk, to beyond the
- stars. From the only American Indian hit man in the Mafia to a
- dinosaur roundup, these are the most bizarre stories ever to be
- inspired by the word Western.
-
-
- Horrific tales by writers like Robert R. McCammon, Richard
- Laymon, F. Paul Wilson, Chet Williamson and Ardath Mayhar.
-
-
- Strange stories by David J. Schow, Howard Waldrop, Al
- Sarrantonio, and rising stars, Scott Cupp, Robert Petitt and Gary
- Raisor.
-
-
- Unclassifiable tales by Neal Barrett, Jr., Joe R. Lansdale,
- Lewis Shiner, Melissa Mia Hall, Lenore Carroll and Richard
- Christian Matheson.
-
-
- This is the most eccentric book to come along in quite some
- time.
-
-
- Yippie ki yea.
-
-
- Deluxe, slip-cased, first edition, limited to 600 numbered
- copies, signed by ALL contributors ----- $59
-
-
- Trade Hardcover ----- $19.95
-
-
- Publication Date: August 1989
- Please add $1 per book to cover postage
-
-
- Dark Harvest, P.O. Box 941, Arlington Heights, IL 60006
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- You get those people who haven't been out of Beverly Hills in ten
- years, and they're telling you how people talk in Detroit. There
- is so much input on any one project that you have to wonder how
- any movie that originated as a book can actually work.
- --Elmore Leonard
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- If the recent release of the movie INDIANA JONES AND THE LAST
- CRUSADE has put you in an adventure mood, why not try Indy's
- immediate ancestor, Allan Quatermain? H. Rider Haggard (1856 -
- 1925) wrote over forty novels, a number of which featured Allan
- Quatermain, a dead ringer for Indy. Haggard was one of the most
- popular authors of his day, which you'll understand if you try
- any of his four most famous novels: KING SOLOMON'S MINES, SHE,
- ALLAN QUATERMAIN, and AYESHA: THE RETURN OF "SHE".
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- ABOUT HOLLYWOOD
-
-
- RETAKES: BEHIND THE SCENES OF 500 CLASSIC MOVIES by John Eastman
- (1989) -- A nearly perfect browsing book for movie lovers. About
- a page (a paperback page) of interesting detail (and occasionally
- dirt) for each movie covered. And don't worry about the word
- "classic"; the loose definition used allows even POPEYE to be
- included.
-
-
- THE ALFRED HITCHCOCK ALBUM by Michael Haley (1981) -- This book
- was produced shortly after Hitchcock's death, so it is complete.
- As the name implies it has loads and loads of photos; from his 53
- movies, from the movie sets, and family shots. The accompanying
- text is interesting, but covers nothing in depth.
-
-
- AN ILLUSTRATED HISTORY OF THE HORROR FILM by Carlos Clarens
- (1967) -- Out of date, of course, but was written back before
- interest in horror films was acceptable and, being literate, was
- the only source of intelligent commentary for a long time. Still
- worth reading on the earlier movies.
-
-
- AMERICAN HORRORS: Essays on the Modern American Horror Film
- edited by Gregory A. Waller (1987) -- What more evidence do you
- need that the horror film has arrived: a collection of academic
- papers from the University of Illinois Press? Interesting, but
- not nearly as much fun for the fan as Clarens' book.
-
-
- ROGER EBERT'S MOVIE HOME COMPANION (updated regularly) -- Like a
- "home version" of a TV show, you can have genuine Roger Ebert
- reviews to thumb through whenever you want. Particularly valuable
- before a visit to your video rental store since only movies
- available on cassette are discussed.
-
-
- HITCHCOCK by Francois Truffaut (1967) -- This is the best book
- about Hitchcock I've found. Truffaut is not only knowledgeable
- (obviously), he's also a true fan.
-
-
- CULT MOVIES (Vols. 1, 2, 3) by Danny Peary (1981, 1983, 1988) --
- There are 4-6 pages of text and black and white photos for each
- movie covered, but with an oversized book and small print,
- there's still plenty of text coverage. Great browsing books.
- Vol. 1 includes: Casablanca, Citizen Kane, Halloween, Mad Max,
- 2001: A Space Odyssey, The Maltese Falcon, King Kong, 93 others.
- Vol. 2 includes: Altered States, The Bride of Frankenstein, Some
- Like It Hot, Last Tango in Paris, Barbarella, 45 others.
- Vol. 3 includes: Annie Hall, Body Heat, Psycho, The Terminator,
- Easy Rider, The Night of the Hunter, Diva, 43 others.
-
-
- THE LIVING AND THE UNDEAD: From Stoker's DRACULA to Romero's DAWN
- OF THE DEAD by Gregory A. Waller (1986) -- Here's another book
- from Waller; this time a hefty 360-page treatise on the vampire.
- If you can stand that much vampire commentary, this is definitely
- the book to get.
-
-
- THE ZOMBIES THAT ATE PITTSBURGH: The Films of George A. Romero by
- Paul R. Gagne (1987) -- A must for Romero fans, who will be happy
- to know that there are many completely disgusting photos (some in
- glorious slick color). My favorite is the full-color close-up of
- a person who's caught just at the critical moment as their head
- explodes. Unforgettable (even if you want to).
-
-
- THE MOON'S A BALLOON by David Niven (1972) -- The man is as
- charming on paper as he was on the screen. When you get done with
- this one, continue with his BRING ON THE EMPTY HORSES (1975).
-
-
- THE BOOK OF VIDEO LISTS by Tom Wiener (1988) -- Here's the book
- on videocassettes you really need. The last two-thirds of the
- book is a master list of all the movies covered, with brief
- descriptions and marked RECOMMENDED or HIGHLY RECOMMENDED if
- appropriate (Mr. Wiener has unusual, but interesting, taste). The
- first third is made up of lists: movies by category, by star, by
- director, even by author. Like Cary Grant movies? Clint Eastwood
- movies? Classic film noir? Hitchcock? It's all here, right at
- your fingertips.
-
-
- STAY OUT OF THE SHOWER: 25 Years of Shocker Films Beginning with
- "Psycho" by William Schoell (1985) -- A very nice book to have:
- loads of black and white stills and coverage that is fun without
- being targeted at 8-year-olds.
-
-
- HUMPHREY BOGART by Nathaniel Benchley (1975) -- Benchley was a
- close friend of Bogart's, and tells his fascinating story with
- humor and affection. Lots of black and white photos too.
-
-
- HORRORSHOWS by Gene Wright (1986) -- Here's a nice volume for
- horror fans, with coverage of film, TV, radio and theater.
- Information is arranged by chapters titled: Crazies and Freaks;
- Mad Scientists; Monsters; Cataclysmic Disasters; Ghouls; Ghosts,
- Demons and Witches; Vampires; Mummies; Werewolves and Other
- Shape-Shifters; Zombies; Splatter; Anthologies; Horror-Makers.
-
-
- THEY CAME FROM OUTER SPACE: 12 Classic Science Fiction Tales That
- Became Major Motion Pictures edited by Jim Wynorski (1980) --
- Includes the following short stories:
-
-
- "Dr. Cyclops" by Henry Kuttner; filmed as DR. CYCLOPS (1940).
