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-
-
- **************************************************************
- * *
- * R E A D I N G F O R P L E A S U R E *
- * *
- * Issue #5 *
- * *
- * October 1989 *
- * *
- * *
- * Editor: Cindy Bartorillo *
- * *
- * HAPPY HALLOWEEN! *
- **************************************************************
-
-
- 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
- call our BBS, the BAUDLINE II at 301-694-7108, 1200/2400 8N1.
-
-
- NOTICE: Reading For Pleasure is not copyrighted. You may copy
- freely, but please give us credit if you extract portions to use
- somewhere else. Sample copies of our print edition are available
- upon request. We ask for a donation of $1.50 each to cover the
- printing and mailing costs.
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- 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.
-
-
- Ad Lib Monroeville,PA John Williams 412-327-9209
- The Annex Dayton,OH John Cooper 513-274-0821
- Beginnings BBS Levittown,NY Mike Coticchio 516-796-7296 S
- Billboard Bartlett,IL Gary Watson 312-289-9808 P
- Boardello Los Angeles,CA Bryan Tsunoda 213-820-4527 P
- Bruce's Bar&Grill Hartford,CT Bruce 203-236-3761 P
- Byrd's Nest Arlington,VA Debbie&Alan Byrd 703-671-8923 P
- CC-BBS ManhattanBchCA Chuck Crayne 213-379-8817 P
- CompuNet Venice,CA Karen Zinda 213-306-1447 P
- Daily Planet Owosso,MI Jay Stark 517-723-4613
- Death Star Oxon Hill,MD Lee Pollard 301-839-0705 P
- Diversified Prog PacPalisadesCA Jean-Pierre Denis 213-459-6053 P
- Farmington Valley Hartford,CT John Walko 203-676-8920 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
- 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
- ()Lensman() BBS Denver,CO Greg Bradt 303-979-8953 P
- Litforum CompuServe Library #1
- Magpie HQ New York,NY Steve Manes 212-420-0527 P
- Nostradamus Los Angeles,CA Al Menache 213-473-4119 P
- Oak Lawn Oak Lawn,IL Vince & Chris 312-599-8089 P
- Poverty Rock PCB Mercer Is.,WA Rick Kunz 206-232-1763 PS
- Quantum Connec. PacPalisadesCA Richard W. Gross 213-459-6748 P
- Riverside Premium Lyons,IL Don Marquardt 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
-
-
- Any board that participates in the RelayNet (tm) email system can
- request RFP from NetNode.
-
-
- P = PC Pursuit-able
- S = StarLink-able
-
-
- NOTE: Back issues on CompuServe may have been moved to a
- different library.
-
-
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-
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Line #
-
-
- Editorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131
- What's News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 182
- The Hugo Awards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 262
- The Year's Best Horror Stories XVII . . . . . . . . . . . 296
- Good Reading Periodically . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 337
- Random Reviews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 457
- Tracy Kidder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 761
- Supernatural Mysteries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 819
- New From Meadowbrook Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 888
- Thomas Harris . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 991
- Fiction Into Film: FALLING ANGEL HEART . . . . . . . . . 1076
- Ray Garton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1212
- New From Underwood-Miller . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1320
- Featured Author: Robert R. McCammon . . . . . . . . . . . 1392
- The Modern Halloween Shelf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1560
- Recent Book Releases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1659
- Guest Reviewer: Darryl Kenning . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2031
- Important Days in October . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2129
- Number One Fan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2228
- The Ultimate Stephen King Character Quiz . . . . . . . . 376
- TUSKCQ Answers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2273
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- Hill House, not sane, stood by itself against its hills, holding
- darkness within; it had stood so for eighty years and might stand
- for eighty more. Within, walls continued upright, bricks met
- neatly, floors were firm, and doors were sensibly shut; silence
- lay steadily against the wood and stone of Hill House, and
- whatever walked there, walked alone.
- --from THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE by Shirley Jackson
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- EDITORIAL
-
-
- Halloween is a very special holiday around here. I've thought
- about it quite a bit and I think it's because Halloween, for us,
- represents Possibilities--all of the wonderful, magical aspects
- of the universe that we poor human beings haven't figured out
- yet. Because we agree with Einstein, that we don't understand one
- tenth of one percent about anything.
-
-
- Just as Santa Claus is a symbol, so are the ghosts and goblins of
- Halloween. The fat guy in red stands for peace on earth, goodwill
- toward men, happiness, and presents. Ghosts and goblins stand for
- all the scientific principles that humans haven't found yet, all
- the dusty corners of reality that we haven't explored.
-
-
- Have you ever wondered what this world looks like, seems like, to
- an amoeba? If an amoeba could communicate with us, how would it
- describe reality? Of course, we would understand the limited
- nature of the description because of the amoeba's physical
- limitations, but what makes us think our view is any more
- complete? If the amoeba isn't an adequate judge of its own
- perspective, we obviously aren't proper judges of ours.
-
-
- You don't have to believe in werewolves to believe that there are
- vast areas of medical science that we haven't mastered. You don't
- have to believe in ghosts to believe that we don't understand
- everything about death. You don't have to believe that Uri Geller
- bends spoons with his mind to believe that the human brain has
- untapped potential. And don't you think that it's kind of
- exciting not to have all the answers? Isn't it really more fun to
- sit back with a horror novel and think about "what if"?
-
-
- Happy reading!
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- 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.
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- Asking a working writer what he thinks about critics is like
- asking a lamp-post how it feels about dogs.
- --Christopher Hampton
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- WHAT'S NEWS
-
-
- * Quite a few years ago Charles Berlitz told us all about THE
- BERMUDA TRIANGLE and now, wouldn't you know it, the little devil
- has found another deadly area: also over water, also a triangle
- (you getting goosebumps?). For $16.95 he'll tell you all about
- THE DRAGON'S TRIANGLE, from Wynwood Press this month. ISBN
- 0-922066-19-1.
-
-
- * In the Summer 1987 issue of The Horror Show Leigh Nichols (AKA
- Dean R. Koontz) interviewed Dean R. Koontz. In the same vein,
- Lionel Fenn (AKA Charles L. Grant) interviewed his "landlady",
- Kathryn Ptacek (AKA Mrs. Charles L. Grant), in the Spring 1989
- issue. Writers are sure a weird bunch.
-
-
- * New book: DRACULA, PRINCE OF MANY FACES: His Life and His Times
- by Radu R. Florescu and Raymond T. McNally ($19.95, Little,
- Brown). This is an in-depth look at Vlad the Impaler, for all the
- Dracula fanatics out there.
-
-
- * Here are some recent and coming books on tape, all with a
- Halloween theme: MIDNIGHT (Dean R. Koontz), 5 cassettes, 15
- hours, unabridged, reader unknown, $21.95, Sep89; THE VAMPIRE
- LESTAT (Anne Rice), 2 cassettes, 180 min., reader unknown,
- $14.95, Oct89; MAJESTIC (Whitley Strieber), 2 cassettes, 180
- min., reader unknown, $14.95, Dec89; CABAL: NIGHTBREED (Clive
- Barker), 2 cassettes, 180 min., read by Malcolm McDowell, $14.95,
- Dec89.
-
-
- * Chris Costner Sizemore, the real-life subject of the book and
- movie THE THREE FACES OF EVE, has written a new book all by
- herself: A MIND OF MY OWN (Morrow, Sep89, $19.95, ISBN
- 0-688-08199-1). In it she recounts her life from her birth in
- 1927, through her recovery in 1977, up to the present day. The
- film rights have been sold to Sissy Spacek.
-
-
- * THE READER'S CATALOG should be just out and may be worth your
- attention. It's a listing of over 40,000 titles currently in
- print, sorted into more than 200 categories. An 800 number is
- given to order any book in the catalog, but giving the title to
- your local independent bookseller is generally the more
- Responsible Consumer thing to do. THE READER'S GUIDE is from
- Random House, $24.95, ISBN 0-924-32200-4. Your local bookstore
- should have a "house" copy. Ask if you can take a look at it.
-
-
- * Anne Rice's Vampire Lestat Fan Club was formed last October at
- a book signing at the DeVille Bookstore in New Orleans. For $5,
- coven members not only receive a quarterly newsletter complete
- with a communication from Lestat de Lioncourt himself, but also
- the opportunity to make donations to the club's periodic blood
- drives. "What better way to prove I am a fan than to offer my
- blood?" one member asks.
-
-
- * Update on THE RUSSIA HOUSE by John le Carre: Meshdunarodnye
- Otnoshenia has bought the Soviet rights to the thriller, and
- plans to publish it next spring with a first printing of
- "hundreds of thousands", according to Knopf. The novel will be
- the subject of a public forum at the Moscow Book Fair in October,
- and the film version (written by Tom Stoppard and starring Sean
- Connery) begins shooting October 2 in Moscow and Leningrad.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- Though rumors persist in the nation's tabloids--of extensive
- plastic surgery, of involvement in the Iran-Contra Scandal, and
- of that fabled "lost weekend" with Imelda Marcos--in truth, they
- lead lives of quiet desperation, shunned by the public they so
- desperately crave.
- --from Skipp & Spector's official biography
-
-
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-
-
- The more I think you over the more it comes home to me what an
- unmitigated Middle Victorian ass you are!
- --H.G. Wells, to George Bernard Shaw
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- THE HUGO AWARDS
-
-
- The award winners announced at the ceremony on Sept. 2, 1989:
-
-
- Novel: CYTEEN by C.J. Cherryh
- Novella: "The Last of the Winnebagos" by Connie Willis
- Novelette: "Schrodinger's Kitten" by George Alec Effinger
- Short Story: "Kirinyaga" by Mike Resnick
- Non-Fiction: THE MOTION OF LIGHT IN WATER by Samuel R. Delany
- Dramatic Presentation: WHO FRAMED ROGER RABBIT
- Professional Editor: Gardner Dozois
- Professional Artist: Michael Whelan
- Semiprozine: Locus edited by Charles N. Brown
- Fanzine: File 770 edited by Mike Glyer
- Fan Writer: Dave Langford
- Fan Artist: (tie) Brad W. Foster & Diana Gallagher Wu
- John W. Campbell Award for best new writer of 1987-1988:
- Michaela Roessner
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- Love may fly out the window, but fear is something that likes to
- stick with you.
- --Peter Straub
-
-
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-
-
- I have the heart of a small boy. I keep it in a jar in my desk.
- --Robert Bloch
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS OF
- THE YEAR'S BEST HORROR STORIES: XVII
- edited by Karl Edward Wagner
- DAW, October 1989
-
-
- TITLE AUTHOR ORIG. APPEARANCE
-
-
- "Playing the Game" Ramsey Campbell Lord John Ten
- "Recrudescence" Leonard Carpenter Amazing
- "Regression" R. Chetwynd-Hayes 4th Book of After
- Midnight Stories
- "She's a Young Thing and
- Cannot Leave Her Mother" Harlan Ellison Pulphouse
- "Call 666" Dennis Etchison Twilight Zone
- "The Daily Chernobyl" Robert Frazier Synergy
- "Now and Again in Summer" Charles L. Grant Fantasy Tales
- "Snowman" Charles L. Grant Gaslight & Ghosts
- "Prince of Flowers" Elizabeth Hand Twilight Zone
- "The Great God Pan" M. John Harrison Prime Evil
- "Works of Art" Nina Kiriki Hoffman Pulphouse
- "Fruiting Bodies" Brian Lumley Weird Tales
- "Nobody's Perfect" Thomas F. Monteleone Pulphouse
- "Dead Air" Gregory Nicoll Ripper!
- "Ours Now" Nicholas Royle Dig
- "Bleeding Between the Lines" Wayne Allen Sallee 2AM
- "What Dreams May Come" Brad Strickland F&SF
- "Lost Bodies" Ian Watson Interzone
- "The Resurrection Man" Ian Watson Other Edens
- "Souvenirs from a Damnation" Don Webb Pulphouse
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- Children are best at listening to stories and being affected by
- them. And we, as readers, are at our best when we are most like
- children.
- --Alan Ryan
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- GOOD READING PERIODICALLY
-
-
- There's something inside all of us that makes us want to express
- ourselves. How many times do you hear someone start a sentence
- with, "I'm the kind of guy who..."? If you ever feel the burning
- need to put your essence into words, and see it in print, you may
- want to know about ROLLMAG ("It Jiggles Your Thinking"), a very
- strange periodical. They put out "6 issues a year or so" for $15,
- and the issue I saw (June 1989) was 4 pages. It consists mostly
- of small paragraphs by people on subjects of their own choosing
- (you must subscribe to be printed). One small excerpt: "Once I
- would never cut lettuce with a knife, now I wear a vest from time
- to time." Think about it. If self-expression sounds good to you,
- write to: Rollmag, Box 5001, Mill Valley, CA 94942-5001.
-
-
- For those interested in the welfare of animals, there is a
- magazine you should know about called The Animals' Voice
- Magazine. It's published bi-monthly by the Compassion for Animals
- Foundation; 6 issues for $24, 12 issues for $36 (but I've seen
- introductory coupons for 6 issues for $18). This is a big, slick
- magazine with great photography and many serious news stories
- relating to animals. I also appreciated the black page preceding
- their news section that warned of "photos of a graphic nature"
- and announced that the news section ends on page 67. This is nice
- for the squeamish. The last third of the magazine has lists of
- companies to boycott, companies that do good, animal-related
- merchandise, T-shirts, books for sale, book reviews, etc. Good
- wide coverage of an important field. Send your check to: The
- Animals' Voice Magazine, P.O. Box 1649, Martinez, CA 94553.
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- I'd like to rework CUJO so the ordeal doesn't look like some
- work of divine punishment for adultery. I never intended that.
- --Stephen King
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- THE ULTIMATE STEPHEN KING CHARACTER QUIZ
-
-
- Do you REALLY know your Stephen King characters? Match up the
- characters below with the novels. You might also try to remember
- whether the character represented the forces of good or evil.
-
-
- The Novels: Carrie, Christine, Cujo, Cycle of the Werewolf, The
- Dead Zone, The Eyes of the Dragon, Firestarter, It, The Long
- Walk, Misery, Pet Sematary, Rage, Roadwork, The Running Man,
- 'Salem's Lot, The Shining, The Stand, The Talisman (with Peter
- Straub), Thinner, The Tommyknockers
-
-
- Mother Abagail
- Uncle Al
- Bobbi Anderson
- Kurt Barlow
- Leigh Cabot
- Marty Coslaw
- Judson Crandall
- Louis Creed
- Arnie Cunningham
- Barton George Dawes
- Charles Decker
- Bill Denbrough
- Flagg
- Randall Flagg
- Jim Gardener
- Ray Garraty
- Richard (Richie the Hammer) Ginelli
- Danny Glick
- Delbert Grady
- Dennis Guilder
- Billy Halleck
- Dick Hallorann
- Mike Hanlon
- Ben Hanscom
- Chris Hargensen
- Eddie Kaspbrak
- Dan Killian
- Taduz Lemke
- Charlie McGee
- Ben Mears
- Pennywise the Clown
- Prince Peter
- Mark Petrie
- Rainbird
- Stu Redman
- Benjamin Stuart Richards
- Beverly Rogan
- Tommy Ross
- Jack Sawyer
- Paul Sheldon
- Morgan Sloat
- Johnny Smith
- Greg Stillson
- Richard Throckett Straker
- Danny Torrance
- Richie Tozier
- Tad Trenton
- Stan Uris
- Walkin Dude
- Annie Wilkes
- Wolf
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- Great horror fiction has never really been about monsters, but
- about mankind. It shows us something important about ourselves,
- something dark, occasionally monstrous -- and usually in bad
- taste.
- --Douglas E. Winter
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- Fear is with us all the time. We can dope it up or drown it with
- alcohol. We can tuck it into a drawer behind last year's designer
- jeans, but it comes out to sleep with us every night.
- --George A. Romero
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- RANDOM REVIEWS:
-
-
- THE WELL-BUILT HOUSE
- by Jim Locke
- (1988)
-
-
- Think of this as a companion volume to Tracy Kidder's bestseller,
- HOUSE (see Kidder article this issue). Jim Locke was one of the
- carpenters that built Mr. Kidder's house so painstakingly. Now,
- in his own book, Jim Locke tells you everything you need to know
- to plan and build your own home--all the inside information that
- consumers rarely have. If you plan to do the construction
- yourself THE WELL-BUILT HOUSE will teach you good building
- techniques. If you don't plan to do the actual work yourself,
- this book will be an invaluable aid to overseeing the work done
- by others. THE WELL-BUILT HOUSE (and Tracy Kidder's HOUSE) are
- required reading for anyone contemplating building their own
- home.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- IT'S ALWAYS SOMETHING
- by Gilda Radner
- (1989)
-
-
- It's probably not news to you that Gilda Radner died this past
- May. She had ovarian cancer, diagnosed on October 21, 1986, that
- was largely unresponsive to therapy. IT'S ALWAYS SOMETHING is a
- close-up look at her struggle with cancer, it's treatments, and
- the side effects of those treatments; and, as you might imagine,
- it's not a very easy book to read.
-
-
- It seems to me that the major value of books like this one is the
- same as the comfort of monster movies. No matter how horrible the
- monster is, he's that horrible and no more. Only in our
- imagination are monsters INFINITELY horrible; once you've seen
- the finite dimensions of the problem, you can begin to deal with
- it. Likewise, as godawful as Gilda Radner's experiences were,
- they weren't as awful as we could imagine.
-
-
- What I'd like to read now is a companion volume from her husband,
- Gene Wilder. He's a shadowy figure in this book, which is
- centered entirely on Gilda and her medical care. His experiences
- must have been equally nightmarish, and need to be shared for the
- same reasons. Being a survivor of a tragedy isn't necessarily the
- more fortunate role.
-
-
- LAST GRISLY NOTE: There is an audio version available, read by
- Gilda Radner herself. She recorded it in April 1989 and died less
- than 30 days later.
-
-
- Come to think of it, there is one very important lesson in IT'S
- ALWAYS SOMETHING: If you're going to get cancer, it sure does
- help to be rich.
-
-
- A wise nurse at the hospital told me later, "Never let a
- gynecologist put anything in your nose".
- --Gilda Radner (IT'S ALWAYS SOMETHING)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- WHY DO CLOCKS RUN CLOCKWISE? and other Imponderables
- Mysteries of Everyday Life Explained
- by David Feldman
- (1987)
-
-
- This volume (and the original, IMPONDERABLES) is in the same
- category as Cecil Adams' STRAIGHT DOPE books (see RFP #1). Both
- Adams and Feldman tackle the really tough, nagging questions of
- life. The major differences are: David Feldman is more serious
- and academic about his subjects. Most answers involve the citing
- of an expert. Cecil Adams uses a more personal voice, taking
- responsibility for answers himself, and he is a very funny man.
- Generally then, I would recommend the Adams books first, but I
- love these kinds of reference books so much I get them all. Here
- are some of the questions covered here:
-
-
- Why is the scoring system in tennis so weird?
- Whatever happened to pay toilets?
- Why do doughnuts have holes?
- Why are hamburger-bun bottoms so thin?
- Why are there eighteen holes on a golf course?
- Why is Jack the nickname for John?
-
-
-
-
-
-
- PRIVATE DEMONS: THE LIFE OF SHIRLEY JACKSON
- by Judy Oppenheimer
- (1988)
-
-
- She lived forty-eight years, raised four children, took care of
- an imperious husband and a big old house, and in her spare time
- created a few landmarks of twentieth-century fiction, including
- the short story "The Lottery", THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE, and WE
- HAVE ALWAYS LIVED IN THE CASTLE. She was also, as so many artists
- are, a little strange: everyone, including her, agreed that she
- was a witch, many thought she could read minds, she talked to
- cats, and late in life she suffered from agoraphobia. Shirley
- Jackson may have only lived 48 years, but she definitely got her
- money's worth.
-
-
- The jargon didn't exist at the time, but Shirley and her husband
- were classic substance abusers. They were terribly overweight,
- their alcohol consumption was prodigious, and amphetamines
- (dexedrine) and tranquilizers (Thorazine, Miltowns, etc.) were a
- standard part of the day. She died at 48, her husband at 51.
-
-
- While I only meant to browse this biography, I ended up reading
- every page, mostly because of Shirley. She was a fascinating
- character, shockingly unnoticed during her lifetime. But when I
- apply my standard of judgement of biographies: Would a person
- who's never heard of the subject enjoy this? -- I would have to
- say probably not in this case. Shirley's life was interesting to
- me primarily because we came from similar backgrounds and had
- similar life experiences; but you can't say that her life was
- very dynamic or adventurous. This is the usual problem with
- writers' biographies; it's just not that much fun to watch
- someone sit in a chair and type. But if you'd like to spend some
- time solely with Character, you'll enjoy meeting Shirley Jackson,
- an unforgettable personality.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- COSMIC CATASTROPHES
- by Clark R. Chapman & David Morrison
- (1989)
-
-
- Catastrophism is the idea that the significant shapers of the
- cosmos we know are not the day-by-day microscopic effects of the
- laws of physics, but rather are once-in-a-millenium mega-events.
- The weakness of this idea is that you find yourself believing in
- the occurrence of catastrophes that no one can absolutely prove
- have EVER happened.
-
-
- For instance, some people believe that a comet of significant
- size hit the earth 65 million years ago and wiped out more than
- half of all terrestrial species. Others think that this is pretty
- farfetched. So far, nobody can prove either point. COSMIC
- CATASTROPHES is a sympathetic explanation of the most popular
- theoretical catastrophes, told in a semi-heavy science-for-the-
- layperson style.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- STRIKE THREE YOU'RE DEAD
- by R.D. Rosen
- (1984)
-
-
- The 1984 winner of the Best First Mystery Edgar from the Mystery
- Writers of America, STRIKE THREE YOU'RE DEAD is a good mystery
- that makes excellent use of its baseball theme. Harvey Blissberg
- is an outfielder (batting .309) for the Providence Jewels, an
- expansion team in the American League East. His roommate on the
- road is Rudy Furth, a so-so relief pitcher. Or should I say used
- to be, because Rudy is found dead in the whirlpool in the second
- chapter.
-
-
- The characters are very lifelike, surprising me in a mystery with
- a strong plot. Usually mystery authors either write a plot or a
- group of characters, depending on their strength. In STRIKE THREE
- YOU'RE DEAD we have the lead, Harvey Blissberg, who is remarkably
- intelligent for a professional athlete (but not TOO smart, he
- still gets into trouble several times). There's his girlfriend
- (and maybe Rudy's too?); a low-life idiot with mob connections;
- and then there's the spineless manager with his younger
- domineering wife. Was Rudy sleeping with Harvey's girl? Was Rudy
- into gambling? Particularly recommended for baseball fans; the
- setting is not just a two-dimensional backdrop, Mr. Rosen
- obviously knows quite a bit about major league baseball.
-
-
-
-
- DEAR GEORGE:
- Advice and Answers from America's Leading
- Expert on Everything from A to B
- by George Burns
- (1985)
-
-
- This is George Burns' sixth book. I hope the others are better
- because this one isn't worth your time or your money. The jokes
- were stale thirty years ago and the whole burlesque, snickering-
- at-dirty-thoughts routine is pretty ridiculous today. Or am I
- wrong? Anyway, I can't recommend this book at all, which is
- disappointing to me since I really love to see George Burns on
- TV. I think he's very funny. Just not in DEAR GEORGE.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- UNDERCURRENTS
- by Ridley Pearson
- (1988)
-
-
- Detective Lou Boldt, Homicide, is a mess. His marriage is falling
- apart, an ulcer is eating him from the inside, he's overworked,
- underpaid, and on top of it all the serial killer they thought
- they had caught turns out to be still at large. He's called the
- Cross Killer because of the design he makes on the victims with
- stab wounds. Now they have to start the investigation all over
- again, with little evidence and no leads.
-
-
- UNDERCURRENTS is a good mystery. There are two maps in the front
- of the book, followed by a long, detail-filled police procedural.
- This is the GOOD kind of detail: lots of food for thought, but
- you aren't penalized for not remembering any particular piece of
- apparent trivia. In other words, the complexities of the plot
- aren't there JUST to hide the give-away plot points. The story
- seems to unreel naturally, with important matters as well as
- trivial, evidence that fits a theory as well as many loose ends.