- "Who Goes There?" by John W. Campbell, Jr.; filmed as THE THING
- FROM ANOTHER WORLD (1951) and THE THING (1982).
- "Farewell to the Master" by Harry Bates; filmed as THE DAY THE
- EARTH STOOD STILL (1951).
- "The Fog Horn" by Ray Bradbury; filmed as THE BEAST FROM 20,000
- FATHOMS (1953).
- "Deadly City" by Ivar Jorgenson; filmed as TARGET EARTH (1954).
- "The Alien Machine" by Raymond F. Jones; filmed as THIS ISLAND
- EARTH (1955).
- "The Cosmic Frame" by Paul W. Fairman; filmed as INVASION OF THE
- SAUCERMEN (1957).
- "The Fly" by George Langelaan; filmed as THE FLY (1958 & 1986).
- "The Seventh Victim" by Robert Sheckley; filmed as THE TENTH
- VICTIM (1965).
- "The Sentinel" by Arthur C. Clarke; filmed as 2001: A SPACE
- ODYSSEY (1968).
- "The Racer" by Ib Melchior; filmed as DEATH RACE 2000 (1975).
- "A Boy and His Dog" by Harlan Ellison; filmed as A BOY AND HIS
- DOG (1975).
-
-
-
-
- (AUTO)BIOGRAPHIES OF NOTE:
-
-
- MY STORY by Mary Astor (also her A LIFE ON FILM)
- LAUREN BACALL BY MYSELF by Lauren Bacall
- A POSTILLION STRUCK BY LIGHTNING by Dirk Bogarde
- MONTGOMERY CLIFT by Patricia Bosworth
- LULU IN HOLLYWOOD by Louise Brooks
- WILL THERE REALLY BE A MORNING? by Frances Farmer
- MY WICKED, WICKED WAYS by Errol Flynn
- MABEL by Betty Fussell (about Mabel Normand)
- THE MOVIES, MR. GRIFFITH, AND ME by Lillian Gish
- STARRING FRED ASTAIRE by Stanley Green & Burt Goldblatt
- WHEN THE MOVIES WERE YOUNG by Mrs. D.W. Griffith
- ON CUKOR by Gavin Lambert
- DON'T FALL OFF THE MOUNTAIN by Shirley MacLaine
- CHANGE LOBSTERS AND DANCE by Lilli Palmer
- MY LIFE AND MY FILMS by Jean Renoir
- ENCOUNTERING DIRECTORS by Charles T. Samuels
- INTERVIEWS WITH FILM DIRECTORS by Andrew Sarris
- HITCHCOCK by John Russell Taylor (the authorized biography)
- DEAR ME by Peter Ustinov
-
-
-
-
- MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS ABOUT HOLLYWOOD:
-
-
- AGEE, James Agee On Film
- ANGER, Kenneth Hollywood Babylon
- BROWNLOW, Kevin The Parade's Gone By
- The War, The West & The Wilderness
- Hollywood: The Pioneers
- COCTEAU, Jean Diary of a Film
- CROCE, Arlene The Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers Book
- CROSS, Robin The Big Book of B Movies
- CROWTHER, Bosley Hollywood Rajah: The Life and Times of
- Louis B. Mayer
- DUNNE, John Gregory The Studio
- EVERSON, William K. A Pictorial History of the Western Film
- The Bad Guys: A Pictorial History of the
- Movie Villain
- The Detective in Film
- Classics of the Horror Film
- FARBER, Manny Movies (AKA Negative Space)
- FITZGERALD, F. Scott The Last Tycoon
- FRENCH, Philip The Movie Moguls
- GREEN, Stanley Encyclopedia of the Musical Film
- HALLIWELL, Leslie The Filmgoer's Companion
- HERMAN, Gary The Book of Hollywood Quotes
- ISHERWOOD, Christopher Prater Violet
- JOHNSON, Dorris and Ellen Leventhal, editors
- The Letters of Nunnally Johnson
- KAEL, Paul 5001 Nights at the Movies
- many more
- KAMINSKY, Stuart Murder on the Yellow Brick Road
- American Film Genres
- KAUFFMANN, Stanley Before My Eyes
- KERR, Walter The Silent Clowns
- KORDA, Michael Charmed Lives: A Family Chronicle
- LAMBERT, Gavin GWTW: The Making of Gone With the Wind
- Inside Daisy Clover
- McCARTHY, Todd and Charles Flynn, editors
- Kings of the Bs
- MALTIN, Leonard, editor TV Movies (updated regularly)
- PRATT, George C. Spellbound in Darkness: A History of the
- Silent Film
- RHODE, Eric A History of the Cinema
- ROSENBERG, Bernard and Harvey Silverstein
- The Real Tinsel
- ROSS, Lillian Picture
- SARRIS, Andrew Politics and Cinema
- SCHARY, Dore The Case History of a Movie
- SENNETT, Ted Hollywood Musicals
- SIMON, John Reverse Angle: American Film 1970-1980
- THOMAS, Frank and Ollie Johnston
- Disney Animation: The Illusion of Life
- THOMSON, David A Biographical Dictionary of Film
- WARSHOW, Robert The Immediate Experience
- WEST, Jessamyn To See the Dream
- WEST, Nathanael The Day of the Locust
- WILSON, Harry Leon Merton of the Movies
- WOOD, Michael America in the Movies
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- As I do not approve of the current wave of violence that we see
- on our screens, I have always felt that murder should be treated
- delicately. And, in addition to that, with the help of
- television, murder should be brought into the home where it
- rightly belongs.
- --Alfred Hitchcock
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- MacGUFFIN -- This was Alfred Hitchcock's term for anything that
- grabs the audience's interest and moves the plot forward, but
- that ultimately can be forgotten. The stealing-the-money subplot
- in PSYCHO is a MacGuffin. As a point of trivia, here is the
- original semi-joke that Hitchcock took the word from:
-
-
- Two men are traveling on a train to Scotland.
- On the luggage rack is a large bundle.
- "What is that package?" asked one of the men.
- "Oh, that's a MacGuffin," replied his friend.
- "What's a MacGuffin?"
- "It's a device for trapping lions in the Scottish
- Highlands."
- "But there aren't any lions in the Scottish Highlands!"
- "Well, then, I guess that's not a MacGuffin."
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- SILVER SCREAM
- directed by David J. Schow
- (1988)
-
-
- Not only does David J. Schow's anthology fit this month's
- theme, it is also required reading for the horror enthusiast.
- There's such a fabulous variety here that no one is likely to
- appreciate all of the stories, but you'll get a thorough tour of
- the land where horror dwells today and you'll probably find some
- countries that you'd like to explore in greater depth, as well as
- some countries you never want to see again. Very educational. And
- lots and lots of fun.