- Just like life.
-
-
- While this is the story of a brutal serial murderer, there really
- isn't much violence in UNDERCURRENTS. This is a police story, not
- a through-the-eyes-of-the-killer gut-wrencher like, say, RED
- DRAGON (by Thomas Harris). And, wonder of wonders, I actually
- solved the mystery before Detective Boldt did, a significant
- event for me despite how many mysteries I read, so this is
- obviously a fair-play mystery. A very good mystery.
-
-
- NOTE: UNDERCURRENTS was bought, read, and enjoyed by Linda Lee
- Bleecker, widow of Bruce Lee and wife of screenwriter Tom
- Bleecker. She recommended it to her husband, who has optioned it
- for a feature film.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- SACRED MONSTER
- by Donald E. Westlake
- (1989)
-
-
- It would seem like a standard Hollywood success story: Jack Pine
- is the quintessential star, immensely talented and completely
- lacking in scruples. He even has the standard supporting cast:
- lifelong friend welching off him forever (name is Buddy Pal, do
- you believe it?), a respectable number of wives and mistresses,
- even the fawning butler Hoskins. He's slept, charmed, acted, and
- doped his way to the top (even got an Oscar). And now he's
- telling Michael O'Connor his life story.
-
-
- Ordinary? Not even close. Funny? It's a riot. I didn't realize,
- until I picked myself up off the floor and stopped laughing,
- that's it's possible to WRITE slapstick. I'd always heard that
- slapstick was a visual technique; now I know better. But don't
- think you can dismiss SACRED MONSTER as comic fluff. It's a
- devastating and shocking indictment of Hollywood life; it's
- hilarious and ominous, ridiculous and chilling--all at the same
- time.
-
-
- The subtitle is A Comedy of Madness, which is apt, because if
- there's one thing SACRED MONSTER will teach you: if you're going
- to live in Hollywood, it sure helps to be insane. This definitely
- makes my Ten Best list for 1989. It's your loss if you miss this
- one.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- SHADES OF GRAY
- by Timothy R. O'Neill
- (1987)
-
-
- Cadet Barstow is being haunted by a gray shape in his room at
- West Point. One more cadet suffering from stress wouldn't concern
- too many people if it weren't for the fact that one morning Cadet
- Barstow disappears from his room. Faculty psychologists Sam
- Bondurant and Liam FitzDonnell are asked to investigate, as
- quietly as possible, before crazy rumors get started. The course
- of their investigation constitutes most of this fascinating
- novel, SHADES OF GRAY.
-
-
- While the pace is occasionally uneven, the story is compellingly
- told, and it bears the distinction of being one of the few books
- I've read (me, the old Horror warhorse) that actually prevented
- me from sleeping. The nightmares suffered in this story are so
- real, so like my own nightmares, that I was truly bothered by
- them. I had to read another book, something very different, to be
- able to sleep. This pokes a serious hole in a pet theory of mine,
- that psychologists don't understand diddly about people, because
- the author (who is Lt. Col. Timothy R. O'Neill) has a Ph.D. in
- experimental psychology.
-
-
- This is not recommended for the blood-and-guts, a-decapitation-
- on-every-page types, but if you're in the mood for a literate
- supernatural story, a perfect Halloween story, this is one of the
- very best in a long time. Incidentally, I've heard that a movie
- version might be on the way. It was supposed be in preproduction
- this past summer.
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- It seems that good horror fiction, and perhaps the best of my
- work, is a bit closer to the edge of feeling and basic elemental
- life-concerns than most other fiction, and than most commercial
- horror fiction.
- --Dennis Etchison
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- All good writers write from the things inside of them. They write
- about the things that make them happy, or make them fearful,
- anxious or whatever. That's what you choose. In other words: you
- don't choose horror...horror chooses you.
- --William F. Nolan
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- TRACY KIDDER
-
-
- In THE SOUL OF A NEW MACHINE (1981) Tracy Kidder spent months
- inside Data General Corporation of Westborough, Massachusetts as
- a crack team of computer wizards worked to design and build a new
- computer, a 32-bit supermini. The excitement and energy come
- right off the page, as do the frustrations and exhaustion. This
- is the story of talented people pushing, and being pushed, to the
- limits of their abilities. You'll probably need a vacation after
- reading this, just to recover. The best computer-oriented book
- I've read, and I'm not alone because Mr. Kidder won a Pulitzer
- Prize for it.
-
-
- In HOUSE (1985), we have a change of pace: Mr. Kidder takes us
- along as he has a new house built for himself. Like his previous
- book, step by step, inch by inch, it's all here -- getting the
- blueprints from William Rawn Associates, Architects, and getting
- the house actually constructed by Apple Corps, Builders. You've
- probably heard jokes about how frustrating it is to build a
- house, and here's your chance to see all of the problems in
- close-up. You'll find that even when everyone means well,
- misunderstandings and mistaken assumptions can be devastating.
- Absolutely must reading for anyone contemplating having a house
- built or any major construction done.
-
-
- In AMONG SCHOOLCHILDREN (1989), just out, Mr. Kidder turns his
- attention to the school system, specifically the fifth-grade
- class in Holyoke, Massachusetts, a small city with big-time urban
- problems. The teacher is 34-year-old Chris Zajac: she is funny,
- feisty, and passionately dedicated to her pupils, kids who will
- amuse and exasperate you--and break your heart. The ad says:
- "This intense and affecting chronicle by the Pulitzer
- Prize-winning author of THE SOUL OF A NEW MACHINE and HOUSE is
- Tracy Kidder's most emotional subject-- and potentially his
- biggest best seller." $19.95
-
-
- Having read THE SOUL OF A NEW MACHINE and HOUSE, I can guarantee
- that AMONG SCHOOLCHILDREN is sure to be very educational and
- completely absorbing.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- Horror is one of the last areas of fiction still standing in the
- rain. It hasn't come under heavy intellectual scrutiny; it's
- still innocent of much compartmentalizing and theorizing; its
- major works are not regularly dissected in the weightier Sunday
- newspapers by lazy academics out to make a quick buck.
- --Clive Barker
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- Henry James was one of the nicest old ladies I ever met.
- --William Faulkner
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- SUPERNATURAL MYSTERIES
-
-
- This is a more-than-usually arguable category. The following
- books have more-or-less detection in a more-or-less supernatural
- setting. In any case, there's some good reading here.
-
-
- Allingham, Margery The Mind Readers
- Berckman, Evelyn The Victorian Album
- Blackburn, John Bury Him Darkly
- Bontly, Thomas J. Celestial Chess
- Breen, Jon L. The Gathering Place
- Burley, W.J. The House of Care
- Carr, John Dickson He Who Whispers
- Carter, Diana Ghost Writer
- Carvic, Heron Miss Seeton Bewitched
- (AKA Witch Miss Seeton)
- Chesbro, George An Affair of Sorcerers
- Christie, Agatha The Pale Horse
- Crane, Caroline Something Evil
- Daly, Elizabeth Evidence of Things Seen
- Davies, L.P. The Reluctant Medium
- de Weese, Jean Hour of the Cat
- Dickinson, Peter Walking Dead
- Doyle, Arthur Conan The Hound of the Baskervilles
- Estleman, Loren D. Sherlock Holmes vs. Dracula
- Fletcher, Lucille The Girl in Cabin B54
- Gallico, Paul Too Many Ghosts
- Grant, Charles L. The Grave
- Hillerman, Tony The Blessing Way
- Hjortsberg, William Falling Angel
- Howatch, Susan The Devil on Lammas Night
- Innes, Michael The Daffodil Affair
- Johnston, Velda A Presence in an Empty Room
- Leiber, Fritz Conjure Wife
- Lovesey, Peter A Case of Spirits
- McBain, Ed Ghosts
- McCloy, Helen Mr. Splitfoot
- McDowell, Michael Cold Moon Over Babylon
- Peters, Elizabeth The Love Talker
- Phillpotts, Eden The Grey Room
- Pronzini, Bill Night Screams
- Rhode, John In the Face of the Verdict
- Rinehart, Mary Roberts The Red Lamp
- Rohmer, Sax The Dream Detective
- Rosenfeld, Lulla Death and the I Ching
- Sladek, John Black Aura
- Smith, Guy Deathbell
- Stein, Duffy The Owlsfane Horror
- Stewart, Fred Mustard The Mephisto Waltz
- Stewart, Ramona Sixth Sense
- Streiber, Whitley The Wolfen
- Tey, Josephine The Franchise Affair
- Warner, Mignon The Tarot Murders
- Wheatley, Dennis Gateway to Hell
- Wilcox, Colin The Black Doors
- Wilson, Colin The Schoolgirl Murder Case
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- When a 16-year-old kid writes a volume of horror stories, it's
- self-evident that he's a lost soul, and Ramsey Campbell has
- devoted the last twenty years to living up to his early
- horrifying promise.
- --Karl Edward Wagner
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- NEW FROM MEADOWBROOK PRESS
-
-
-
-
- THE OVER-THE-HILL SURVIVAL GUIDE: How to Keep Young People in
- Their Place, Get Back at Your Kids, and Go Out with a Bang
-
-
- by Bob Feigel and Malcolm Walker
-
-
- Here's a hilarious book that shows senior citizens how to cope
- with life in the slow lane--and how to fight back. Included are
- ingenious tactics like:
-
-
- * how to save money by shoplifting
- * how to get by on pet food
- * how to do your own face-lift
- * how to fake senility to get a seat on a crowded bus
- * how to defend yourself with a crutch
- * 6 ways to embarrass your children
- * how to use your will to get back at your family
- * 5 ways to go out with a bang
-
-
- $5.95 paperback ISBN: 0-671-69000-0 Out in November
-
-
-
-
- THE PARENTS' GUIDE TO DIRTY TRICKS: How to Con, Hoodwink, and
- Outsmart Your Kids
-
-
- by Bill Dodds
-
-
- Since kids think nothing of lying and cheating to get their way,
- here's an outrageous book that shows adults how to fight fire
- with fire.
-
-
- Now parents can beat kids at their own game by using
- unconventional and, until now, unthinkable methods, including:
-
-
- * how to get some sleep when your kids throw a slumber party
- * how to get your kids to eat spinach, broccoli, and liver
- without a whimper (and without even knowing it)
- * how to avoid telling your kids about sex
- * how to lose your kids on a nature hike
-
-
- $4.95 paperback ISBN: 0-671-68998-3 Out in October
-
-
-
-
- LEARN WHILE YOU SCRUB
- SCIENCE IN THE TUB
-
-
- by James Lewis
-
-
- Now school-age kids can learn science while they splash and play
- in the tub. Here are fifty fun experiments that introduce five-
- to nine-year-olds to concepts like:
-
-
- * how a pump works
- * why water evaporates
- * what causes a whirlpool
- * how air pressure works
- * how water changes an object's weight
- * why water magnifies objects
-
-
- James Lewis' first book for toddlers and preschoolers, RUB-A-DUB-
- DUB SCIENCE IN THE TUB, was published by Meadowbrook Press in
- June.
-
-
- $6.95 paperback ISBN: 0-671-68999-1 Out in October
-
-
-
-
- WEIRD WONDERS & BIZARRE BLUNDERS
- The Official Book of Ridiculous Records
-
-
- by Brad Schreiber
-
-
- Here's a book for people who enjoy Guinness' most amazing records
- and Ripley's most unbelievable facts, but wish they went one step
- further. It's the weirdest collection of world records, and the
- funniest. Here are just a few:
-
-
- * the most hotel rooms destroyed by a rock group
- * the strangest last request by a condemned prisoner
- * the most socks lost in a laundromat
- * the biggest lie told by a TV evangelist
- * the longest distance driving blindfolded
- * the most successful sewer fisherman
-
-
- $4.95 paperback ISBN: 0-671-69035-3 Out in November
-
-
- Meadowbrook Press, 18318 Minnetonka Blvd., Deephaven, MN 55391
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- And the Raven, never flitting, still is sitting, still is sitting
- On the pallid bust of Pallas just above my chamber door;
- And his eyes have all the seeming of a demon's that is dreaming,
- And the lamp-light o'er him streaming throws his shadow on the
- floor;
- And my soul from out that shadow that lies floating on the floor
- Shall be lifted--nevermore!