-
-
- Introduction by Tobe Hooper: An appropriate, if not terribly
- informative, initiation to the tales that follow, from the
-
-
- FADE IN: HOLLYWOOD MANSION -- NIGHT
-
-
- to its
-
-
- FADE TO BLACK
-
-
- "Preflash" by John M. Ford: Hallucinatory account of a man who
- can foresee others' deaths. Cinematic, dark, moody.
-
-
- "Cuts" by F. Paul Wilson: An author whose novel was desecrated in
- the screen adaptation gets revenge. Does this mean Mr. Wilson was
- not pleased with the movie version of THE KEEP?
-
-
- "The Movie People" by Robert Bloch: Lovely, haunting story
- that'll have you paying a lot more attention to movie extras.
-
-
- "Sinema" by Ray Garton: Not all movies are made in a studio, nor
- are the people in them always actors. Or even willing. Not bad,
- but nauseating, and was done better in "Apt Pupil" by Stephen
- King.
-
-
- "Son of Celluloid" by Clive Barker: This is a reprint from BOOKS
- OF BLOOD VOLUME III, and it's still outrageously hideous,
- bewilderingly original. Like so many Barker stories. This one has
- a cancerous tumor that does a John Wayne impression. No foolin'.
-
-
- "The Answer Tree" by Steven R. Boyett: Film criticism can be
- hazardous to your mental health.
-
-
- "Night They Missed The Horror Show" by Joe R. Lansdale: Working
- very hard to offend absolutely everyone, Mr. Lansdale succeeds.
-
-
- "More Sinned Against" by Karl Edward Wagner: A would-be starlet
- gets an advanced degree in Using Others To Get What You Want. An
- unblinking, gritty story.
-
-
- "Return of the Neon Fireball" by Chet Williamson: If you want
- something bad enough, it's just possible you might get it. A tale
- right out of the Twilight Zone.
-
-
- "Night Calls The Green Falcon" by Robert R. McCammon: My favorite
- story in this anthology. Mr. McCammon specializes in depicting
- the psychologically maimed.
-
-
- "Bargain Cinema" by Jay Sheckley: A very brief Deathstyles of the
- Emotionally Poor & the Intellectually Destitute.
-
-
- "Lifecast" by Craig Spector: Special effects wizard gets revenge
- on his philistine director, but, as usual, the cost is high.
-
-
- "Sirens" by Richard Christian Matheson: Thoughts (and lusts) can
- sometimes have a terrible external reality. A short-short.
-
-
- "Hell" by Richard Christian Matheson: Story of random, anonymous
- evil reminiscent of Spielberg's movie DUEL.
-
-
- "A Life in the Cinema" by Mick Garris: Typical Hollywood
- director/louse tries to revive his ailing career with a freak
- baby. Story has all the charm of IT'S ALIVE.
-
-
- "Splatter: A Cautionary Tale" by Douglas E. Winter: A reprint
- from MASQUES II, we find here that the only thing more ugly than
- some examples of modern horror is censorship. Similar (in theme)
- to A CLOCKWORK ORANGE by Anthony Burgess.
-
-
- "Film At Eleven" by John Skipp: Does TV news merely record what
- would have happened anyway, or does it create what it reports?
- Does a dying person really die if there isn't a camera crew to
- cover it?
-
-
- "The Show Goes On" by Ramsey Campbell: Typical dream-like tale
- from Campbell, full of the childish fears that none of us ever
- quite grow out of. A reprint from his collection DARK COMPANIONS.
-
-
- "The Cutter" by Edward Bryant: Sharp-as-diamonds story of an
- unhappy boy who learns that the film editor's art can be used to
- edit reality.
-
-
- "Pilgrims to the Cathedral" by Mark Arnold: My least favorite. A
- tale that had potential ultimately goes nowhere, with a 12-page
- gore-fest tacked on to the end. Note: gore plays better in a
- movie than it reads.
-
-
- "Endsticks" by David J. Schow: Not a story, this is where the
- editor explains how this anthology came to exist, and where he
- introduces (belatedly) the authors. At first I wondered why he
- left these introductions until the end of the book, but after
- thinking about it, I think I prefer it this way. Already being
- familiar with at least one story from the author gave me a hook
- to hang the biographical information on.
-
-
- By "biographical information", don't assume Mr. Schow gives
- the usual "He was born in whenever, studied at whoknows, and now
- lives with his wife and two rabbits in wherever." Oh, no.
- Instead, you get to hear all about Ooze-Its, secret nicknames,
- and Jay Sheckley's measurements (36-24-36). Sort of New Wave
- Biography, I guess.
-
-
- David J. Schow is, by the way, a most fascinating and
- surprising writer. He uses words like "mucilaginous" and
- "upchuckify", and says things like, "Little Johnny Skipp,
- horror's Number-One Garbage Pail kid, who waves a big hello from
- his end of the evolutionary chart". You just may find yourself
- seeking out more Schow material (Hint: THE KILL RIFF is in
- paperback now).
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- Drama is life with the dull bits left out.
- --Alfred Hitchcock
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- FICTION INTO FILM:
-
-
-
-
- DEATH OF A SALESMAN
- play by Arthur Miller
- TV adaptation (available on videotape) directed by
- Volker Schlondorff
-
-
- What we have here is Arthur Miller's contention that our
- modern American value system just doesn't work. Willy Loman has
- equated being a success as a human being with being a financial
- success, something which he has never even approached. To save
- face and win the love of his friends and family, he tries to
- pretend that he's a great success, which becomes increasingly
- difficult during the course of the play. Willy continually
- alienates those he loves out of fear that they will see through
- the illusion he so carefully constructs. The tragic irony is that
- his friends and family have NEVER been fooled by Willy's
- pretensions; their values aren't flawed as his are, so they are
- able to see his worth and love him anyway. Willy has never
- realized this.
-
-
- Schlondorff's adaptation stars Dustin Hoffman as Willy Loman
- in a simply breathtaking performance as an essentially good man
- unraveling before his own eyes. The tragic irony is served up by
- his son Biff who tries so hard to show his love for Willy; and is
- played by John Malkovich (of DANGEROUS LIAISONS) working ably off
- of Hoffman's lead. Kate Reid is good as his devoted wife Linda,
- as is Charles Durning as Willy's good neighbor Charlie, who does
- a fine job until the very end. He seems uncomfortable with his
- last speech, but then it takes a special person to use the word
- "dast" with ease. All in all, this is a masterful production, and
- completely faithful to Miller's original intentions. The only
- complaint I have is that the dialogue is rattled off very fast at
- times, and if you're not already familiar with it, you're going
- to miss things.
-
-
- Should you read the play or see the tape? I really think
- you'd enjoy both, but certainly you must read the play first. It
- reads very well, and you'll have the time to fully consider all
- of the important parts, of which there are many. This is a
- complex play with many things to think about, which could help
- explain why it won a Pulitzer Prize and the Drama Critics Circle
- Prize. Theater at its tragic best.
-
-
- FOR EXTRA CREDIT: Arthur Miller had a hidden agenda here
- that you might care to know about. Tragedy, according to the
- formal definition by Aristotle, concerns people who are
- significantly better than the average person, who start out happy
- and wind up much less so. This is why so many classical
- tragedies (drama and fiction) concern gods. Arthur Miller wanted
- to show that tragedy should, on the contrary, deal with the
- Common Man; that the plight of the "nobody" has importance and
- the power to move us, and ultimately has more meaning for us than
- the fate of the more distant gods.
-
-
- PIECE TO MEMORIZE: Generally recognized as the most
- significant line in the play is the one spoken by Linda toward
- the end of Act One: "I don't say he's a great man. Willy Loman
- never made a lot of money. His name was never in the paper. He's
- not the finest character that ever lived. But he's a human being,
- and a terrible thing is happening to him. So attention must be
- paid. He's not to be allowed to fall into his grave like an old
- dog. Attention, attention must be finally paid to such a person."
-
-
-
-
-
-
- DEATHTRAP: A Thriller in Two Acts
- play by Ira Levin
- screenplay adaptation by Jay Presson Allen
- movie directed by Sidney Lumet
-
-
- To begin with, there are (at least) two DEATHTRAPs.
- DEATHTRAP One is a play by Ira Levin: 2 acts, 5 characters, about
- a husband-and-friend team who murder the wife. DEATHTRAP Two is a
- play written by two characters in DEATHTRAP One: 2 acts, 5
- characters, about a husband-and-friend team who murder the wife.
- You with me? Maybe you'd better take notes.
-
-
- This play is a lot of fun, and I'm going to try not to ruin
- any of it for those of you who don't know the story. As you've
- already gathered, the play-within-a-play, self-referential
- aspects of DEATHTRAP predominate, much of which is rather lost in
- the movie version. A movie looks like real life, which is what
- makes a movie so exciting and immediate; but you don't get the
- feeling of watching a PLAY, which is unfortunate in this case.
- Seeing DEATHTRAP on the stage is better, but for all the nuances,
- get a copy of the play (mine's from Penguin) and read it.
-
-
- At one point, one of the characters reads from DEATHTRAP
- Two, and what they read is word-for-word from DEATHTRAP One. It's
- the description of the set, which you won't get unless you have
- the written play. However, the written play will ruin the movie
- more than the movie will ruin the play, so if you want to see the
- movie, do that first. There are even some added in-jokes in
- Lumet's version, for instance: The lead character, a playwright,
- has a play opening on Broadway at the Music Box Theater, which is
- where DEATHTRAP actually opened in 1978. He also has this same
- character use the expression "fwow up" in reference to reviews of
- his play, which is an allusion to a famous Constant Reader column
- written by Dorothy Parker. None of these in-jokes are critical to
- understanding the play, they're just icing.
-
-
- The movie, by the way, is somewhat changed from Ira Levin's
- original play, and I'm not so sure the changes are successful.
- Many of the deletions struck me as sloppy: they cut the
- explanation of who Lottie and Ralph are in Act 1 Scene 1, but
- left in a reference to them in Act 1 Scene 3, so everyone sits
- around thinking, "Who are Lottie and Ralph?" The added material,
- more often than not, was unnecessary padding.
-
-
- The performances were all good, the five-member cast being:
- Michael Caine, Christopher Reeve, Dyan Cannon, Irene Worth, and
- Henry Jones. The tone of Christopher Reeve's character was
- altered for the movie, probably for controversy and shock value,
- and the ending was changed (in specifics, not in tone). The new
- ending worked well, but I would rather have seen Henry Jones play
- it, as his character would have in Ira Levin's version. I'm a big
- fan of Henry Jones.
-
-
- DEATHTRAP is a delightful comic thriller by Ira Levin, who
- is certainly one of the more versatile writers around today. As
- convoluted and breathless as a roller coaster ride, and even more
- fun. See it, then read it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE ACCIDENTAL TOURIST
- novel by Anne Tyler
- screenplay by Frank Galati & Lawrence Kasdan
- movie directed by Lawrence Kasdan
-
-
- I'm not sure I'm the right person to comment on this book
- and movie, but since I'm the only one here right now, we'll have
- to make do. I will state up front that I'm not a big fan of
- realistic fiction. Sounds odd to me -- that's why we have
- nonfiction. Anyway...
-
-
- Macon Leary is a man afraid of life, living behind a glass
- wall. He and his wife recently lost their 12-year-old son, but
- Macon was stifled long before that. As teenagers, his wife Sarah
- was initially attracted to him because he ignored her, a lesson
- which he took to heart. He maintains that reserve to this day, a
- disinterest which he finds has become less an act and more actual
- as time has passed. Typically, Macon's job is writing tour guides
- dedicated to helping a traveler feel like he never left home (the
- point: experience less, not more).
-
-
- Macon's nadir arrives after his wife leaves him and he cuts
- himself off from life until he is sleeping in what he calls a
- "body bag". At this point he meets Muriel, who is spontaneous,
- mercurial, and complex. Later, after the various events of the
- story, Macon's education is complete when he refuses to take a
- pain killer, preferring to face life as it is, not through a
- deadening filter. Anne Tyler creates people who are startlingly
- real; I know many of these characters very well.
-
-
- So how does the movie stack up? Lawrence Kasdan's version
- turns out to be a direct condensation of Anne Tyler's novel.
- Other than the necessary deletions for time, the movie is
- faithful to the book right down the line; a visual version.
- William Hurt is Macon Leary, and does his usual excellent job,
- vividly displaying Macon's distance from people, as well as his
- intelligence, humor, and pain. Geena Davis is appealingly ditzy,
- and Kathleen Turner is fine as the wife who supports Macon's
- psychological problems rather than helping them. A fine movie
- adaptation of a character-rich novel.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE BIG CLOCK (filmed as NO WAY OUT)
- novel by Kenneth Fearing
- screenplay by Robert Garland
- movie directed by Roger Donaldson
-
-
- If you're not familiar with either the movie or the book,
- you're in for a rare treat: a clever book that has been radically
- overhauled to make a brilliant movie. I'm not sure we'll ever see
- this happen again. The novel by Fearing is a great read, it's
- main failing is its brevity. You'll want to read the book in
- addition to the movie if only for the character Louise Patterson,
- who does not appear in the movie. Her chapter alone makes the
- book worthwhile. (Random note: I couldn't help but visualize
- Louise Patterson as a fortyish Colleen Dewhurst.)
-
-
- The movie is pure delight. All of the basic concepts and
- plot elements are retained, but EVERY detail has been altered.
- Instead of the magazine world in New York, the movie is set in
- and around Washington D.C. Instead of Earl Janoth, publishing
- king, we have David Brice, Secretary of Defense. Instead of
- George Stroud, genius magazine editor, we have Tom Farrell,
- genius Navy career man. All of the changes, in my opinion, made
- the movie more focused and immediate, shifting this story from an
- intellectual exercise into an edge-of-the-seat thriller.