- --from "The Raven" by Edgar Allan Poe
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- THOMAS HARRIS
-
-
-
-
- If you like a good serial-killer story, you definitely need to
- know about Thomas Harris, who has written two of the absolute
- best. You get both memorable characters and a plot that will keep
- you up long past your bedtime.
-
-
-
-
- RED DRAGON
-
-
-
-
- Douglas E. Winter has called RED DRAGON "one of the finest horror
- novels of the eighties", and it is certainly the quintessential
- Psycho Killer story. Thomas Harris puts you into the mind of a
- seriously disturbed personality, allowing you to feel the pain he
- feels. Unlike most of the Psycho Killer novels, however, this
- point of view is not played for titillation, but for revulsion.
- The closer you get to the Tooth Fairy (the media's nickname for
- the guy, and don't ask), the more horrifying he is.
-
-
- By the way, don't be surprised if you wind up with a permanent
- paranoia about the way the Tooth Fairy chooses his victims. Let's
- just say that Thomas Harris points out vulnerabilities you
- probably didn't realize you had. This is the stuff of nightmares,
- so let the reader beware.
-
-
- Oh, yes, I should mention that there is a movie adaptation of RED
- DRAGON called MANHUNTER, and it's available on videotape. From my
- unofficial poll, people who haven't read the book like the movie
- more than people who have. I thought that the movie left out too
- many important details, as well as trivializing Dr. Hannibal
- Lecter, my favorite character. Will Graham, the lead character
- who is trying to catch the bad guy--his character is pretty much
- a zero in the movie. All in all, I'd at least read the book first
- if I were you.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS
- (1988)
-
-
- Here's our cast: Dr. Hannibal Lecter is back, as is FBI
- Behavioral Science Section Chief Jack Crawford. Will Graham, an
- alcoholic now, has retired to Florida, but Clarice Starling, an
- FBI trainee, is here to take over. And of course there's Dr.
- Frederick Chilton, administrator of the Baltimore State Hospital
- for the Criminally Insane, who is the novel's jerk-in-residence.
- And I almost forgot, there's Buffalo Bill, serial killer still at
- large. Catching him is what THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS is all
- about.
-
-
- The most obvious thing to say about SILENCE is that Thomas Harris
- has done it again; a strong cast of characters solves a partly-
- intriguing, partly-disgusting mystery in compelling prose. There
- are even a few improvements. The good-guys-against-bureaucracy
- element of the plot is stronger. Crawford and Starling have to
- fight criminals AND bureaucrats to do the job they were hired to
- do, and with, of course, no commensurate reward. Also, there is
- comedy this time: Chapter 14 introduces Pilcher and Roden,
- entomologists at the Smithsonian who could play Vegas. A very
- nice touch.
-
-
- As usual, there's little one can say without giving away
- important plot details. Thomas Harris provides numerous plot
- twists, many surprises, and a great deal of tension. Enjoy it.
- But wait for a weekend evening to read it, because you're going
- to lose some sleep over this book.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- Horror is that which we have not yet come to terms with.
- --Ramsey Campbell
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- I love it when someone tells me he had nightmares from reading
- one of my stories or couldn't sleep -- or was scared so bad he
- went out and bought a small tactical nuclear weapon for
- self-defense.
- --Dean R. Koontz
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- FICTION INTO FILM:
-
-
- FALLING ANGEL
- by William Hjortsberg
- (1978)
-
-
- For the first few chapters you may think that FALLING ANGEL is
- just another hard-boiled detective story, and you'd have plenty
- of facts in your favor. Most of the standard fixtures are
- present: seedy detective hero, a mysterious and wealthy client
- who is obviously hiding something, an exotic and dangerous woman,
- and, of course, the verbally abusive policemen. So why is this in
- RFP's Halloween issue?
-
-
- Well, let's start at the beginning: The story opens on Friday the
- 13th when attorney Herman Winesap (of McIntosh, Winesap and Spy)
- asks our hero, Harry Angel, to meet a potential client, Louis
- Cyphre, at a restaurant at 666 Fifth Avenue. Have you noticed
- anything wrong yet? Then there's the character of Louis Cyphre;
- an ominous, creepy guy who wants to find 1940s singer Johnny
- Favorite dead or alive -- and makes no attempt to disguise the
- fact that finding him dead would be the more pleasant solution.
- This is only the beginning of what is certainly the finest
- supernatural detective story every written.
-
-
- Over and above the horror, beyond the detection, there's the
- network of warning signs and hints laid by Hjortsberg. He uses
- literary allusions, symbolic imagery, and all kinds of wordplay
- in his game of hide-and-seek with the reader. It's so much fun,
- don't be surprised if you immediately want to read the book
- again, once you know the whole story, to see just how Hjortsberg
- created the maze of deception that is FALLING ANGEL. My one hint
- to you: pay attention to all proper names; they are all carefully
- chosen.
-
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- If you haven't read FALLING ANGEL yet, skip to next dotted line
-
-
- SPOILER!
-
-
- Speaking of literary allusion, it may escape the casual reader
- that FALLING ANGEL is really a retelling of the Oedipus story
- (you remember, the guy who murdered his father and married his
- mother). Your first hint is the quote from Oedipus The King by
- Sophocles in the front of the book. Within the story the
- parallels are numerous:
-
-
- 1. Dr. Fowler is shot through the eye (Oedipus puts his own eyes
- out).
- 2. The incest in FALLING ANGEL mirrors the relationship between
- Oedipus and his mother.
- 3. The name of Angel's agency is Crossroads Detective Agency
- (Oedipus kills his father at the crossroads).
- 4. Angel, like Oedipus, seeks intelligence and finds the guilt
- within himself.
- 5. Angel, like Oedipus, tries to defy the gods and control his
- own future.
- 6. Oedipus was a king who ended up an outcast, while in FALLING
- ANGEL we have an "Angel" who's destined for Hell.
-
-
- While I'm at it, I might as well mention that the cycle of 3
- plays about Oedipus by Sophocles (called the Theban Plays) is
- well worth reading. I think you'll be surprised how well it has
- aged. Knowing the story ahead of time (as the contemporaries did
- too) and watching Oedipus make a complete jerk of himself is
- still great fun.
-
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- THE MOVIE
-
-
- Alan Parker's adaptation of FALLING ANGEL (he wrote the
- screenplay and directed it) is called ANGEL HEART. I'm not sure
- why he changed the name, but both names are equally meaningful,
- once you know the story. It's an atmospheric, tension-filled
- movie, and very effective at translating Hjortsberg's complicated
- plot to a visual medium.
-
-
- Other than simple condensation, Parker made a couple of major
- changes. To begin with, he put the voodoo down in New Orleans
- instead of New York City, and most critics focused on that
- difference, usually saying it was a questionable decision.
- Personally, I don't see that it hurt or helped the story. Most of
- the secondary characters were greatly abbreviated in order to
- give full weight to Angel's story, so their location wasn't all
- that important.
-
-
- The performances of the two stars, Mickey Rourke as Harry Angel
- and Robert DeNiro as Louis Cyphre, are superb, perfect casting.
- Every one else is adequate, and because of the way that Alan
- Parker has skewed the story, this is all that is necessary.
-
-
- The videotape, by the way, comes in a Not Rated version with the
- footage of dripping blood during the sex scene replaced. For once
- the censors had at least half a point, because this scene is
- really disturbing. Unfortunately, that is the whole point of the
- scene, and Parker accomplishes the purpose admirably. This is an
- "adult" film in the best sense of the word. It requires maturity
- to thoroughly understand, and can be upsetting to older children.
-
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- If you haven't seen ANGEL HEART yet, stop here!
-
-
- SPOILER!
-
-
- The biggest change that Parker made was the identity of the
- killer, which is remarkable when you think about it, because this
- story is, underneath all the horror elements, a murder mystery.
- Of course, due to the peculiar circumstances of this story, the
- technical identity of the murderer isn't quite as important as is
- usual in a mystery, but the change is still significant. And I
- think it's inspired.
-
-
- I like the story much better with Parker's explanation of the
- crimes. It is psychologically very compelling. Obviously Angel's
- schizophrenic alter ego is trying to stop people from talking,
- shut them up before they give "him" away to Angel. Angel's pauses
- in front of mirrors towards the end (one of them shattered),
- warns us that his personality is disintegrating. And, of course,
- ultimately he remembers. Parker added a fascinating twist to a
- novel that was based on fascinating twists. A very fine movie.
-
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- Zombies are the liberal nightmare. Here you have the masses, whom
- you would love to love, appearing at your front door with their
- faces falling off; and you're trying to be as humane as you
- possibly can, but they are, after all, eating the cat. And the
- fear of mass activity, of mindlessness on a national scale,
- underlies my fear of zombies.
- --Clive Barker
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- TWO REVIEWS BY DREW:
-
-
- LIVE GIRLS
- by Ray Garton
- Pocket Books 1987 $3.95
-
-
- On the hard-core street that never sleeps, Davey Owen is lured
- into the nightmare of the damned... He's lost his girl, blown his
- job, and he's looking for consolation in the seedy precincts of
- Times Square. As dusk falls, a garish glow envelops the street
- where "LIVE GIRLS", a peep-show house, beckons Davey through its
- doors...into a world of strange, savage ecstasy...into the pale
- irresistible arms of a woman who offers him the kiss of demons in
- exchange for eternal life. A woman so ravishing, so insatiable,
- that he must say yes again and again until he can no longer say
- no. He has given her the vital essence of his body. Now she will
- devour his soul...
-
-
- LIVE GIRLS is a tale about vampires with a very unique twist...
- the main "characters" are female, who work at Live Girls and
- obtain their life-giving blood in a very unique way. Observe the
- following passage:
-
-
- "Across from him on the wall between two of the doors
- was a sign. He stepped forward and squinted to read it
- in the poor light:
-
-
- INSTRUCTIONS
-
-
- --ENTER BOOTH (ONE PERSON ONLY PER BOOTH)
- --INSERT TOKENS IN BOX
- --PANEL WILL RAISE
- --INSERT TIP THRU LOT BELOW WINDOW FOR SEXY SHOW
-
-
- Davey held in a laugh. Insert tip of what through slot?"
-
-
- LIVE GIRLS won the 1987 Bram Stoker Novel Award from the Horror
- Writers of America. This book got very little industry play, and
- if it weren't for being a member of the HWA, I might very well
- have missed the book completely. From the grizzly murders that
- the book opens with to the all-out battle against the vampire
- queen herself at the end, LIVE GIRLS is totally captivating and
- almost impossible to put down. Warning: make sure there are lots
- of lights on when reading this book and make sure your ghoul
- tolerance is at a high.
-
-
- I thoroughly enjoyed LIVE GIRLS and just recently sat down to
- read it again, enjoying it as much as the first time. Passages in
- the book literally gave me goose bumps and I found myself rapidly
- scanning pages, hurrying to get to the next action.
-
-
- On a scale of 1 to 10 stars, I give LIVE GIRLS 9 1/2 stars.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- MONSTERS
- by Ray Garton
- from NIGHT VISIONS 6
- Dark Harvest 1988 $19.95
-
-
- MONSTERS is a novella, 124 pages, about religious fanaticism and
- the effects of guilt, especially unearned guilt, on the human
- psyche and on human relationships. Guilt that can bring out the
- "monster" in us.
-
-
- MONSTERS is an up-to-date version of the classic werewolf story,
- set in a small California town called St. Helena. Roger Carlton
- is returning to St. Helena after a six-year absence; an absence
- caused by his being "run out of town" by a group of fanatic
- Seventh-day Adventists. You see, Roger dared to become a writer
- of erotic murder mysteries and the Adventists have decreed that
- this is wrong. When the going gets tough, Roger gets these pains
- in his gut and sees visions of claws and creatures that are
- vaguely human, that feed off human flesh. Roger falls in lust
- with a young girl, Sondra, who works in the local delicatessen.
- It turns out that she also gets the same gut-wrenching pains as
- Roger. But, unlike Roger, Sondra knows the significance of the
- pains and what they lead to. There are unexplained, gory slayings
- that have been taking place in St. Helena and Sondra knows
- much too much about them.
-
-
- MONSTERS is an excellently written story in the true Ray Garton
- tradition. There is lots of gore--which Garton is very good
- at--and heart-stopping excitement. The outcome of the story is
- telegraphed kind of early, but that doesn't detract from the
- overall quality of the story. I found MONSTERS to be very
- thrilling, difficult to put down and finished it in two sittings.
-
-
- On a scale of 1 to 10 stars, I give MONSTERS 8 stars.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- You know you're successful when you've pissed off your parents.
- --David J. Schow
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- Dean Koontz physically resembles a sick wart hog, as well. When
- he answers his door at three o'clock on a Wednesday morning, he
- looks decidedly mealy to me. This, I say to myself, is not the
- face of an author, this is the face of a felon, a man you would
- expect to be arrested on a morals charge involving kittens,
- ducklings, and Cheese Whiz.
- --Leigh Nichols (AKA Dean Koontz)
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- UNDERWOOD-MILLER
-
-
- Underwood-Miller publishes quality books by quality authors. We
- have quite a few U-M books here in our library, and heartily
- recommend any U-M release to readers and collectors alike. Here
- are some recent items you might be interested in:
-
-
- HARLAN ELLISON'S WATCHING by Harlan Ellison
-
-
- I've got my copy; how about you? Harlan Ellison is possibly our
- greatest living essayist, and this is a huge collection of his
- commentaries on film and whatever else happens to cross his path.
- Not to be missed, and it's a beautiful book.
- First Edition: ISBN: 0-88733-067-3 550 pages. $29.95
- Deluxe: 600 slipcased, signed, numbered ISBN: 0-88733-066-5 $60
-
-
-
-
- SCREAMS by Robert Bloch
-
-
- Three novels of psychological suspense in one volume: THE WILL
- TO KILL, THE STAR STALKER and FIREBUG. A must-own for Bloch fans.
- Mine is on order as we go to press.
- First Edition: ISBN: 0-88733-079-7 488 pages $29.95
- Deluxe: 300 slipcased, signed, numbered ISBN: 0-88733-080-0 $50
-
-
-
-
- HORRORSTORY: The Collectors Edition - Volume Five
- edited by Karl Edward Wagner
-
-
- The contents of DAW's YEAR'S BEST HORROR STORIES are always so
- good and are now so hard to find that U-M decided to preserve
- them in hardcover. There will be five volumes, starting with this
- one (which covers DAW's YEAR'S BEST HORROR STORIES #13, #14, and
- #15 for a total of 55 stories) and working backwards. Each volume
- will include the stories from three DAW editions. This would be
- the perfect Christmas gift for horror collectors.
-
-
- Includes stories by: Tanith Lee, Ramsey Campbell, Jack Dann,
- David J. Schow, William F. Wu, Joe R. Lansdale, Ron Leming, John
- Alfred Taylor, Joel Lane, Wayne Allen Sallee, Stephen F. Wilcox,
- W.H. Pugmire & Jessica Amanda Salmonson, Brian Lumley, Brad
- Strickland, R. Chetwynd-Hayes, Phillip C. Heath, Leonard
- Carpenter, David B. Silva, Michael Reaves, Tina Rath, William F.
- Nolan, Simon Clark, Robert Bloch, Ron Wolfe, Vincent McHardy,
- Charles L. Grant, Paul M. Sammon, Jovin Panich, Gardner Dozois,
- Stephen King, Christopher Burns, Steve Sneyd, Daniel Wynn Barber,
- Leslie Halliwell, Fred Chappell, David S. Garnett, David
- Langford, Charles Wagner, John Brizzolara, James B. Hemesath,
- Roger Johnson, John Gordon and Dennis Etchison.
-
-
- First Edition: ISBN: 0-88733-078-9 $40
- Deluxe: Special leatherbound edition. 350 numbered copies. This
- very distinctive edition will be bound in leather with linen
- slipcase, silk marker ribbon and imported French marbled
- endpapers. Each numbered copy will be signed by its authors (see
- note). As a bonus, each volume will have one of Michael Whelan
- (this year's Hugo winner) remarkable covers as its dustjacket,
- reproduced from the original painting! ISBN: 0-88733-077-0 $150
-
-
- NOTE: Every effort is being made to locate each author in order
- to sign these special copies, but we may miss a few! Satisfaction
- is always guaranteed.
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- Being famous sucks. There is no upside. The downside is when you
- realize the only reason everything on the buffet is free is
- because they're planning on having you for desert.
- --Stephen King
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- FEATURED AUTHOR:
-
-
- ROBERT R. McCAMMON
-
-
- Robert R. McCammon ("Rick" to his friends, "Mr. McCammon" to me)
- was born on July 17, 1952, in Birmingham, Alabama. He still lives
- there today, with his wife Sally, in a 100-year-old log house. He
- has the distinction of being the only author I know of who
- actually SOLD his very first book (he was 26); he has no "trunk"
- novels. That novel was BAAL, and with it Mr. McCammon staked out
- his territory: dark fantasy in general, and the existence of Evil
- in particular. He has said:
-
-
- "Horror writing is the fundamental literature of humanity...
- I'll stick with it until I find a kind of literature that
- speaks more strongly about the human condition. I don't think
- there is one."
-
-
- As you would imagine, he's given considerable thought to the
- "voice" in which he has chosen to speak:
-
-
- "Horror and violence in the real world is very different from
- horror and violence in books and movies. If people object to
- the depiction of horror and violence, they are objecting to
- shadows and disregarding the reality; of course, it's much
- easier to demand censorship of books and movies than to
- grapple with the complex factors of real life, and that's one
- of the things that distresses me most: people are losing their
- courage to face up to reality. Certain groups will protest all
- day over things that don't matter a bit, and then they'll
- cower before issues that are vital to our culture and
- survival." --Robert R. McCammon
-
-
- I've never read a story by Robert McCammon that wasn't well-told,
- but his first three novels weren't terribly original. He finally
- decided to blaze his own trail, and achieved his first real
- success, with THEY THIRST, which contains just about every
- contemporary horror device, and I do mean EVERY. Let him explain
- it:
-
-
- "I decided to kick out the stops on that one [THEY THIRST].
- And I did have fun, for the simple reason that writing it
- was like building a huge panorama out of multi-colored Lego
- blocks, and then taking a big stick to it and playing
- Godzilla, just wrecking the whole place, but having the
- greatest time doing it." --Robert R. McCammon
-
-
- And for another opinion:
-
-
- "In many ways, THEY THIRST is the ultimate vampire novel....
- What thrills! When it comes to descriptions of wild berserk
- horror, McCammon is the master. The section that takes place
- in a sandstorm (vampires control the elements, remember?) is
- one of the finest, and scariest scenes I've read in all of
- horror fiction, bar none." --Joe Lansdale
-
-
- His final leap to Horror Genre Respectability was made with SWAN
- SONG, a magnum opus of 956 pages, a gigantic prose painting of an
- American landscape after a nuclear war. It shared the first
- Stoker Award from the Horror Writers of America with Stephen
- King's MISERY. As Mr. McCammon says of it:
-
-
- "The largest part of the book [SWAN SONG] deals with
- rebirth. I had a dream in which the real faces of people
- are hidden behind the ones they wear, and those real
- faces are nothing like the masks."
-
-
- Mr. McCammon has said that he doesn't outline his novels, not
- even the mammoth SWAN SONG, a technique (or lack of) that I
- believe shows; his stories never seem forced or manufactured, a
- significant achievement in a genre prone to manipulated shocks.
-
-
- In the past few years Mr. McCammon has tried his hand at short
- stories, with great critical success. As he says:
-
-
- "Some short stories are easy, and others just about blow
- the top off your skull. I'm still not very comfortable
- writing them [this was early 1987], but I've realized
- that a good short story can be a small miracle of mental
- cinema."
-
-
- You can't say you've read the best of modern horror if you
- haven't read McCammon, one of the finest critics of modern
- society writing in any genre of fiction.
-
-
-
-
- THE WORLD ACCORDING TO ROBERT R. McCAMMON:
-
-
-
-
- BAAL (1978) A first novel that bears the scars of
- conventionality, but survives due to McCammon's canny sense of
- detail and his cinematic flair.
- BETHANY'S SIN (1980) This is another town-with-a-secret where
- nobody goes out at night but, once again, given a vividness
- that makes it memorable.
- THE NIGHT BOAT (1980) What if a U-boat full of zombie Nazis,
- frozen in time, we still patrolling the waters? As you might
- imagine, it's not pretty.
- THEY THIRST (1981) The vampire novel to end all vampire novels;
- an inspired epic of evil.
- "Makeup" (1981) Appeared in MODERN MASTERS OF HORROR edited by
- Frank Coffey. An interesting, if fairly conventional, haunted-
- makeup-kit story, with a surprise ending.
- MYSTERY WALK (1983) Two different cultures clash: the quiet
- traditions of the Native American and the religious frenzy of
- an evangelical church. McCammon has points to make about both.
- USHER'S PASSING (1984) The further adventures of the House of
- Usher, which, contrary to Poe's tale, didn't really fall. It
- just should have. The Ushers are an unforgettable family.
- "Nightcrawlers" (1984) Appeared in MASQUES, an anthology edited
- by J.N. Williamson. The story of a Vietnam vet who literally
- can't get away from the war, it was made into a critically
- acclaimed segment of the Twilight Zone TV show (modern
- incarnation) directed by William Friedkin (THE EXORCIST).
- Possibly McCammon's finest short piece.
- "The Red House" (1985) Appeared in GREYSTONE BAY, a shared-world
- anthology edited by Charles L. Grant. Bob Deaken gets a lesson
- in living from the "family" in the Red House.
- "I Scream Man" (1985) Appeared in The Horror Show, Winter 1985
- issue. A creepy vignette.
- "Yellow Jacket Summer" (1986) Appeared in Twilight Zone
- magazine. Nature turns nasty.
- SWAN SONG (1987) A vast panorama of America following a nuclear
- war. I've heard from a at least half a dozen people who've
- already read this novel more than once, one of them is actually
- into double digits. Obviously a story that affects deeply.
- "The Deep End" (1987) This appeared in the NIGHT VISIONS 4
- anthology and went on to win the first Stoker Award for Short
- Story. A man faces the monster that killed his son, the one
- that lives in the deep end of the swimming pool.
- "Doom City" (1987) Appeared in DOOM CITY: The Second Chronicle
- of Greystone Bay, an anthology edited by Charles L. Grant. What
- would you do if you woke up to a world that had died while you
- slept?
- "A Life in the Day of" (1987) Also in NIGHT VISIONS 4. Johnny
- Strickland, rising young ad executive, is about to find that
- the fast lane is going a lot faster than he had intended. This
- one will remind you of Rod Serling's best material.
- "Best Friends" (1987) Also in NIGHT VISIONS 4. The title refers
- to Tim Clausen's buddies: Adolf, Frog, and Mother. They star in
- this novelette, which is definitely not for the squeamish.
- STINGER (1988) If you're tired of cute E.T.-style aliens, you're
- ready to meet Stinger. As the cover says, "He's here...and he's
- NOT friendly." Definitely in the tradition of his earlier THEY
- THIRST, but this time there's more polish, more plot control.
- "Night Calls the Green Falcon" (1988) Appeared in SILVER SCREAM,
- an anthology edited by David J. Schow (see RFP #4). A story
- more heartwarming that horrific, of a long-ago star of movie
- serials who dons his costume one last time to catch a psycho
- killer. A favorite story of mine.
- THE WOLF'S HOUR (1989) Meet Michael Gallatin, a master spy
- during World War II whose effectiveness comes, at least in
- part, from his talents as a werewolf.
- "Eat Me" (1989) Appeared in THE BOOK OF THE DEAD, an anthology
- edited by John Skipp and Craig Spector. Zombie stories are
- particularly good for social commentary, but Mr. McCammon
- extends this to both ends of the emotional scale with a
- combination of visceral shock and pathos.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- This morning I put ground glass in my wife's eyes. She didn't
- mind. She didn't make a sound. She never does.