-
-
- Part of the fun is both reading the book AND seeing the
- movie, and appreciating what a wonderful job Robert Garland did
- with the adaptation. Unfortunately for this review, I don't want
- to say any more about the plot. This is one story that could
- easily be ruined by advance knowledge, and for that reason I
- recommend seeing the movie first -- the book is so subtle that
- you may need to have seen the movie to catch all of the plot
- intricacies. HIGHLY recommended.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- It was apparent from the first that STAR WARS was an outsize
- elephant with the brains of a gnat.
- --Brian Aldiss
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- JOE BOB GOES TO THE DRIVE-IN
- by Joe Bob Briggs
- Introduction by Stephen King
- (1987)
-
-
- How sick is your local newspaper?
-
-
- Do you live in a wholesome American community?
- Can the people in your community read?
- Can they read a newspaper?
-
-
- If the answer to any of the above is yes, you may never have
- heard of "Joe Bob Goes to the Drive-In", the only newspaper
- column ever to be
-
-
- <-> banned in Fort Smith, Arkansas; Dallas, Texas; Cleveland,
- Ohio; and Raleigh, North Carolina
-
-
- <-> picketed by feminists in San Francisco
-
-
- <-> condemned from the pulpit in Tyler, Texas
-
-
- <-> endorsed by Hustler magazine
-
-
- <-> excluded from the finest homes in America and laughed at by
- millions
-
-
- So what have you missed? You missed a brilliant review of
- BLOODSUCKING FREAKS, an analysis of GAS PUMP GIRLS and INVASION
- OF THE BLOOD FARMERS that could stop your heart, and the official
- breast count in I SPIT ON YOUR GRAVE.
-
-
- Joe Bob Briggs is the world's only drive-in movie columnist.
- Accept no substitutes.
-
-
- THE JOE BOB BIO
-
-
- Born: Frontage Road, Texas
- Current residence: Trailer park in Grapevine, Texas
- Occupation: America's foremost expert on drive-ins, having seen
- 14,500 movies out under the stars like God intended, in the
- privacy of my personal automobile. I am host of DRIVE-IN
- THEATRE, only on The Movie Channel.
- Turn-ons: Garbonzas, new seat covers for my Toronado, NIGHT OF
- THE LIVING DEAD -- the #1 drive-in movie of all time, and Bo
- "is-it-time-to-get-nekkid-again-John" Derek.
- Turn-offs: Wimps, Commies, and buttered popcorn, because it
- messes up the new seat covers.
- Favorite power tool: Chain saws, what else?
-
-
-
-
- JOE BOB GOES TO THE DRIVE-IN
- Cindy says check it out.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- It's the first screenplay I've written where the lead character
- is an overt psychopath.
- --Sam Hamm, speaking of BATMAN
-
-
- The key thing about Batman is that he has no special powers. He's
- an ordinary guy who's extraordinarily repressed, psychologically.
- If someone asked Bruce Wayne, "Why do you put on a Bat-suit?" he
- wouldn't really know. He's the kind of person who should have
- been in therapy a long, long time ago.
- --Michael Keaton
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- THE HOLLYWOOD MYSTERY
-
-
-
-
- Avallone, Michael Shoot It Again, Sam
- Babson, Marian Murder Murder Little Star
- Baxt, George The Neon Graveyard
- Berger, Phil Deadly Kisses
- Braudy, Susan Who Killed Sal Mineo?
- Chais, Pamela Final Cut
- Christie, Agatha The Mirror Crack'd
- Crispin, Edmund Frequent Hearses (AKA Sudden Vengeance)
- Cunningham, E.V. The Case of the Kidnapped Angel
- Dickson, Peter Death of an Old Time Movie Star
- Ellin, Stanley Star Light, Star Bright
- Engel, Ted Murder on Location
- Field, Evan What Nigel Knew
- Giroux, E.X. A Death for a Darling
- Hill, Reginald A Pinch of Snuff
- Hyams, Joe Murder at the Academy Awards
- Jance, J.A. A More Perfect Union
- Kaminsky, Stuart any Toby Peters mystery
- Keating, H.R.F. Filmi, Filmi, Inspector Ghote
- Kennedy, George Murder on Location
- Murder on High
- Lehman, Ernest Farewell Performance
- Lovesey, Peter Keystone
- Macdonald, Ross The Barbarous Coast
- MacLean, Alastair Bear Island
- McCabe, Cameron The Face on the Cutting Room Floor
- McDonald, Gregory Fletch's Moxie
- MacDonald, John D. Free Fall in Crimson
- Monette, Paul The Long Shot
- Morse, L.A. Sleaze
- Moyes, Patricia Falling Star
- Ormerod, Roger Dead Ringer
- Parker, Robert B. A Savage Place
- Pentecost, Hugh Beware Young Lovers
- Queen, Ellery The Devil to Pay
- The Four of Hearts
- Ramsey, Lila The Bestseller
- Rice, Craig The April Robin Murders
- Sinclair, Murray Only in LA
- Tough Luck LA
- Stainton, Audrey Sweet Rome
- Stinson, Jim Low Angles
- Upton, Robert Fade Out
- Wager, Walter Blue Murder
- Wambaugh, Joseph The Glitter Dome
- Washburg, L.J. Dead-Stick (Sep89)
- Westlake, Donald E. Enough!
- Sacred Monster
- Whitney, Phyllis Listen For The Whisperer
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- There are no symbols in NORTH BY NORTHWEST. Oh yes! The last
- shot. The train entering the tunnel after the love scene between
- Grant and Eva Marie Saint! It's a phallic symbol. But don't tell
- anyone!
- --Alfred Hitchcock
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- FEATURED AUTHOR:
-
-
- FREDRIC BROWN
-
-
- First off, please note the spelling of Fredric. That's not a
- mistake. It's a nice piece of intellectual snobbery to be one of
- the few who knows something obscure, like that the former
- President's name is Harry S Truman (no period after the S).
-
-
- You can get Fredric Brown's life story from any number of
- locations, but the two facts to know about Brown, from the
- perspective of a reader are:
-
-
- (1) He is known as a "pulp" writer, meaning that he sold his
- words cheaply and often, mostly to magazines printed on cheap
- "pulp" paper. What this means to you is that there are many Brown
- stories (and a number of novels) to read and the quality of the
- writing is remarkably consistent. Because that's the whole trick
- of being a successful pulp writer -- consistency. Brown never
- wrote the Great American Novel, but he did write well, as you can
- (and should) find out for yourself.
-
-
- (2) Fredric Brown had an obsession with liquor. Whether or
- not he was an alcoholic is of no real concern to me, but you
- can't possibly read much Brown material without realizing that he
- considered drinking liquor to be one of life's fundamental
- activities. The best example is THE SCREAMING MIMI; you could get
- queasy just reading it. I'm not sure what ultimate relevance this
- has, but it's one of the first things most people remember about
- Fredric Brown's writing (particularly the mysteries).
-
-
- Here are some significant Brown offerings, with commentary
- for the novels that I've read recently.
-
-
- THE FABULOUS CLIPJOINT (1947) Ed & Am Hunter mystery novel. Ed
- Hunter wants to find out who killed his father, and his uncle Am
- decides to help out, and together they are Brown's only
- continuing characters. Only average as a mystery. The "fabulous
- clipjoint" of the title is Chicago.