- --from "The Dead Line" (1980) by Dennis Etchison
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- THE MODERN HALLOWEEN SHELF
-
-
- The following selections are some recommendations of books to
- curl up with on a cool Halloween night. You're sure to find
- something here from the 1980s that you missed. Thanks to all the
- great readers on RelayNet (tm) who helped with their suggestions.
-
-
- Peter Ackroyd -- Hawksmoor (1985) An awesome mix of detective
- story, ghost story, historical novel, and literary pastiche.
- F.W. Armstrong -- The Devouring (1987) A psychic detective faces
- ancient evil in Buffalo, New York.
- Iain Banks -- The Wasp Factory (1984) A book of extremes, it
- impresses some and disgusts others.
- Clive Barker -- The Damnation Game (1985) A complicated and rich
- selling-your-soul-to-the-devil story.
- Michael Bishop -- Who Made Stevie Crye? (1984) Is it a horror
- novel or the world's longest joke?
- Ramsey Campbell -- Dark Feasts (1987) Campbell's choice of the
- best short pieces of his career to date. Also very good is his
- latest novel, Ancient Images (1989).
- Jonathan Carroll -- The Land of Laughs (1980) More dark fantasy
- than horror; see if you can tell what's wrong with Galen,
- Missouri. The most original author I know.
- Marc Eliot -- How Dear the Dawn (1987) A master vampire descends
- on a small coastal village.
- Dennis Etchison -- The Dark Country (1982) Great short horror
- from a master. Don't miss "The Late Shift".
- Ray Garton -- Live Girls (1987) An evil dwells in the seedy dives
- of mid-town Manhattan--insatiable female vampires.
- Patricia Geary -- Strange Toys (1987) A young girl grows up
- knowing that the supernatural is very real, and her sister is
- very evil.
- Charles L. Grant -- The Pet (1986) The patron saint of "quiet
- horror" at his best.
- Thomas Harris -- Red Dragon (1981) Can Will Graham catch the
- psychotic "Tooth Fairy" before he kills again?
- David G. Hartwell, editor -- The Dark Descent (1987) One of the
- finest horror anthologies available, as well as one of the
- largest.
- Robert Irwin -- The Arabian Nightmare (1983) This macabre fantasy
- takes place in 1486, written by a former teacher of medieval
- history.
- Stephen King -- Good choices would be: It (1986), to get ready
- for the TV mini-series in May; Misery (1987), for a
- writers-eye-view of fans (particularly relevant in the wake of
- the "My Sister Sam" killing); or The Dark Half (1989), about a
- writer's problems with his pseudonym.
- T.E.D. Klein -- The Ceremonies (1984) The Elder Gods are back in
- this modern recreation of Machen and Lovecraft themes.
- Dean R. Koontz -- The master of suspense. His most recent are
- Lightning (1988), Midnight (1989), and the upcoming The Bad
- Place (1990).
- Joe R. Lansdale -- The Drive-In (1988) Come to the Friday
- All-Night Horror Show, where the audience gets more than their
- money's worth.
- Richard Laymon -- The Cellar (1980) Come to Malcasa Point,
- California, and visit The Beast House.
- Robert R. McCammon -- Swan Song (1987) An epic adventure of
- America after the bombs drop.
- Kirby McCauley, editor -- Dark Forces (1980), which has got to be
- the best anthology of the 1980s. A landmark book.
- George R.R. Martin -- A very versatile writer. Fevre Dream (1982)
- is my all-time favorite vampire story, it's sort of a Mark-
- Twain-meets-Bram-Stoker, vampires on a riverboat novel.
- Graham Masterton -- Picture of Evil (1985) Someone must destroy
- the painting that is the source of Cordelia & Maurice's power.
- Richard Christian Matheson -- Scars and Other Distinguishing
- Marks (1987) 26 short-shorts, a collaboration with his father,
- and a screenplay he wrote for Amazing Stories TV show.
- David J. Schow -- The Kill Riff (1988) Lucas Ellington knows who
- is responsible for his daughter's death--Whip Hand, a heavy-
- metal rock band--and he's going to make them pay.
- Dan Simmons -- Song of Kali (1985) The horror that is Calcutta.
- Lisa Tuttle -- A Nest of Nightmares (1986) Short stories from the
- female point of view.
- Karl Edward Wagner -- In a Lonely Place (1983) Some of his best
- short stories.
- Chet Williamson -- One of the best up-and-coming horror writers.
- Ash Wednesday (1987) is a good introduction.
- F. Paul Wilson -- The Keep (1981) What do you get if you cross a
- vampire with a Nazi?
- Douglas E. Winter, editor -- Prime Evil (1988) A nice anthology,
- worth the price to get David Morrell's award-winning "Orange Is
- for Anguish, Blue for Insanity".
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- Next to being Ed Meese, writing is the loneliest profession on
- earth.
- --John Skipp
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- What's going to come out of those people who think that NIGHT OF
- THE LIVING DEAD isn't enough?
- --Robert Bloch
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- RECENT BOOK RELEASES
-
-
- These are just a few of the releases scheduled (as we go to
- press) for August through October. HC=hardcover PB=paperback and
- TP=trade paperback (oversized). The long 10-digit number is the
- ISBN number, convenient when ordering from distributors. This
- list is provided without warranty of any kind.
-
-
- Beyond the Body: An Investigation of Out-of-the-Body Experiences
- by Susan J. Blackmore (parapsychology)
- Academy Chicago Aug89 TP $8.95 0-89733-344-6
- How To Shit In The Woods by Kathleen Meyer
- Ten Speed Press Aug89 PB $5.95 0-89815-319-0
- How To S___ In The Woods 0-89815-320-4 (alternate cover)
- (An environmentally sound approach to a lost art.)
- The Stress of Her Regard by Tim Powers
- Ace Sep89 HC $17.95 0-441-79055-0
- (Byron, Shelley and Keats are possessed by a kind of vampire in
- this novel by the author of The Anubis Gates.)
- The Stephen King Companion edited by George Beahm
- Andrews & McMeel Sep89 TP $12.95 0-8362-7978-6
- The PreHistory of The Far Side by Gary Larson
- Andrews & McMeel Sep89 TP $12.95 0-8362-1851-5
- (A fabulous narrative, pages from his sketchbook, rejects and
- bloopers. Includes 144 pages full-color.)
- Industrial Light & Magic: The Art of Special Effects by Thomas G.
- Smith
- Ballantine Sep89 HC $60.00 0-345-32263-0
- Trevayne by Robert Ludlum
- Bantam Sep89 PB $5.95
- (This novel, published for the first time under the author's
- own name, contains a new introduction that explains why.)
- You Ain't Heard Nothin' Yet: 501 Famous Lines from Great (and
- Not-So-Great) Movies compiled and edited by John P. Fennell
- Citadel Sep89 TP $7.95
- (Memorable lines from 60 years of movies, many illustrated with
- stills.)
- Razored Saddles edited by Joe R. Lansdale & Pat LoBrutto
- Dark Harvest Sep89 HC $19.95 0-913165-49-2
- Invasion of the Body Snatchers by Jack Finney
- Fireside Sep89 TP $8.95 0-671-68211-3
- The Penny Whistle Halloween Book: Everything You and Your
- Children Need to Know About Giving and Enjoying the Happiest,
- Scariest Halloween Parties of Your Life by Meredith Brokaw &
- Annie Gilbar
- Grove Weidenfeld Sep89 TP $9.95 1-55584-377-8
- Nightmare Movies by Kim Newman
- Harmony Sep89 TP $12.95
- (Reviews hundreds of terror films, masterpieces and
- monstrosities alike.)
- The Pessimist's Journal of Very, Very Bad Days by Jess Brallier
- and R.P. McDonough
- Little, Brown Sep89 TP $9.95 0-316-10600-3
- (Offers a historical disaster for each day of the year, plus
- room to write in one's own.)
- Changing the Past: A Novel by Thomas Berger
- Little, Brown Sep89 HC $18.95
- (Walter Hunsicker is given a chance to see what life would have
- been like if he could change his past.)
- The Feud by Thomas Berger
- Little, Brown Sep89 TP $8.95
- (Chronicles small-town America in the 1930s in a novel by the
- author of Little Big Man. A motion picture based on the book
- will be released this fall.)
- Blind In One Ear: The Avenger Returns by Patrick Macnee
- Mercury House Sep89 HC $19.95 0-916515-58-3
- (The autobiography of the actor best known as John Steed in
- TV's The Avengers.)
- It Would Be So Nice If You Weren't Here: My Journey Through Show
- Business by Charles Grodin
- Wm Morrow Sep89 HC $18.45 0-688-08873-2
- (The actor reflects on his career in Hollywood. I've heard this
- is a vastly entertaining book.)
- Two Much! by Donald E. Westlake
- Mysterious Sep89 PB $4.95
- (Art Dodge decides to marry a rich woman but instead marries
- two--Liz and Betty Kerner, beautiful twin heiresses, in this
- farce by the Edgar Award-winning author.)
- 'Murder Will Out': The Detective in Fiction from Poe to the
- Present by T.J. Binyon
- Oxford UP Sep89 HC $21.95 0-19-219223-X
- Mystery Reader's Walking Guide: London by Alzina Stone Dale &
- Barbara Sloan Hendershott
- Passport Sep89 TP $12.95
- (Features 11 walking tours through the heart of London.)
- Panati's Extraordinary Endings of Practically Everything &
- Everybody by Charles Panati
- Perennial Sep89 TP 10.95
- (Discusses how famous people, cities, flora, fauna and more met
- their demise.)
- The New York Public Library Desk Reference
- Prentice Hall Sep89 HC $29.95 0-13-620444-9
- (A one-volume collection of the most frequently sought
- information covers 26 subject areas.)
- Dumbth: And 79 Ways to Make Americans Smarter by Steve Allen
- Prometheus Sep89 HC $19.95
- (The humorist offers ways to improve critical thought and
- reasoning.)
- Lucid Dreams in 30 Days: The Creative Sleep Program by Keith
- Harary & Pamela Weintraub
- St. Martin's Sep89 TP $5.95
- (The authors explore the mysteries of sleep and tell how to
- control dreams in this paperback original.)
- Have an Out-Of-Body Experience in Thirty Days: The Free Flight
- Program by Keith Harary & Pamela Weintraub
- St. Martin's Sep89 TP $5.95
- (A step-by-step guide to an out-of-body experience.)
- Death and the Chaste Apprentice by Robert Barnard
- Scribners Sep89 HC $17.95 0-684-19002-8
- (In this comedy mystery, everybody involved in a local
- theatrical production wants to kill an annoying innkeeper.)
- Simply Barbara Bush: A Portrait of America's Candid First Lady by
- Donnie Radcliffe
- Warner Sep89 HC $14.95 0-446-51553-1
- The Naughty Victorian Hand Book by Burton Silver
- Workman Sep89 TP $9.95 0-89480-624-6
- (Rediscover the therapeutically hilarious art of "furtling" --
- erotic hand manipulation -- in the book that puts the underside
- (and more) of Victoriana at your fingertips. It will profoundly
- change your relationship to your hand.)
- Life Among the Savages by Shirley Jackson
- Academy Chicago Oct89 TP $8.95
- (The author wrote this domestic chronicle in 1953 when her four
- children were under 10.)
- Murder Guide to London, An A-Z of Metropolitan Atrocities by
- Martin Fido (true crime)
- Academy Chicago Oct89 HC $12.95 0-89733-341-1
- (This narrative guide to major murder sites provides maps and a
- key to murderers' names.)
- Forgiven: The Rise and Fall of Jim Bakker and the PTL Ministry by
- Charles E. Shepard
- Atlantic Monthly Oct89 HC $22.95
- (The author won a 1988 Pulitzer Prize in journalism for his
- reporting on the televangelist and his ministry in The
- Charlotte Observer.)
- An Incomplete Education by Judy Jones & William Wilson
- Ballantine Oct89 HC $24.95 0-345-29570-6
- (One of my favorite reference books. Not at all stuffy.)
- Queen of the Damned by Anne Rice
- Ballantine Oct89 PB $5.95
- (The Vampire Lestat is confronted by Akasha, the mother of all
- vampires, in this reprint.)
- The Twilight Zone Companion: Second Edition by Marc Scott Zicree
- Bantam Oct89 TP $12.95 0-553-34744-6
- Bureaucracy: What Government Agencies Do and Why They Do It by
- James Q. Wilson
- Basic Oct89 HC $24.95
- (Offers explanations from an expert in public administration.)
- Breathing Lessons by Anne Tyler
- Berkley Oct89 PB $5.50
- (Maggie and Ira's trip from Baltimore to Deer Lick, PA, takes
- them through the memories of a 28-year marriage in this
- Pulitzer Prize winner. From the author of The Accidental
- Tourist.)
- Literature in America: An Illustrated History by Peter Conn
- Cambridge Oct89 HC $29.95 0-521-30373-7
- (This illustrated history covers American literature from the
- 17th century to the 1980s.)
- Naming the Rose: Eco, Medieval Signs, and Modern Theory by
- Theresa Coletti
- Cornell UP Oct89 TP $8.95
- (Decodes the signs and symbols in Umberto Eco's novel The Name
- of the Rose.)
- Guide to Literary London by George Williams
- David & Charles Oct89 TP $22.95
- (Includes authors' homes, historic theaters, clubs, bookshops
- and coffeehouses.)
- Nemesis by Isaac Asimov
- Doubleday Oct89 HC $18.95 0-385-24792-3
- Special Limited Edition $125 0-385-26619-7
- The Cuckoo's Egg: Tracking a Spy Through the Maze of Computer
- Espionage by Clifford Stoll
- Doubleday Oct89 HC $18.95 0-385-24946-2
- (Tells how an ex-hippie turned systems manager uncovered an
- international computer spy ring.)
- Fifty Simple Things You Can Do To Save The Earth by The
- Earthworks Group
- Earthworks Press Oct89 PB $4.95 0-929634-06-3
- (Let's face it--somebody's got to.)
- The Encyclopedia of Monsters by Jeff Rovin
- Facts On File Oct89 HC $29.95 0-8160-1824-3
- (Features a comprehensive guide to beasts, fiends and others.)
- On an Average Day... by Tom Heymann
- Fawcett Columbine Oct89 TP $6.95
- (Takes an off-beat statistical look at America--e.g., on an
- average day, over 41,000 calls are made to dial-a-porn numbers
- and four people call Elvis at Graceland.)
- Gone With the Wind: The Definitive, Illustrated History of the
- Book, the Movie, the Legend by Herb Bridges & Terryl C. Boodman
- Fireside Oct89 TP $14.95 0-671-68387-X
- The Natural House Book: Creating a Healthy, Harmonious and
- Ecologically Sound Home Environment by David Pearson
- Fireside Oct89 TP $17.95 0-671-66635-5
- The Open Door: When Writers First Learned to Read edited by
- Steven Gilbar
- Godine Oct89 HC $12.95 809-7
- (Thirty writers, including Charles Dickens, Winston Churchill,
- Jean Rhys, and William Cobbett, recall the special moment when
- written words suddenly had meaning.)
- A Warning to the Curious by M.R. James, selected and introduced
- by Ruth Rendell
- Godine Oct89 TP $10.95 816-X
- (Thirteen tales by the master of chill, selected by an Edgar
- Award-winning author.)
- A Cold Red Sunrise by Stuart M. Kaminsky
- Ivy Oct89 PB $3.50
- (Won the 1989 Edgar Award for Best Mystery of the Year.)
- My Pretty Pony by Stephen King and Barbara Kruger
- Knopf Oct89 HC $50 0-394-58037-0
- (A new, slipcased edition of the work originally published by
- the Whitney Museum of American Art. I've heard there will only
- be 15,000 copies.)
- The Dan Quayle Quiz Book: For People Who Think They are Smarter
- Than the Vice President by Jeremy Solomon & Ken Brady
- Little, Brown Oct89 PB $4.95 0-316-80359-6
- (Offers the chance to test one's knowledge of Quayle's
- statements with multiple-choice questions.)
- The Book of Video Lists: 1990 Edition by Tom Wiener
- Madison Oct89 TP $10.95 0-8191-7011-9
- (My favorite, most-used video reference book. Terrific.)
- Words On Tape, 1990: An International Guide to the Audio Cassette
- Market
- Meckler Oct89 TP $34.95 0-88736-368-7
- (This paperback original is the last word on over 30,000 audio
- cassette titles currently available from over 700 cassette
- publishers on subjects that range from self-help and
- inspirational work, to fiction and plays, and children's
- literature, to coursework in business and many other fields.)
- The New TV: A Complete Guide to High Definition Television by
- Dale Cripps and Sam Bush
- Meckler Oct89 TP $14.95 0-88736-489-6
- (This original paperback offers complete coverage and in-depth
- analysis of the headline making technology known as HDTV (high
- definition television). HDTV promises to explode upon the
- consciousness of the television world while changing our
- concept of TV as we know it today. The book will excite readers
- into the "Brave New (visual) World".
- Norma Jean: My Secret Life with Marilyn Monroe by Ted Jordan
- Wm Morrow Oct89 HC $18.45 0-688-09118-0
- (An early lover of the star tells of their affair. Contains
- rare photos.)
- The Wanderer: Dion's Story by Dion DiMucci with Davin Seay
- Wm Morrow Oct89 TP $6.70 0-688-09206-3
- The Crime of the Century by Kingsley Amis
- Mysterious Oct89 HC $16.95 0-89296-398-0
- (A serial killer has London police baffled, until a group
- including a master detective, a novelist, a rock star, and
- others sets its imagination to solving the case.)
- Tomorrow's Crimes by Donald E. Westlake
- Mysterious Oct89 HC $18.95 0-89296-299-2
- (An ingenious collection of criminous science fiction and
- fantasy. Includes the brilliant 1967 novel ANARCHAOS.)
- Help I Am Being Held Prisoner by Donald E. Westlake
- Mysterious Oct89 PB $4.50
- (Inmates decide to rob a bank while still behind bars.)
- A Curmudgeon's Garden of Love by Jon Winokur
- NAL Oct89 HC $16.95 0-453-00677-9
- (In the tradition of the author's Portable Curmudgeon, this is
- a look at love without rose-colored glasses.)
- Blind Faith by Joe McGinnis
- NAL/Signet Oct89 PB $5.95
- (The bestselling author investigates the murder of a Toms
- River, NJ, woman by a husband driven by greed.)
- Horrors by Drake Douglas
- Overlook Oct89 HC $22.50
- (This history of the horror genre has been updated to include
- 75 vintage film stills.)
- Theatrical Anecdotes by Peter Hay
- Oxford UP Oct89 TP $8.95 0-19-506078-4
- (Collects the legends, lore and humor of The Great White Way.)
- The Oxford Book of English Ghost Stories edited by Michael Cox &
- R.A. Gilbert
- Oxford UP Oct89 TP $9.95
- (Collects 42 of the best English ghost stories ever written.)
- The Complete Monty Python's Flying Circus by Graham Chapman, et
- al
- Pantheon Oct89 TP $12.95 Volume I 0-679-72647-0
- Pantheon Oct89 TP $12.95 Volume II 0-679-72648-9
- Pantheon Oct89 TP $26 boxed set 0-679-72702-7
- (The scripts from the successful British comedy show will be
- published in two volumes, and as a boxed set.)
- Haunted by James Herbert
- Putnam Oct89 HC $17.95 0-399-13486-7
- Poodle Springs by Raymond Chandler & Robert B. Parker
- Putnam Oct89 HC $18.95 0-399-13482-4 (or Sep89)
- (Parker completes Chandler's unfinished Philip Marlowe novel.)
- Tekwar by William Shatner
- Putnam Oct89 HC $17.95 0-399-13495-6 (or Sep89)
- (Chronicles the exploits of 22nd-century ex-cop Jake Cardigan
- as he searches for a device to rid the world of a drug that is
- poisoning society.)
- My Turn: The Memoirs of Nancy Reagan by Nancy Reagan with William
- Novak
- Random House Oct89 HC $21.95 0-394-56368-9
- deluxe limited edition $100 0-394-58162-8
- The Ludlum Triad: The Holcroft Covenant / The Matarese Circle /
- The Bourne Identity by Robert Ludlum
- Random House Oct89 HC $16.95 0-394-57610-1
- Mary Shelley: Her Life, Her Fiction, Her Monsters by Anne K.
- Mellor
- Routledge, Chapman and Hall Oct89 TP $14.95
- (Examines the life and work of the author from a feminist
- perspective.)
- A Dictionary of Literary Quotations by Meic Stephens
- Routledge, Chapman & Hall Oct89 HC $25
- (Contains 3250 quotations about literature, writers, writing,
- books and the book trade.)
- The Complete Avengers by Dave Rogers
- St. Martin's Oct89 TP $12.95
- (This Avengers casebook recounts the history of the popular
- television show.)
- The First 200 Years of Monty Python by Kim "Howard" Johnson
- St. Martin's Oct89 TP $14.95
- (A history of the ever-popular TV comedy, Monty Python's Flying
- Circus, and its six creators.)
- Series of Murders: A Charles Paris Mystery by Simon Brett
- Scribners Oct89 HC $16.95 0-684-19096-6
- (Murder strikes the set of a TV police series.)
- Currents of Death: Power Lines, Computer Terminals, and the
- Attempt to Cover Up Their Threat to Your Health by Paul Brodeur
- Simon & Schuster Oct89 HC $19.95 0-671-67845-0
- (Presents the case against electromagnetic radiation.)
- The Comic Book in America by Mike Benton
- Taylor Oct89 HC $29.95
- (An illustrated history of comic books in America.)
- Zapcrafts by Nancy Birnes
- Ten Speed Press Oct89 TP $14.95 0-89815-290-9
- (Over 200 recipes for microwave projects you can make that are
- not food.)
- The Ridge by Lisa Cantrell
- Tor Oct89 PB $4.95
- (A possessed house.)
- Walkers by Graham Masterton
- Tor Oct89 HC $18.95 0-312-93201-4
- Manifold Destiny: The One! The Only! Guide to Cooking on Your Car
- Engine by Chris Maynard & Bill Scheller
- Villard Oct89 TP $7.95 0-679-72337-4
- (As far as I know, this is for seriously cooking in and on
- various parts of your car.)
- Holidays in Hell by P.J. O'Rourke
- Vintage Oct89 TP $8.95
- (The social satirist takes a caustic look at the world.)
- Fury by John Coyne
- Warner Oct89 HC $18.95 0-446-51420-9
- Rapture by Thomas Tessier
- Warner Oct89 PB $4.95
- (A tale of psychological terror about obsessive and perverted
- love.)
- Spirits of Christmas edited by Kathryn Cramer & David G. Hartwell
- Wynwood Oct89 HC $18.95 0-922066-16-7
- (This collection of ghost stories includes everything from a
- little known tale by Dickens to new works commissioned for this
- volume.)
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- I used to plot my novels very thoroughly in advance, chapter by
- chapter, but abandoned that method from INCARNATE onward. Mind
- you, this presumably leads to what Everett Bleiler complained was
- "extemporized plotting" in THE HUNGRY MOON, but I confess to
- liking the way that novel develops.
- --Ramsey Campbell
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- Once, a long time ago, someone had taken from him something
- irreplaceably valuable. He couldn't remember what it was. And no
- one would admit it.
- --from "Deadspace" (1985) by Dennis Etchison
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- GUEST REVIEWER:
-
-
- DARRYL KENNING
-
-
- WAR WORLD - Vol. I - THE BURNING EYE
- created by Jerry Pournelle
- Baen Books $3.95
-
-
- This is yet another "Shared Universe" series based upon the
- planet Haven and using the universe so well created in the
- "Mercenary" series by Mr. Pournelle. A series of short stories by
- stalwarts such as Mike Resnick, Poul Anderson, Janet Morris and
- David Drake, just to mention a few. I thoroughly enjoyed the
- original series and was prepared to find a watered down series of
- disconnected stories. Not so. These are excellent, written by
- competent professional storytellers in a well thought out
- universe, with an all-too-possible political system. This is a
- "must buy" for folks who like rather "hard" Science Fiction with
- a realistic war bent.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- BIMBOS OF THE DEATH SUN
- by Sharyn McCrumb
- Windwalker Books, $2.95
-
-
- Imagine if you will the cover of this book, a young lady in a
- bikini with a space helmet and air tanks on, leaning across the
- computer of a pipe smoking author. Now I have got to tell you, I
- wouldn't even slow down if I saw this thing on a newsstand, much
- less pick it up....Bimbos...for heaven sake. Yet this is one of
- the funniest send ups of Science Fiction Cons you can imagine.