-
-
- THE DEAD RINGER (1948) Ed & Am Hunter mystery novel
-
-
- MURDER CAN BE FUN (1948) Mystery novel
-
-
- THE BLOODY MOONLIGHT (1949) Ed & Am Hunter mystery novel
-
-
- WHAT MAD UNIVERSE (1949) Science fiction novel. A parallel
- universe story, and one of Brown's most famous books. I think
- this would be a bit "cute" for most of today's SF readers.
-
-
- THE SCREAMING MIMI (1949) Mystery novel. One of Brown's absolute
- best. A Ripper is loose, and reporter/alcoholic Bill Sweeney
- becomes obsessed with the woman who is nearly the fourth victim.
- You'll be assembling the pieces of the puzzle right along with
- Bill. Will you figure it out first? Also notable for Bill's
- Herculean consumption of alcohol.
-
-
- COMPLIMENTS OF A FIEND (1950) Ed & Am Hunter mystery novel
-
-
- HERE COMES A CANDLE (1950) Mystery novel
-
-
- NIGHT OF THE JABBERWOCK (1950) Mystery novel. Doc Stoeger
- publishes a small town newspaper and yearns for excitement.
- Before the night's over, he'll have rubbed elbows with big-city
- mobsters, an escaped lunatic, and a bank robber (we won't even
- mention the four murders). There are also plenty of allusions to
- the writings of Doc's favorite author, Lewis Carroll.
-
-
- THE CASE OF THE DANCING SANDWICHES (1951) Mystery novelette
-
-
- DEATH HAS MANY DOORS (1951) Ed & Am Hunter mystery novel
-
-
- THE FAR CRY (1951) Mystery novel. George Weaver, recovering from
- a breakdown, rents the house where Jenny Ames was murdered eight
- years ago. The murderer was never caught, so George decides to
- investigate on his own. He may wish he hadn't. A few rather large
- logical problems here, but a compellingly told story.
-
-
- SPACE ON MY HANDS (1951) Science fiction short stories
-
-
- WE ALL KILLED GRANDMA (1952) Mystery novel
-
-
- THE DEEP END (1952) Mystery novel. A local high-school student is
- killed in what seems to be just another tragic accident, at least
- to everyone but journalist Sam Evans. He uncovers a series of
- suspicious accidents that look, to Sam, very much like murder. Or
- is Sam going off THE DEEP END (get it?). Well-done example of
- what is now a standard mystery plot.
-
-
- MADBALL (1953) Paperback original mystery novel
-
-
- THE LIGHTS IN THE SKY ARE STARS (1953) Science fiction novel
-
-
- MOSTLY MURDER (1953) Mystery short stories
-
-
- ANGELS AND SPACESHIPS (1954) Science fiction short stories
-
-
- HIS NAME WAS DEATH (1954) Mystery novel. Brief exploration of the
- effects of chance occurrence (fate) on a murderer. If Darius
- hadn't come home early, he wouldn't have had to kill Myrtle. If
- Joyce hadn't given out $10 bills, Darius wouldn't have had to
- kill Claude. If Claude hadn't gone home early, Darius wouldn't
- have had to kill Rose. And if Joyce hadn't been so interested in
- the murders, Darius wouldn't have had to kill her. One things for
- sure: Darius is being kept very busy.
-
-
- MARTIANS, GO HOME (1955) Science fiction novel. From what I've
- heard, this seems to be the novel most respected by today's SF
- fans. Unfortunately for me, I haven't been able to find a decent
- copy.
-
-
- THE WENCH IS DEAD (1955) Mystery novel
-
-
- THE LENIENT BEAST (1956) Mystery novel. John Medley kills, again.
- Frank Ramos is a Mexican-American cop who suspects the truth.
- Alice Ramos is his alcoholic Anglo wife. Fern Cahan is his
- partner. Walter Pettijohn is his boss. This novel is an absorbing
- psychological study, told from the point of view of each of these
- people, each with a different set of priorities. Fascinating.
-
-
- ROGUE IN SPACE (1957) Science fiction novel. Crag, Brown's
- typical protagonist transplanted into the future, has numerous
- adventures and does much drinking. This continues FB's
- examination of the paradoxes of morality and his obvious fear and
- mistrust of women. Just when I'd decided that I didn't much care
- for Brown's SF, I read this one and thoroughly enjoyed it.
-
-
- HONEYMOON IN HELL (1958) Science fiction short stories
-
-
- THE OFFICE (1958) Mainstream novel with minor crime elements.
- This is the Brown novel easiest to forget.
-
-
- ONE FOR THE ROAD (1958) Mystery novel
-
-
- THE LATE LAMENTED (1959) Ed & Am Hunter mystery novel
-
-
- KNOCK THREE-ONE-TWO (1959) Mystery novel
-
-
- THE MIND THING (1961) Paperback original science fiction novel
-
-
- THE MURDERERS (1961) Mystery novel
-
-
- NIGHTMARES AND GEEZENSTACKS (1961) Miscellaneous short stories.
- Probably Brown's most famous short story collection.
-
-
- THE FIVE-DAY NIGHTMARE (1962) Mystery novel
-
-
- MRS. MURPHY'S UNDERPANTS (1963) Ed & Am Hunter mystery novel
-
-
- THE SHAGGY DOG AND OTHER MURDERS (1963) Mystery short stories
-
-
- DAYMARES (1968) Science fiction short stories
-
-
- PARADOX LOST AND TWELVE OTHER GREAT SCIENCE FICTION TALES (1973)
- His better SF stories are here.
-
-
- HOMICIDE SANITARIUM (1984) Mystery short stories
-
-
- BEFORE SHE KILLS (1984) Mystery short stories
-
-
- CARNIVAL OF CRIME (1985) Mystery short stories. Beautiful volume
- of Brown's mystery stories. Also includes short biography and
- comprehensive bibliography.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- You have to remember that PSYCHO is a film made with quite a
- sense of amusement on my part. To me, it's a fun picture.
- --Alfred Hitchcock
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- THE DARK FANTASTIC
- by Stanley Ellin
- (1983)
-
-
- commentary by Jerry Shifrin & Charles Power
-
-
- Jerry Shifrin:
-
-
- I just finished Stanley Ellin's THE DARK FANTASTIC, an excellent,
- gripping thriller. It's told from two different viewpoints using
- an alternating chapters technique. What I found most fascinating
- about this was the unpleasantness of the hero and the semi-
- attractiveness of the villain. I just wonder if that's what the
- author intended?
-
-
- The story concerns an old-time resident of Brooklyn, NY who's
- dying of cancer. He's a retired university professor who's almost
- penniless and apparently dependent on painkiller medication. In
- his university days he was a staunch supporter of minorities.
- Now, perhaps due to the drugs, he appears as an extreme racist
- and has decided to blow up an apartment building he owns which is
- peopled by blacks and other minorities. The "hero", a detective
- on the trail of an art thief, has the hots for the daughter of
- one of the tenants of that building. Needless to say the book is
- mainly about the intertwining of their respective goals.
-
-
-
-
- Charles Power:
-
-
- Glad you were able to enjoy THE DARK FANTASTIC at last. I think
- it was the first major original novel published by Mysterious
- Press--due to the fact that Ellin's regular publisher wanted
- nothing to do with it! That oh-so-charming racist villain was a
- bit too much for them.
-
-
- By the way, I didn't think the detective hero was as unpleasant
- as you imply. He was, incidentally, Ellin's only recurring
- character, having appeared in one previous, shorter (and less
- interesting) novel, STAR LIGHT, STAR BRIGHT.
-
-
- Ellin is GREAT. See if you can find THE KEY TO NICHOLAS STREET
- and THE LUXEMBOURG RUN. And, if possible, the omnibus volume of
- his short fiction, also from Mysterious Press, THE SPECIALTY OF
- THE HOUSE.
-
-
-
-
- Jerry Shifrin:
-
-
- Funny. I wrestled with my feelings towards Kirwan (the villain)
- and ultimately concluded that he really was an okay guy, but the
- painkiller medication had made him psychotic. The evidence showed
- that he was a supporter of minorities during his professorial
- career.
-
-
- Maybe it's just me. I puzzled over what Ellin's intent may have
- been for Milano (the detective). Is that what Ellin saw as an
- attractive character? Was Ellin really pandering to that type of
- character who he may have perceived as his primary audience? My
- guess is that he was there as a contrast to Kirwan, a good guy
- gone bad.
-
-
- Milano appeared to me as a real user/abuser of people,
- particularly women. He even used his (unknown to her) ex-lover to
- get information to help the girl he was trying to bed. He used
- his neighbor's influence to draw her towards his bachelor pad. He
- used (and later ignored) the two kids at his agency, even though
- he indicated that he'd help them later (I presume that it was one
- of those kids who was responsible for warning Kirwan). In
- addition, he was presented as something less than brilliant,
- consistently missing or misunderstanding the various clues until
- they were thrown in his face.
-
-
- I think Ellin took some pains to show all of his character flaws.
- Perhaps it was an anti-hero approach.
-
-
-
-
- Charles Power:
-
-
- It's been a while since I read THE DARK FANTASTIC, but at the
- time, I interpreted Kirwan's prior "liberal" history as
- completely shallow and hypocritical. Kirwan was consistently
- shown as a manipulative scoundrel.
-
-
-
-
- Jerry Shifrin:
-
-
- I agree that that interpretation is possible, but will point to
- his long career of being a good guy and the fact that his
- nastiness only began after abusing his painkiller medication
- (recall that he was bribing the pharmacist for additional
- supplies). Perhaps Ellin intended for it to be ambiguous, but I
- believe Kirwan's form of paranoia/psychosis is not untypical for
- drug abusers.
-
-
- Milano, on the other hand, had no such excuse for his behavior.
-
-
- We have a putative hero who successfully solves a mystery, saving
- a number of lives in the process, and winning the affection of a
- beautiful woman. We also have a bitter old man who dies while
- attempting to murder a number of innocent people. This would be a
- good, though somewhat ordinary, story. It's the closer
- examination of the two protagonists that raises all of the
- ambiguities.
-
-
- I give the book extra credit for being thought-provoking. Our
- discussion on this is somewhat similar to my own thinking and
- evaluation subsequent to finishing the story. I think it's that
- sort of intricacy/ambiguity that makes a good book into an
- excellent one. It's really a shame that this book didn't get a
- wider audience.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- A good film is that which absorbs the audience's attention and
- enables them to come out of the theater and say, "The dinner, the
- baby-sitter, the price of admission -- that was all worth it."
- --Alfred Hitchcock
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- GUEST REVIEWER: Darryl Kenning
-
-
- THESE GREEN FOREIGN HILLS,
- by Roland J. Green
- (ACE 12-87, $2.95)
-
-
- This is book #2 in a combat SF series called "The Peace
- Company". [Which incidentally was the name of the first novel of
- the series.] The author has done a number of successful
- collaborations with some of my favorite authors (Pournelle,
- Dickson, Carr), and this book (and the first) lived up to my
- expectations.
-
-
- Roland Green spends more time examining the interpersonal
- relationships that make any group of people effective than he
- does in the actual "action". It is a pleasure to see an author
- show the use of informal networks in a generally positive light
- for a change. For me at least, that part of the story
- construction was as fascinating as it was well done. I don't want
- to shortchange the story itself though. It moves well along and
- is gradually building up a comprehensive picture of life in his
- particular universe at that particular time.
-
-
- After reading this book I immediately went back and reread
- the first of the series -- I enjoyed it too. This one rates a
- spot in the "I'll come back and reread it" stack. Enjoy.
-
-
- Rating: 4 (out of a possible 5)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- SIDESHOW
- by W. R. Thompson
- (Baen 1-88, $3.50)
-
-
- About the year 2000, if history is any indicator, we can
- expect a multitude of doomsayers, end of the worldists, and a
- round of good ole' crazies to appear. SIDESHOW has all these
- elements and more, it is reminiscent of SLAN by A.E. Van Vogt
- with its psi characters, yet manages to be an excellent
- projection of a possible near future in America.
-
-
- From a political analyst's viewpoint, the scenario is
- depressingly realistic and all too possible -- splintered one
- issue political parties -- suspension of some civil liberties --
- broad liberties taken with other human rights -- deep endemic
- financial depression -- all combining to set the stage as a new
- wild psi talent starts to show up in the general population.
-
-
- I found the story well thought out, with nice character
- depth and an even pace. No great surprises in the story line, but
- in spite of the depressing political environment I really enjoyed
- the book. As a matter of fact I had a very hard time putting it
- down once I had started it!
-
-
- In short, even if you aren't into political environment
- forecasting, I recommend this book for your enjoyment.
-
-
- Rating: 4 (on our 1-5 scale)
-
-
-
-
- Darryl Kenning may be reached at the ANNEX BBS 513-433-0821 or,
- at 6331 Marshall Rd. Centerville, OH 45459.
-
-
- (These reviews first appeared in STARWARD BOUND, a publication of
- the Dayton Area Science Fiction Club, and are reprinted by
- permission of the author.)
-
-
- (c) copyright 1988 by Darryl Kenning
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- I used to envy Walt Disney when he made only cartoons. If he
- didn't like an actor, he could tear him up.