- Not only that, it is a darn good mystery besides. I found myself
- chortling aloud as I read it, and just thoroughly enjoying
- myself. This one may be hard to find, but it is definitely worth
- the search. Many thanks to Mary Frost Pierson for recommending
- this to me.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- WRITERS OF THE FUTURE Vol. 5
- Edited by Algis Budrys
- Bridge Publications, Inc.
- 0-88404-379-7; $4.95; 1989
-
-
- As I've noted several times before, I'm really not much of a fan
- of short stories. In my experience it takes a rare talent to be
- able to capture the imagination with a short Science Fiction
- story. I think one of the problems is that it is difficult to set
- the story parameters that quickly. But I digress; mostly the only
- times I'll pick up a book of short stories is in an airline
- terminal or on vacation when nothing else is available.
-
-
- This series, however, has edged its way onto my VERY short
- exception list for books of short stories.
-
-
- Founded in 1983 by L. Ron Hubbard, the Writers of the Future
- program/contest and the companion Illustrators of the Future are
- worth their weight in gold to those of us who love Science
- Fiction. You should read any one of this series to learn about
- the program and the most impressive listing of authors and
- illustrators who have given their time and talents towards
- helping a new generation of SF talent get established.
-
-
- Interspersed with the stories and illustrations are commentaries
- about writing from luminaries such as Hal Clement, Marta Randall,
- Frank Kelly-Freas to name only some. Even if you do not aspire to
- the authorship sides of SF you will enjoy the insights offered.
-
-
- But the real treasure are the stories. 14 outstanding award
- winning stories, complete with award winning illustrations. The
- authors and illustrators will surely be names that you will want
- to remember.....remember so that you can snatch up future
- offerings as soon as they hit your bookstore.
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- BOX SCORES: From no stars (ugh!) to 5 stars
-
-
- IN ENDLESS TWILIGHT by L. E. Modesitt, Jr. 3 ***
- TOR $3.95 March, 1988
-
-
- DOWNTIME by Peter Fox 4 ****
- Berkley $3.50 January, 1988
-
-
- You can contact Darryl at 6331 Marshall Rd., Centerville, Ohio
- 45459, or on Compuserve (76337,740), or on the ANNEX Bulletin
- Board 513-274-0821 (J 3 to join the Science Fiction conference).
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- ...the book [THE PARASITE] is rather about the development of
- Rose's dormant male personality and her consequent slide toward
- fascist attitudes...
- --Ramsey Campbell
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- IMPORTANT DATES IN OCTOBER
-
-
- 01 1760 William Beckford, British writer
- 01 1885 Louis Untermeyer, American poet and anthologist
- 02 1879 Wallace Stevens, American poet
- 02 1904 Graham Greene, British writer
- 03 1886 Henri Alain-Fournier, French novelist
- 03 1900 Thomas Wolfe, American novelist
- 03 1925 Gore Vidal, American writer
- 04 1884 Damon Runyon, American writer
- 05 1713 Denis Diderot, French writer
- 05 1840 John Addington Symonds, British historian and writer
- 06 1895 Caroline Gordon, American writer
- 06 1914 Thor Heyerdahl, Norwegian anthropologist, author of THE
- KON-TIKI EXPEDITION
- 07 1849 Edgar Allan Poe died at 40
- 07 1849 James Whitcomb Riley, American poet
- 07 1879 Leon Trotsky, Russian revolutionary leader & writer
- 08 1872 John Cowper Powys, British writer
- 09 1899 Bruce Catton, American historian and journalist
- 09 1906 Lopold Senghor, Senegalese poet
- 09 1918 E. Howard Hunt, Jr., American writer
- 10 1870 Ivan Bunin, Russian writer
- 10 1924 James Clavell, English-American writer
- 10 1930 Harold Pinter, British playwright
- 11 1885 Franois Mauriac, French writer
- 11 1910 Joseph Alsop, American journalist
- 11 1925 Elmore Leonard, American writer
- 12 1844 George W. Cable, American writer
- 12 1896 Eugenio Montale, Italian poet
- 13 1635 Roger Williams banned in Boston
- 13 1890 Conrad Richter, American writer
- 13 1925 Frank Gilroy, American writer
- 14 1888 Katherine Mansfield, New Zealand writer
- 14 1894 e. e. cummings, American poet
- 14 1906 Hannah Arendt, political philosopher and writer
- 15 70 BC Publius Vergilius Maro (AKA Vergil), Roman poet
- 15 1674 Robert Herrick, British poet
- 15 1814 Mikhail (Yurevich) Lermontov, Russian poet and novelist
- 15 1844 Friedrich Nietzsche, German philosopher and writer
- 15 1881 P.G. Wodehouse, British-American writer
- 15 1905 C.P. Snow, British writer and scientist
- 15 1908 John Kenneth Galbraith, economist and writer
- 15 1917 Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., historian and writer
- 15 1920 Mario Puzo, American writer
- 15 1926 Evan Hunter, American writer (AKA Ed McBain)
- 16 1758 Noah Webster, American lexicographer and writer
- 16 1854 Oscar Wilde, Irish writer
- 16 1927 Gnter Grass, German writer
- 17 1864 Elinor Glyn, British novelist
- 17 1903 Nathanael West, American novelist
- 17 1915 Arthur Miller, American playwright
- 18 1785 Thomas Love Peacock, British writer
- 18 1859 Henri Bergson, French philosopher and writer
- 19 1605 Sir Thomas Browne, British writer
- 19 1784 Leigh Hunt, British writer
- 19 1895 Lewis Mumford, cultural historian and writer
- 19 1931 John le Carr, British writer
- 20 1854 Arthur Rimbaud, French poet
- 20 1859 John Dewey, philosopher, educational theorist & writer
- 20 1905 Frederic Dannay, one half of Ellery Queen & Barnaby Ross
- 21 1772 Samuel Taylor Coleridge, British writer
- 21 1790 Alphonse de Lamartine, French writer
- 21 1929 Ursula LeGuin, American writer
- 22 1919 Doris Lessing, British writer
- 23 1844 Robert Bridges, British poet
- 23 1942 Michael Crichton, American writer
- 24 1904 Moss Hart, American playwright
- 24 1923 Denise Levertov, American poet and essayist
- 25 1400 Geoffrey Chaucer, English poet, died
- 25 1800 Thomas Babington Macaulay, British writer
- 25 1914 John Berryman, American poet
- 25 1941 Anne Tyler, American writer
- 26 1930 John Arden, British playwright
- 26 1945 Pat Conroy, American writer
- 27 1914 Dylan Thomas, British poet
- 27 1932 Sylvia Plath, American poet
- 28 1903 Evelyn Waugh, British novelist
- 29 1740 James Boswell, Scottish biographer
- 29 1882 Jean Giraudoux, French playwright
- 29 1906 Fredric Brown, American writer
- 30 1751 Richard Brinsley Sheridan, British playwright
- 30 1871 Paul Valry, French writer
- 30 1885 Ezra Pound, American poet
- 31 1620 John Evelyn, British diarist
- 31 1795 John Keats, British poet
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- The stuff that happens in THE KILL RIFF is made up. It is NOT
- REAL. The people are not real people. This is what is meant when
- you read "any resemblance to real people or incidents is purely
- coincidental". If you claim this book has made you do weird
- things, you should be locked away where you cannot hurt anyone.
- Repeat: I made it all up. That's why it's called fiction.
- --David J. Schow's note in THE KILL RIFF
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- NUMBER ONE FAN
- by Annie Wilkes
-
-
- Every time Halloween rolls around, I think about all the books
- I've read about ghosts, aliens, and seances. Not the fiction, the
- nonfiction. And every time I think about them, I get irritated.
-
-
- Fiction is subject to being good or bad; but nonfiction is
- subject to being true or false -- and thereby hangs the problem.
- Are these books true or false? I've talked to very few people who
- can be logical about the "supernatural". (I'm not sure I like the
- word "supernatural", but I don't want to confuse matters any
- further by inventing my own.)
-
-
- The people who write these books say, "I'm not lying", which, of
- course, is very easy to say and very difficult to prove. But even
- if they aren't lying, that just makes their words sincere; it
- doesn't make them TRUE. The skeptics will tell you, "Of course
- it's not true, don't be stupid", which is hardly helpful. Then
- there's always the argument to use on skeptics that goes like
- this: We can send two-dimensional images through space, talk to
- someone on the other side of the planet as easily as talking to
- someone on the other side of the room, etc., etc., etc., and
- talking to dead people is ridiculous?
-
-
- Think about it for just a minute. Pick just one book. A recent
- Whitley Strieber, a Bermuda Triangle book, an Amityville book
- (one of the nonfiction ones), whatever. What if the events
- described in the book are true? Can you just imagine all the
- thinking that would be turned on its head? It would be
- revolutionary. It would be IMPORTANT.
-
-
- And yet we all just wander along. Believers think the skeptics
- are close-minded, skeptics think the believers are dim-witted.
- And, one way or the other, important issues get buried. Golly,
- but this is irritating.
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- Publishers are all cohorts of the devil; there must be a special
- hell for them somewhere.
- --Goethe
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- THE ULTIMATE STEPHEN KING CHARACTER QUIZ ANSWERS
-
-
- Mother Abagail (The Stand) good
- Uncle Al (Cycle of the Werewolf) good
- Bobbi Anderson (The Tommyknockers) good
- Kurt Barlow ('Salem's Lot) evil
- Leigh Cabot (Christine) good
- Marty Coslaw (Cycle of the Werewolf) good
- Judson Crandall (Pet Sematary) semi-good
- Louis Creed (Pet Sematary) semi-good
- Arnie Cunningham (Christine) good, then evil
- Barton George Dawes (Roadwork) semi-good
- Charlie Decker (Rage) semi-evil
- Bill Denbrough (It) good
- Flagg (The Eyes of the Dragon) evil
- Randall Flagg (The Stand) evil; AKA Walkin Dude
- Jim Gardener (The Tommyknockers) good
- Ray Garraty (The Long Walk) good
- Richard "Richie the Hammer" Ginelli (Thinner) semi-good
- Danny Glick ('Salem's Lot) good, then evil
- Delbert Grady (The Shining) evil
- Dennis Guilder (Christine) good
- Billy Halleck (Thinner) semi-good
- Dick Hallorann (The Shining) good
- Mike Hanlon (It) good
- Ben Hanscom (It) good
- Chris Hargensen (Carrie) evil
- Eddie Kaspbrak (It) good
- Dan Killian (The Running Man) evil
- Taduz Lemke (Thinner) semi-evil
- Charlie McGee (Firestarter) good
- Ben Mears ('Salem's Lot) good
- Pennywise the Clown (It) evil
- Prince Peter (The Eyes of the Dragon) good
- Mark Petrie ('Salem's Lot) good
- Rainbird (Firestarter) evil
- Stu Redman (The Stand) good
- Benjamin Stuart Richards (The Running Man) good
- Beverly Rogan (It) good
- Tommy Ross (Carrie) good
- Jack Sawyer (The Talisman) good
- Paul Sheldon (Misery) good
- Morgan Sloat (The Talisman) evil
- Johnny Smith (The Dead Zone) good
- Greg Stillson (The Dead Zone) evil
- Richard Throckett Straker ('Salem's Lot) evil
- Danny Torrance (The Shining) good
- Richie Tozier (It) good
- Tad Trenton (Cujo) good
- Stan Uris (It) good
- Walkin Dude (The Stand) evil; AKA Randall Flagg
- Annie Wilkes (Misery) evil
- Wolf (The Talisman) good
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- I felt like poisoning a monk.
- --Umberto Eco on why he wrote the novel
- THE NAME OF THE ROSE
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- NEXT MONTH: We're back on schedule now, so look for #6 (our
- Computers and Robots issue) around late October or early
- November. Keep on reading and don't hesitate to write to us.
-
-
-
-