- --Alfred Hitchcock
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- AUGUST BIRTHDAYS
-
-
- 01 1819 Herman Melville, American writer
- 02 1924 James Baldwin, American writer
- 03 1887 Rupert Brooke, English poet
- 03 1920 P.D. James, English novelist
- 03 1924 Leon Uris, American novelist
- 04 1792 Percy Bysshe Shelley, English poet
- 04 1839 Walter Pater, English writer
- 04 1859 Knut Hamsun, Norwegian writer
- 05 1850 Guy de Maupassant, French writer
- 05 1889 Conrad Aiken, American writer
- 06 1651 Francois Fenelon, French writer
- 06 1809 Alfred, Lord Tennyson, English poet
- 06 1868 Paul Claudel, French writer
- 08 1884 Sara Teasdale, American poet
- 08 1896 Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, American writer
- 09 1593 Izaak Walton, English writer
- 09 1631 John Dryden, English writer
- 09 1922 Philip Larkin, English writer
- 10 1869 Lawrence Binyon, English writer
- 11 1823 Charlotte M. Yonge, English writer
- 11 1892 Hugh MacDiarmid, Scottish writer
- 11 1897 Louise Bogan, American writer
- 11 1913 Sir Angus Wilson, English writer
- 12 1774 Robert Southey, English poet
- 12 1867 Edith Hamilton, American writer
- 12 1876 Mary Roberts Rinehart, American writer
- 12 1884 Frank Swinnerton, English novelist
- 13 1802 Nikolaus Lenau, Austrian poet
- 14 1846 Henry David Thoreau jailed for tax resistance
- 14 1867 John Galsworthy, English writer
- 15 1771 Sir Walter Scott, Scottish writer
- 15 1785 Thomas De Quincey, English writer
- 15 1887 Edna Ferber, American writer
- 16 1860 Jules Laforgue, French poet
- 16 1888 T.E. Lawrence, English writer
- 16 1902 Georgette Heyer, English novelist
- 17 1840 Wilfrid Scawen Blunt, English writer
- 17 1932 V.S. Naipaul, Trinidadian novelist
- 18 1916 Elsa Morante, Italian writer
- 18 1922 Alain Robbe-Grillet, French writer
- 19 1902 Ogden Nash, American poet
- 19 1903 James Gould Cozzens, American novelist
- 20 1881 Edgar A. Guest, American journalist and poet
- 20 1901 Salvatore Quasimodo, Italian writer
- 20 1921 Jacqueline Susann, American novelist
- 22 1893 Dorothy Parker, American writer
- 22 1903 Ren Wellek, Austrian writer
- 22 1920 Ray Bradbury, American writer
- 23 1868 Edgar Lee Masters, American writer
- 23 1908 Arthur Adamov, Russian dramatist
- 24 1591 Robert Herrick, English poet
- 24 1872 Sir Max Beerbohm, English writer
- 24 1894 Jean Rhys, English writer
- 24 1899 Jorge Luis Borges, Argentinian writer
- 25 1836 Bret Harte, American writer
- 25 1921 Brian Moore, Irish novelist
- 26 1875 Sir John Buchan, Scottish writer
- 26 1880 Guillaume Apollinaire, French writer
- 26 1904 Christopher Isherwood, English writer
- 26 1914 Julio Cortazar, Argentinian writer
- 27 1770 Georg Wilhelm Hegel, German philosopher
- 27 1871 Theodore Dreiser, American writer
- 27 1899 C.S. Forester, English novelist
- 28 1749 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, German writer
- 28 1903 Bruno Bettelheim, American writer
- 29 1632 John Locke, English philosopher
- 29 1809 Oliver Wendell Holmes, American writer
- 30 1797 Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, English novelist
- 30 1901 John Gunther, American writer
- 31 1811 Thophile Gautier, French writer
- 31 1908 William Saroyan, American writer
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- It has been said of me that if I made CINDERELLA, the audience
- would start looking for a body in the pumpkin coach.
- --Alfred Hitchcock
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- NUMBER ONE FAN
- by Annie Wilkes
-
-
- The important thing to remember is to keep moving. Sure, you
- enjoy Stephen King, but you need more. The longer your list of
- favored authors and/or books is, the better off you'll be, so
- don't allow yourself to get bogged down.
-
-
- You see, there's such a rainbow of reading out there. There
- are mystery stories, and science fiction stories, and westerns,
- and Vietnam stories, and dog stories, and vampire stories, and
- had-I-but-known stories, and funny stories, and adultery stories,
- and pink elephant stories, and....well, you get the idea. So why
- limit yourself? Like your parents used to say about spinach: how
- do you know you don't like it if you've never tried it? Try
- everything at least once. Then try it at least once again, much
- later, because even if the book doesn't change, you do.
-
-
- The real problem is those snobbish gourmets. They'd have you
- believe that enjoying lots of different things just shows how
- uncultured you are. Pfui! Look at the poor wine connoisseur who
- will tell you that all those wines in your local wine shop are
- "simply undrinkable". They, with their sophisticated palate,
- would only drink this wine made by one old man, in alternate
- years, in the south of France. Of course, he won't ship so you
- have to go there personally, on a donkey over dirt trails, but
- THAT'S wine. How sad. All that knowledge, and it hasn't gotten
- him anywhere at all.
-
-
- So, as I said before, keep moving. Next time you're picking
- books out, get something different. Ask someone for a
- recommendation if you want to, but EXPLORE! Blaze a new trail for
- yourself. The very best book you'll have read in 1989 may be one
- you've never heard of yet.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- TRIVIA ANSWERS
-
-
- Part One:
-
-
- 1. Anne Tyler
- 2. Irving Stone
- 3. Erich Maria Remarque
- 4. Robert Penn Warren
- 5. Jules Verne
- 6. Lew Wallace
- 7. Philip K. Dick (DO ANDROIDS DREAM OF ELECTRIC SHEEP?)
- 8. Pierre Boulle
- 9. John O'Hara
- 10. Herman Wouk
- 11. Harold Robbins
- 12. Alice Walker
- 13. Boris Pasternak
- 14. John Steinbeck
- 15. Leon Uris
- 16. William Peter Blatty
- 17. Ray Bradbury
- 18. Mary Shelley
- 19. James Jones
- 20. Edna Ferber
- 21. Mario Puzo
- 22. Margaret Mitchell
- 23. Victor Hugo
- 24. James Hilton
- 25. Erich Segal
- 26. Dashiell Hammett
- 27. Charles Nordhoff
- 28. William Somerset Maugham
- 29. Ken Kesey
- 30. Henryk Sienkiewicz
- 31. Lloyd C. Douglas
- 32. Ira Levin
- 33. William Styron
- 34. Michael Crichton
- 35. Henry Fielding
- 36. Leo Tolstoy
- 37. Emily Bronte
-
-
- Part Two:
-
-
- 1. They had some form of rabies.
- 2. Those were the original working titles of Steven Spielberg's
- (executive producer of GREMLINS) E.T. and CLOSE ENCOUNTERS,
- respectively.
- 3. Those are the names of Dustin Hoffman's in-laws.
- 4. THX-1138 is the title of director George Lucas's first feature
- film.
- 5. It's a snide reference to film critics Roger Ebert and Gene
- Siskel.
- 6. His doctor was the jogger who died on the beach.
- 7. As a contestant on the TV game show JEOPARDY.
- 8. Michael Douglas
- 9. Humphrey Bogart never said "Play it again, Sam".
- 10. Peter Finch, for NETWORK (Best Actor)
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- They tell me that a murder is committed every minute, so I don't
- want to waste any more of your time. I know you want to get to
- work.
- --Alfred Hitchcock
-
-
-
-